Molecular characterization of the cyclic nucleotide-gated cation channel of bovine rod outer segments

The cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) cation channel of rod photoreceptors plays an important role in the perception of light. The channel gating is the final step in the visual transduction cascade. The cloning (Kaupp et al., 1989) of what is now known to be the CNG channel α subunit facilitated its...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dose, Andrea Christina
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/4785
Description
Summary:The cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) cation channel of rod photoreceptors plays an important role in the perception of light. The channel gating is the final step in the visual transduction cascade. The cloning (Kaupp et al., 1989) of what is now known to be the CNG channel α subunit facilitated its molecular characterization. A heterologous expression system was developed to examine molecular aspects of the α and β subunits of the CNG channel. Expression in mammalian cells helped resolve confusion regarding the JVL of the rod CNG channel a subunit. Although the cDNA codes for an 80 kDa protein, the a subunit exists in the rod outer segment as a 63 kDa protein suggesting the existence of a processing mechanism. PCR was used to construct cDNA clones which code for both the 63 and 80 kDa forms of the a subunit of the rod CNG channel. A polyclonal antibody, generated to specifically label the 80 kDa α subunit, was used in conjunction with a monoclonal antibody specific for the 63 kDa α subunit in labeling studies. These antibodies were shown to be mono-specific, capable of differentiating between the two size forms of the a subunit. Immunohistochemical studies demonstrated that the 63 kDa α subunit is the predominant species in the rod outer segment while the 80 kDa form is present in very low quantities. Rod outer segment (ROS) purification on sucrose gradients also showed that the 80 kDa form co-sediments with the 63 kDa α subunit indicating that the two size forms coexist in the outer segment. Examining the α subunits of the photoreceptors of another species demonstrated similar processing of the CNG α subunit polypeptides, however, an olfactory a subunit did not appear to undergo similar processing. The cloned CNG channel β subunit cDNA codes for a protein with a predicted molecular mass of 155 kDa (Korschen et al, 1995). Heterologous expression of the β subunit cDNA yielded a 240 kDa protein, positively identifying the 240 kDa protein in ROS which co-purifies with the a subunit as the CNG β subunit. Construction and expression of a truncated form of the (3 subunit demonstrated that it is the glutamic acidrich N-terminal portion of the (3 subunit that is responsible for its anomalous migration on an SDS gel. Co-expression of both subunits in mammalian cells indicated that the 3 subunit was not responsible for the processing of the α subunit. As seen for the subunits of the native CNG channel the heterologously expressed α and β subunits coimmunoprecipitated. The subunit interaction was not dependent on the 92 N terminal amino acids of the 80 kDa α subunit or on the glutamic acid-rich portion of the P subunit. A method for reconstitution of the heterologously expressed CNG channel was also developed. The expressed a subunit reconstituted alone did not generate functional cGMP-gated channels. Reconstitution of the heterologously expressed channel complex comprising the 80 kDa α and complete β subunits generated functional channels. Compared to the native CNG channel, 10% of the heterologously expressed channel complex exhibited cGMP-gated channel activity. This is the first example of reconstitution of a heterologously expressed cation channel into lipid vesicles for Ca²⁺ efflux measurements. The system presented here will be useful to further define CNG α and β subunit interactions and to carry out structure-function studies on the channel using a biochemical efflux assay. === Medicine, Faculty of === Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Department of === Graduate