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Voltage-clamp recordings of light responses from wild-type and mutant mouse cone photoreceptors
- Source :
- The Journal of General Physiology, The Journal of general physiology, vol 151, iss 11
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Rockefeller University Press, 2019.
-
Abstract
- This paper describes the first extensive study of voltage-clamp recordings from WT and mutant mouse cone photoreceptors made from dark-adapted retinas without fluorescent markers. Cones can continue to adapt rapidly in bright light, even without known mechanisms of transduction modulation.<br />We describe the first extensive study of voltage-clamp current responses of cone photoreceptors in unlabeled, dark-adapted mouse retina using only the position and appearance of cone somata as a guide. Identification was confirmed from morphology after dye filling. Photocurrents recorded from wild-type mouse cones were biphasic with a fast cone component and a slower rod component. The rod component could be eliminated with dim background light and was not present in mouse lines lacking the rod transducin-α subunit (Gnat1−/−) or connexin 36 (Cx36−/−). Cones from Gnat1−/− or Cx36−/− mice had resting membrane potentials between −45 and −55 mV, peak photocurrents of 20–25 picoamps (pA) at a membrane potential Vm = −50 mV, sensitivities 60–70 times smaller than rods, and a total membrane capacitance two to four times greater than rods. The rate of activation (amplification constant) was largely independent of the brightness of the flash and was 1–2 s−2, less than half that of rods. The role of Ca2+-dependent transduction modulation was investigated by recording from cones in mice lacking rod transducin (Gnat1), recoverin, and/or the guanylyl-cyclase–activating proteins (GCAPs). In confirmation of previous results, responses of Gnat1−/−;Gcaps−/− cones and triple-mutant Gnat1−/−;Gcaps−/−;Rv−/− cones recovered more slowly both to light flashes and steps and were more sensitive than cones expressing the GCAPs. Cones from all four mouse lines showed significant recovery and escaped saturation even in bright background light. This recovery occurred too rapidly to be caused by pigment bleaching or metaII decay and appears to reflect some modulation of response inactivation in addition to those produced by recoverin and the GCAPs. Our experiments now make possible a more detailed understanding of the cellular physiology of mammalian cone photoreceptors and the role of conductances in the inner and outer segment in producing cone light responses.
- Subjects :
- Patch-Clamp Techniques
genetic structures
Physiology
Knockout
Voltage clamp
Medical Physiology
Connexin
Connexins
Mice
Recoverin
medicine
Animals
Calcium Signaling
Transducin
Research Articles
Mice, Knockout
Membrane potential
GNAT1
Retina
biology
Chemistry
Calcium-Binding Proteins
medicine.anatomical_structure
Mutation
Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells
Biophysics
biology.protein
sense organs
Transduction (physiology)
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15407748 and 00221295
- Volume :
- 151
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of General Physiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....dbbb5b0cde09d9c8fa7cea8d6d5f5e6a