Invertebrate photoreceptors use the inositol-lipid signaling cascade for phototransduction. A useful approach to dissect this pathway and its regulation has been provided by the isolation of Drosophila visual mutants. We measured extracellular changes of Ca2+ [delta Ca2+]o in Drosophila retina using Ca(2+)-selective microelectrodes in both the transient receptor potential (trp) mutant, in which the calcium permeability of the light-sensitive channels is greatly diminished and in the inactivation-but-no-afterpotential C (inaC) mutant which lacks photoreceptor-specific protein kinase C (PKC). Illumination induced a decrease in extracellular [Ca2+] with kinetics and magnitude that changed with light intensity. Compared to wild-type, the light-induced decrease in [Ca2+]o (the Ca2+ signal) was diminished in trp but significantly enhanced in inaC. The enhanced Ca2+ signal was diminished in the double mutant inaC;trp indicating that the effect of the trp mutation overrides the enhancement observed in the absence of eye-PKC. We suggest that the decrease in [Ca2+]o reflects light-induced Ca2+ influx into the photoreceptors and that the trp mutation blocks a large fraction of this Ca2+ influx, while the absence of eye specific PKC leads to enhancement of light-induced Ca2+ influx. This suggestion was supported by Ca2+ measurements in isolated ommatidia loaded with the fluorescent Ca2+ indicator, Ca Green-5N, which indicated an approximately threefold larger light-induced increase in cellular Ca2+ in inaC relative to WT. Our observations are consistent with the hypothesis that TRP is a light activated Ca2+ channel and that the increased Ca2+ influx observed in the absence of PKC is mediated mainly via the TRP channel.
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1 December 1994
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December 01 1994
Genetic dissection of light-induced Ca2+ influx into Drosophila photoreceptors.
A Peretz,
A Peretz
Department of Physiology, Hadassah Medical School, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.
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C Sandler,
C Sandler
Department of Physiology, Hadassah Medical School, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.
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K Kirschfeld,
K Kirschfeld
Department of Physiology, Hadassah Medical School, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.
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R C Hardie,
R C Hardie
Department of Physiology, Hadassah Medical School, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.
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B Minke
B Minke
Department of Physiology, Hadassah Medical School, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.
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A Peretz
,
C Sandler
,
K Kirschfeld
,
R C Hardie
,
B Minke
Department of Physiology, Hadassah Medical School, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
J Gen Physiol (1994) 104 (6): 1057–1077.
Citation
A Peretz, C Sandler, K Kirschfeld, R C Hardie, B Minke; Genetic dissection of light-induced Ca2+ influx into Drosophila photoreceptors.. J Gen Physiol 1 December 1994; 104 (6): 1057–1077. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.104.6.1057
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