Phosphorylation of the InaD Gene Product, a Photoreceptor Membrane Protein Required for Recovery of Visual Excitation (*)
- § To whom correspondence and reprint requests should be addressed: Universität Karlsruhe, Zoologisches Institut I, Postfach 6980, 76128 Karlsruhe, Germany. Tel.: 721-6082218; Fax: 721-6084848.
Abstract
In an approach directed to isolate and characterize key proteins of the transduction cascade in photoreceptors using the phosphoinositide
signaling pathway, we have isolated the Calliphora homolog of the Drosophila InaD gene product, which in Drosophila InaD mutants causes slow deactivation of the light response. By screening a retinal cDNA library with antibodies directed against
photoreceptor membrane proteins, we have isolated a cDNA coding for an amino acid sequence of 665 residues (M
= 73,349). The sequence displays 65.3% identity (77.3% similarity) with the Drosophila InaD gene product. Probing Western blots with monospecific antibodies directed against peptides comprising amino acids 272-542
(anti-InaD-(272-542)) or amino acids 643-655 (anti-InaD-(643-655)) of the InaD gene product revealed that the Calliphora InaD protein is specifically associated with the signal-transducing rhabdomeral photoreceptor membrane from which it can be extracted
by high salt buffer containing 1.5 M NaCl. As five out of eight consensus sequences for protein kinase C phosphorylation reside
within stretches of 10-16 amino acids that are identical in the Drosophila and Calliphora InaD protein, the InaD gene product is likely to be a target of protein kinase C. Phosphorylation studies with isolated rhabdomeral photoreceptor
membranes followed by InaD immunoprecipitation revealed that the InaD protein is a phosphoprotein. In vitro phosphorylation is, at least to some extent, Ca
-dependent and activated by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. The inaC-encoded eye-specific form of a protein kinase C (eye-PKC) is co-precipitated by antibodies specific for the InaD protein from detergent extracts of rhabdomeral photoreceptor membranes, suggesting that the InaD protein and eye-PKC are interacting in these membranes. Co-precipitating with the InaD protein and eye-PKC are two other key components of the transduction pathway, namely the trp protein, which is proposed to form a Ca
channel, and the norpA-encoded phospholipase C, the primary target enzyme of the transduction pathway. It is proposed that the rise of the intracellular
Ca
concentration upon visual excitation initiates the phosphorylation of the InaD protein by eye-PKC and thereby modulates its function in the control of the light response.
Footnotes
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↵* This work was supported by funds provided by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Pa 274/3-4. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
The nucleotide sequence from which the amino acid sequence reported in this paper was deduced has been submitted to the GenBank(™)/EMBL Data Bank with accession number Z69883.
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↵1 The abbreviations used are:
- trp
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transient receptor potential
- inaC
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inactivation-no afterpotential C
- InaD
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inactivation-no afterpotential D
- norpA
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no receptor potential A
- PAGE
-
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
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- Received January 11, 1996.
- © 1996 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











