A cGMP-gated cation channel in depolarizing photoreceptors of the lizard parietal eye

Nature. 1997 Feb 27;385(6619):815-9. doi: 10.1038/385815a0.

Abstract

Rods and cones of the two vertebrate lateral eyes hyperpolarize when illuminated, a response generated by a cyclic GMP cascade leading to cGMP hydrolysis and consequently the closure of cGMP-gated, non-selective cation channels that are open in darkness. Lizards and other lower vertebrates also have a parietal (third) eye, which contains ciliary photoreceptors that under dark-adapted conditions depolarize to light instead. Depolarizing light responses are characteristic of most invertebrate rhabdomeric photoreceptors, and are thought to involve a phosphoinositide signalling pathway (see, for example, refs 7-9). Surprisingly, we have found in excised membrane patches a cGMP-gated channel that is selectively present at high density on the outer segment (the presumptive light-sensitive part) of the parietal eye photoreceptor. Like the light-activated channel of the cell, it is non-selective among cations. Inositol trisphosphate (InsP3) had no effect on the same membrane patches. These findings suggest that the photoreceptors of the parietal eye, like rods and cones, use a cGMP cascade and not an InsP3-mediated pathway for phototransduction, but in this case light increases cGMP. A unifying principle of evolutionary significance emerges: that phototransductions in various ciliary photoreceptors, whether hyperpolarizing or depolarizing, uniformly use a cGMP cascade and a cGMP-gated channel to generate the light response, although there are rich variations in the details.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cations, Divalent / metabolism
  • Cell Membrane / metabolism
  • Cyclic GMP / physiology*
  • Cyclic Nucleotide-Gated Cation Channels
  • In Vitro Techniques
  • Ion Channel Gating*
  • Ion Channels / physiology*
  • Light
  • Lizards / anatomy & histology
  • Lizards / physiology*
  • Membrane Potentials
  • Patch-Clamp Techniques
  • Photoreceptor Cells / physiology*
  • Vision, Ocular / physiology*

Substances

  • Cations, Divalent
  • Cyclic Nucleotide-Gated Cation Channels
  • Ion Channels
  • Cyclic GMP