Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception
Ophthalmology Research Joyce Tombran-Tink, PhD, and Colin J. Barn...
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Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception
Ophthalmology Research Joyce Tombran-Tink, PhD, and Colin J. Barnstable, DPhil SERIES EDITORS
Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception, edited by Joyce Tombran-Tink, Phd, and Colin J. Barnstable, D Phil, 2008 Mechanisms of the Glaucomas: Disease Processes and Therapeutic Modalities, edited by M. Bruce Shields, MD, Joyce Tombran-Tink, PhD, and Colin Barnstable, DPhil, 2008 Ocular Transporters in Ophthalmic Diseases and Drug Delivery, edited by Joyce TombranTink, PhD, and Colin J. Barnstable, DPhil, 2008 Visual Prosthesis and Ophthalmic Devices: New Hope in Sight, edited by Joseph F. Rizzo, MD, Joyce Tombran-Tink, PhD, and Colin J. Barnstable, DPhil, 2007 Retinal Degenerations: Biology, Diagnostics, and Therapeutics, edited by Joyce TombranTink, PhD, and Colin J. Barnstable, DPhil, 2007 Ocular Angiogenesis: Diseases, Mechanisms, and Therapeutics, edited by Joyce TombranTink, PhD, and Colin J. Barnstable, DPhil, 2006
Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by Joyce Tombran-Tink, PhD Department of Ophthalmology Department of Neural and Behavioral Sciences Milton S. Hershey Medical Center Penn State University College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, USA
Colin J. Barnstable, DPhil Department of Neural and Behavioral Sciences Milton S. Hershey Medical Center Penn State University College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, USA
Editors and Series Editors Joyce Tombran-Tink, PhD Department of Ophthalmology Department of Neural and Behavioral Sciences Milton S. Hershey Medical Center Penn State University College of Medicine Hershey, PA, USA
Colin J. Barnstable, DPhil Department of Neural and Behavioral Sciences Milton S. Hershey Medical Center Penn State University College of Medicine Hershey, PA, USA
ISBN: 978-1-58829-957-4 e-ISBN: 978-1-59745-374-5 DOI: 10.1007/978-1-59745-374-5 Library of Congress Control Number: 2008925918 © 2008 Humana Press, a part of Springer Science + Business Media, LLC All rights reserved. This work may not be translated or copied in whole or in part without the written permission of the publisher (Humana Press, 999 Riverview Drive, Suite 208, Totowa, NJ 07512 USA), except for brief excerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis. Use in connection with any form of information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed is forbidden. The use in this publication of trade names, trademarks, service marks, and similar terms, even if they are not identified as such, is not to be taken as an expression of opinion as to whether or not they are subject to proprietary rights. While the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of going to press, neither the authors nor the editors nor the publisher can accept any legal responsibility for any errors or omissions that may be made. The publisher makes no warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein. Cover illustration: Figure 2, Chapter 1, “An Organ of Exquisite Perfection,” by George Ayoub. Adapted from a diagram from www.webvision.med.utah.edu. Modified by Nancy Fallatt. Back cover images from Figure 1, Chapter 17, “Multifocal Oscillatory Potentials of the Human Retina,” by Anne Kurtenbach and Herbert Jägle. Printed on acid-free paper 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 springer.com
Preface Sensitivity to light is a near-universal attribute of living organisms. It can be seen in the tropic responses of plants, in movements of many bacteria and unicellular organisms, as well as in the more complex visual responses of most animals. While the mechanisms of light detection and the behavioral consequences of its detection in these species are a series of fascinating stories, this volume is concerned with vision in its more classical interpretation. Although ancient philosophers, including Aristotle and Ptolemy, thought that the function of the eye was to emit light and illuminate objects, it has been over a thousand years since the Persian Alhazan (Abu Ali Hasan Ibn al-Haitham) explained that vision was the result of light coming from an object into the eyes. What happened to the light after traversing the optical path of the eyes remained unclear for many centuries. Leonardo daVinci and others of that era thought that light was channeled back to the ventricles of the brain through the optic nerves. In the early nineteenth century, as the structure of the eye, and particularly the retina, were examined more carefully, it became apparent that vision was linked to a transformation process, which occurred in the retina and specifically in the photoreceptors. The visual pigments and their sensitivity to light were described in the mid-nineteenth century. In the first half of the twentieth century, the pioneering work of Wald showed that the visual pigment was a protein with an attached molecule that had properties of a carotenoid. The identification of this chromophore and its derivatives as retinal and retinol and the enzymatic conversion of one to the other were landmark studies carried out in the laboratories of Morton in England and Wald in the United States. This finding was the cornerstone for the next major breakthrough in our understanding of the visual transduction cascade. In a follow-up study, Wald and his coworkers Hubbard and Brown found that the active visual pigment chromophore was 11-cis retinal, and that light induced a transition in this pigment to the all-trans form. We now know that the light-induced change in the conformation of 11-cis retinal is the fundamental step in converting light energy into chemical energy in the retina. The next major breakthrough in our understanding of the visual transduction cascade, the conversion of this cis–trans isomerization of the opsin chromophore, part of the rhodopsin complex, into changes in membrane conductance and synaptic signaling took another 30 years to understand. The work during this period showed that the lightsensitive rhodopsin machinery is primarily located in disks that are completely isolated from the plasma membrane but electrical signals involve changes in conductance at the plasma membrane of the rod photoreceptors. Perhaps the most important realization in this story is that rod photoreceptors need an internal signal molecule. For many years, the two rival candidates for this internal signal were calcium and cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP). Physiological measurements showed that changes occurred in calcium fluxes in rod photoreceptors on illumination, a finding that later led to the identification of a biochemically defined light-sensitive enzymatic machinery that hydrolyzed cGMP. The critical role of cGMP v
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in visual transduction was later established when Fesenko showed that this nucleotide could directly regulate the opening of a novel class of membrane channels, the cyclic nucleotide-gated cation channels. Thus, the pathway from light to an alteration in rod photoreceptor membrane conductance was finally established in the twentieth century and over the past decade has been characterized in much greater detail. We now know that photoreceptors cannot regenerate 11-cis retinal by themselves, and that all-trans retinal from the photoreceptors is carried via a number of retinoid-binding proteins to the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells, where it is regenerated to 11-cis retinal. We also know that photoreceptors have the remarkable ability to adapt to different levels of background illumination with minimal loss of sensitivity, and that visual transduction by itself is not sufficient to create signals that can be transmitted back to the visual cortex. The information from photoreceptors passes through many types of retinal neurons, and a highly processed signal is sent back to visual centers in the brain through the ganglion cell axons so that the signals can be interpreted. Thus, we have found that vision is a much more complex and dynamic process than those initially proposed by the ancient philosophers, and that it occurs through an exquisite biochemical transduction system made possible through the concerted effort of all cell types in the retina. In this text, the authors discuss many important facets of the visual transduction cascade, including photoreceptor membrane conductance, how the RPE regenerates 11-cis retinal, photoreceptor adaptation to various levels of illumination and the biochemical basis of this phenomenon as well as its psychophysical consequences, how the retina develops into its final structure, how signals are processed in the retinal synaptic layers, and how changes in the retina and RPE influence normal aging. An important message in this volume is that as we continue to understand the molecular and biochemical intricacies of visual transduction and the many aspects of aging and retinal degeneration, we can adopt a series of dietary and lifestyle changes and with pharmaceutical aids can slow the decline in visual function. Whether this will be enough to stave off loss of vision or onset of age-related disease remains to be seen. Loss of vision is paralyzing to individuals, their family members, and the health care system. The recent statistics from the National Eye Institute show that there is an increase in the numbers of the elderly with visual impairment, and that this will continue to rise with the burgeoning aging population. Thus, there is an urgent need to understand the biochemical mechanisms that allow us to see and to study how these mechanisms are affected by aging and pathology so that better therapeutics can be developed to make vision possible at all stages of our lives. Joyce Tombran-Tink Colin J. Barnstable
Contents Preface..................................................................................................................... Contributors ............................................................................................................ Companion CD ....................................................................................................... Part I
Evolution of the Visual System
1 An Organ of Exquisite Perfection ..................................................... George Ayoub Part II
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3
Photoreceptor Structure, Function, and Development
2
Development of the Foveal Specialization ....................................... Keely M. Bumsted O’Brien
17
3
An Update on the Regulation of Rod Photoreceptor Development .. Edward M. Levine and Sabine Fuhrmann
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Part III 4
5
The Retinal Pigment Epithelium and the Visual Cycle
Photoreceptor–RPE Interactions: Physiology and Molecular Mechanisms .......................................................... Silvia C. Finnemann and Yongen Chang Molecular Biology of IRBP and Its Role in the Visual Cycle .......... Diane E. Borst, Jeffrey H. Boatright, and John M. Nickerson
Part IV
Regulation of Photoresponses by Phosphorylation .......................... Alecia K. Gross, Qiong Wang, and Theodore G. Wensel
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The cGMP Signaling Pathway in Retinal Photoreceptors and the Central Role of Photoreceptor Phosphodiesterase (PDE6)............................................................ Rick H. Cote
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10
87
Visual Signaling in the Outer Retina
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8
67
125
141
Rhodopsin Structure, Function, and Involvement in Retinitis Pigmentosa ................................................................. Scott Gleim and John Hwa
171
Multiple Signaling Pathways Govern Calcium Homeostasis in Photoreceptor Inner Segments ............................ Tamas Szikra and David Krizaj
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The Transduction Channels of Rod and Cone Photoreceptors ......... Dimitri Tränkner vii
225
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Contents 11
Rhodopsins in Drosophila Color Vision ........................................... David Jukam, Preet Lidder, and Claude Desplan
251
12
INAD Signaling Complex of Drosophila Photoreceptors ................ Armin Huber and Nina E. Meyer
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Part V 13
Visual Processing in the Inner Retina
Visual Signal Processing in the Inner Retina .................................... Botir T. Sagdullaev, Tomomi Ichinose, Erika D. Eggers, and Peter D. Lukasiewicz
Part VI 14
287
Color Vision and Adaptive Processes
Human Cone Spectral Sensitivities and Color Vision Deficiencies ...................................................... Andrew Stockman and Lindsay T. Sharpe
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Luminous Efficiency Functions ........................................................ Lindsay T. Sharpe and Andrew Stockman
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Cone Pigments and Vision in the Mouse .......................................... Gerald H. Jacobs
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Multifocal Oscillatory Potentials of the Human Retina ................... Anne Kurtenbach and Herbert Jägle
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Part VII
Aging and Vision
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The Aging of the Retina ................................................................... Caren Bellmann and José A. Sahel
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Aging of the Retinal Pigment Epithelium ........................................ Michael E. Boulton
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Visual Transduction and Age-Related Changes in Lipofuscin ......... . . Małgorzata Rózanowski and Bartosz Rózanowski
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Part VIII 21
Nonphotoreceptor Light Detection and Circadian Rhythms
A Nonspecific System Provides Nonphotic Information for the Biological Clock ........................................... Marian H. Lewandowski
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22 The Circadian Clock: Physiology, Genes, and Disease .................... Michael C. Antle
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Index .........................................................................................................
501
Contributors Michael C. Antle, PhD • Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada George Ayoub, PhD • Neuroscience Research Institute and Department of Molecular Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA Colin J. Barnstable, DPhil • Department of Neural and Behavioral Sciences, Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Penn State University College of Medicine, Hershey, PA Caren Bellman, PhD • Centre Hospitalier National d’Ophtalmogie des Quinze-Vingts, and INSERM U 592, Paris, France Jeffrey H. Boatright, PhD • Department of Ophthalmology, Emory Eye Center, Emory University, Atlanta, GA Diane E. Borst, PhD • Department of Anatomy, Physiology, and Genetics, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD Michael E. Boulton, PhD • Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX Keely M. Bumsted O’Brien, PhD • Department of Optometry and Vision Science, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand Yongen Chang, PhD • Dyson Vision Research Institute, Weill Medical College, New York, NY Rick H. Cote, PhD • Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH Claude Desplan, PhD • Department of Biology, New York University, New York, NY Erika D. Eggers, PhD • Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO Silvia C. Finnemann, PhD • Dyson Vision Research Institute, Weill Medical College, New York, NY Sabine Fuhrmann, PhD • Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, John A. Moran Eye Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT Scott Gleim, MS • Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH Alecia K. Gross, PhD • Department of Vision Sciences, School of Optometry, University of Alabama, Birmingham, AL Armin Huber, PhD • Department of Biosensorics, Institute of Physiology, University of Hohenheim, 70599 Stuttgart, Germany John Hwa, MD, PhD • Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology and of Medicine, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH Tomomi Ichinose, MD, PhD • Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO Gerald H. Jacobs, PhD • Neuroscience Research Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA Herbert Jägle, MD • University Eye Hospital, Tübingen, Germany ix
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David Jukam, BS • Department of Biology, New York University, New York, NY David Krizaj, PhD • Departments of Ophthalmology and Physiology, University of Utah School of Medicine, 65 N Medical Drive, Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S.A. Anne Kurtenbach, PhD • University Eye Hospital, Tübingen, Germany Edward M. Levine, PhD • Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, John A. Moran Eye Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT Marian H. Lewandowski, PhD • Department of Neurophysiology and Chronobiology, Institute of Zoology, Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland Preet Lidder, PhD • Department of Biology, New York University, New York, NY Peter D. Lukasiewicz, PhD • Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO Nina E. Meyer, PhD • Department of Biosensorics, Institute of Physiology, University of Hohenheim, 70599 Stuttgart, Germany John M. Nickerson, PhD • Department of Ophthalmology, Emory Eye Center, Emory University, Atlanta, GA . Małgorzata Rózanowski, PhD • School of Optometry and Vision Sciences, Cardiff University, United Kingdom . Bartosz Rózanowski, PhD • Department of Cell Biology and Genetics, Institute of Biology, Pedagogical Academy of Kraków, Poland Botir T. Sagdullaev, PhD • Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO José A. Sahel, MD • Centre Hospitalier National d’Ophtalmogie des Quinze-Vingts, and INSERM U 592, Paris, France Lindsay T. Sharpe, PhD • Institute of Ophthalmology, London, United Kingdom Andrew Stockman, PhD • Institute of Ophthalmology, London, United Kingdom Tamas Szikra, PhD • Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research, Maulbeerstrasse 66, 4058 Basel, Switzerland Joyce Tombran-Tink, PhD • Department of Ophthalmology, Department of Neural and Behavioral Sciences, Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Penn State University College of Medicine, Hershey, PA Dimitri Tränkner, PhD • Institut für Biologische Informationsverarbeitung, Forschungszentrum Jülich, Germany Qiong Wang, PhD • Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX Theodore G. Wensel, PhD • Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX
COMPANION CD Black and White and Color illustrations are provided on the Companion CD attached to the inside back cover. The image files are organized into folders by chapter number and are viewable in most Web browsers. The CD is compatible with both Mac and PC operating systems.
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1 An Organ of Exquisite Perfection George Ayoub CONTENTS Optical Path Retinal Photoreception Retinal Pathways References
OPTICAL PATH As can be seen in Fig. 1, the eye is a nearly spherical structure, structurally limited by the sclera and cornea. The sclera is the tough white tissue that delimits the outer orbit of the eye, while the cornea is the clear portion in the front. The cornea is a focusing element for the visual path, providing more than half of the focusing power of the eye, with the lens handling the remainder. Focusing of light by the cornea and lens is necessary to create an image on the retina, which is the light-sensitive portion of the eye. This is much like the role of a camera lens in creating a clear image at the CCD (charge-coupled device) or film plane. Indeed, the cornea and lens are the two elements that focus the light, with the cornea fixed in focal length and the lens adjustable. They provide a double positive lens arrangement (i.e., two convex lenses) to accomplish this. Light is focused based on the cornea’s shape and refractive index. The cornea is a nearly spherical structure, slightly flattened to reduce spherical aberration. The index of refraction for light (n) as it passes through the cornea is 1.376. Since the index of refraction in air is 1.0, this change in the refractive index, along with the cornea’s convex shape, causes light rays to bend in a converging manner as they pass through [1–3]. The lens of the eye has a shape that is malleable, allowing this second focusing element in the visual path to be used to adjust the focal point, which allows us to form a clear image on the retina for objects from near to distant. The shape of the lens changes due to the action of two structures. The connective tissue encompassing the lens keeps it spherical, but the suspensory ligaments that surround it pull it into a flatter shape. The ciliary muscles counteract the pull of these ligaments and allow the lens to become more round. Thus, by contracting the ciliary muscles, we are able to focus on objects that are close at hand by increasing the curvature of the lens, thereby increasing its refractive power. Relaxation of this muscle allows us to focus on objects at a distance. From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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Fig. 1. Schematic of the eye and a corresponding micrograph of the retina. The eye structures are labeled and the retinal layers indicated as follows: retinal pigment epithelium (RPE); outer segments of photoreceptors (OS); inner segments of photoreceptors (IS); outer nuclear layer (ONL), which is composed primarily of photoreceptor cell nuclei; outer plexiform layer (OPL), which is the site for synaptic contact between photoreceptors, horizontal cells, and bipolar cells; inner nuclear layer (INL), the location of cell bodies of bipolar cells and most horizontal and amacrine cells; inner plexiform layer (IPL), the site of synaptic contact between bipolar cells, amacrine cells, and ganglion cells; ganglion cell layer (GCL), the location of most ganglion cell somata; and nerve fiber layer (NFL), comprised of the axons of ganglion cells.
As we age, the lens becomes less elastic, and the ability of it to round up decreases. The result is that our nearest clear point of vision moves further away with age. This situation is termed presbyopia [1, 2]. The refractive index of the lens is not a constant. The lens itself is made of over 2,000 layers of cells, with the refractive index of this tissue increasing at the center and being less at the front and back surfaces. The index of refraction at the cortex is 1.386, while the index at the inner core is 1.406. This means that the refractive index is matched to the cornea at the point where light enters the lens and then steps up and down as it passes through. A significant result of this feature is a decrease in reflection of light. As one can observe when light passes through glass (which has an index of refraction of about 1.5), some of the light is reflected. Indeed, this reflection is due to the light passing through the large change in refractive index. As light passes across a large change in refractive index, a portion of the light is reflected, and the larger the difference in the refractive indexes, the greater the reflection that is seen. For clear window glass, this amount of light reflected is 4% of the light at each surface (thus, 92% of the light passes through, with 4% reflected at the front surface of the window and an additional 4% at the back surface of the window). Because the refractive index of the lens changes gradually, less light is reflected as the
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light passes through, allowing for transmission of more of the light and virtual elimination of internal reflections that would otherwise compromise visual acuity [1–3]. Between the cornea and the lens is the iris. This structure provides an aperture that controls the amount of light that enters the eye and passes through to the retina. The iris is located between the two refractive surfaces, reducing distortion of the entering light. The iris is pigmented, and the opening of the iris is termed the pupil. This opening is reduced in brighter illumination and increased in dimmer illumination to provide sufficient stimulation for the retinal cells. Directly behind the cornea is a fluid-filled chamber; the fluid is called the aqueous humor. Fluid is continually secreted into this chamber and continually drained from it. In certain medical conditions, the drain rate of fluid is reduced, and pressure can build. This occurs in many types of glaucoma, in which the increase in pressure is gradual over time and can be controlled to some extent by medication that reduces fluid production. An uncontrolled elevation of pressure causes a gradual loss of vision due to damage to the cells at the back of the eye that form the optic nerve [2]. While the aqueous humor fluid helps maintain the structure and curvature of the cornea, it is the gelatinous vitreous humor that maintains the full shape of the orb of the eye. The vitreous fills the region behind the lens and in front of the retina and provides sufficient pressure to keep the round shape of the eye. Optically, then, light passes through the cornea, aqueous humor, iris, lens, and vitreous humor on its path to the retina. The cornea and lens are the refractive elements, with the lens the only adjustable one, and the iris modulates the amount of light that passes. If there are aberrations in the shape of the eye or of the cornea, then distortion of vision occurs. When the cornea is not radially symmetric, astigmatism results, by which the focus at one angle differs slightly from the focal distance at another angle. If the overall shape of the cornea is rounder or flatter, then the conditions of myopia (nearsightedness) or hyperopia (farsightedness) result because the focal distance is slightly different from what is needed to form a clear image on the retina. Thus, slight changes in the shape of the cornea, since it is the primary focusing element, result in deviations from normal focus. For those who are myopic, the decrease in lens malleability seen in presbyopia has a delayed impact on vision compared to the hyperopic individual. The reason is simply that as the near point of vision moves further from the eyes, if one has started with a closer near point of vision (as is the case in myopia), then the effect is to move the near point to a normal reading distance, while for the normal sighted or hyperopic, it is to move the nearest point of vision to a distance further than is readily readable (indeed, one typically finds that the letters are too small when they are in focus, and so use of reading glasses or a magnifying lens is needed to compensate). RETINAL PHOTORECEPTION Photoreception has two major components: optical and biochemical. The optical component is primarily described in the preceding section, although there are critical retinal portions to this. The biochemical component occurs in the outer retina.
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Fig. 2. The organization of the retina. (Courtesy of Dr. Helga Kolb.)
Photoreception Optics Optically, light focused by the front of the eye is imaged onto the photoreceptor layer of the retina. The retina itself is a thin neural tissue that lines the inside orbit of the eye and is comprised of several layers of cells, as can be seen in Fig. 1. These cells are in repeating arrays, such that in any given area of retina, the same cell types are found in a similar arrangement. The optical arrangement is that light passes first through ganglion cells, then amacrine, bipolar, and horizontal cells before arriving at the photoreceptors, which make up the outer retina (see Fig. 2) [1–4]. The retinal layers are defined from the inner to outer regions of the eye, with the ganglion cell axon fibers the innermost layer of the retina and the photoreceptors and epithelium the outermost retinal layers. Within the retina, there are two types of photoreceptors: The rod photoreceptors provide for our night vision and are exquisitely sensitive to small amounts of light; the cone photoreceptors provide color vision. Cone photoreceptors are responsive to one of three colors (red, green, or blue); combined, the relative intensities of these three primary colors that we can see allow us to determine the color of any object and to see the full spectrum of the rainbow. This feature of only detecting three colors is why we can see all colors when we look at an LCD (liquid crystal display) screen, which is also only comprised of red, green, and blue (RGB), or at a magazine photo, which is typically made from cyan, magenta, and yellow (the complementary colors to RGB) along with black. The central part of the retina, called the fovea, contains a very high number of cone photoreceptors packed into a very small space, about 160,000 cone photoreceptors per square millimeter. This high density of cones is why when we look
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straight at an object we can make out a large amount of detail. The cones in the fovea then provide our highest visual acuity, which is 0.017° (300 µrad, or 1.03 arc minute) of our visual field. This works out to be a 19-inch object a mile away or the size of the pixels on a television or LCD monitor at normal viewing distance. A simple exercise to observe this is to view a computer monitor at a close distance and note that you can see the individual pixels, while at normal distance they are indistinguishable [1, 3]. The fovea provides this high acuity for the central 2° of our visual field. Within this region, there is a pit in the retina as the other cells are angled to the sides of the fovea, eliminating these cells from the path of the light onto the cones. Although the retinal neurons are transparent, for the centralmost vision, the small refraction that the cells create would decrement acuity slightly; thus their angling away from the fovea removes this potential detriment, retaining our crisp vision [1, 3]. Away from the fovea, there is a mixture of rod and cone photoreceptors, and the acuity is much more limited, although the sensitivity to low light levels is higher due to the presence of rods. One can observe this on a dark night, such as when something catches your eye and you turn to look at it, but it is not as bright as when seen in the periphery of one’s vision. Outside of the neural retina lies the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). This RPE has two essential functions for photoreception, one optical and the other biochemical. Optically, the RPE cells are black, and they surround the outer segments of the photoreceptors. This means that any light that passes around a photoreceptor is absorbed by the RPE. Thus, no light is reflected back onto the retina. This black curtain keeps us from seeing halos around objects and is therefore essential for high acuity. Notably, in nocturnal animals, such as cats, the epithelium is reflective, allowing them to capture every bit of light as they reflect the photons that are not captured in the first pass through. Their vision in dim light is thus very good, but their acuity is not as high as it is for humans due to this trade-off [5, 6]. Photoreception Biochemistry The other key function of the RPE for photoreception is in regeneration of the visual pigment of the photoreceptors. For this, the RPE cells use vitamin A. The RPE exchanges and renews the photosensitive molecule from the photoreceptors, creating an intimate collaboration between these two cells. Hence, the photoreceptors rely on the RPE for both optical purposes and biochemical function. Photoreception takes place in the outer segments of the photoreceptors. Photoreceptors are segmented into three regions: the outer segment, which is packed with photosensitive molecules; the inner segment, which contains the cell nucleus and a large amount of mitochondria to generate the energy for this photoreception; and the synaptic terminal, which communicates to the next cells in the visual system. The biochemical process of photoreception is referred to as phototransduction. Molecules of visual pigment called opsin are embedded within the membrane of the rods and cones. Indeed, the rods and cones have an elaboration of membrane in their outer segments, with the cones having membrane folded over and over on itself and the rods containing a stack of membranous disks, which look much like a large stack of pancakes, within a sleeve of rod membrane. All this membrane is loaded with opsin
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molecules (called rhodopsin in the rods), and these opsins absorb light of a specific range of wavelengths. Rhodopsin absorbs light of about 500 nm, while cone opsins absorb light of 420, 530, and 560 nm (blue, green, and red, respectively). These are the peak wavelengths, meaning that at these colors the opsin molecules are maximally stimulated. They absorb light 50 nm or more greater and lesser than their optimal color, but less strongly, so their response to light decreases as the color is further from their optimal wavelength [1, 4, 7]. When light is absorbed by rhodopsin, the light energy is absorbed by the portion of the molecule called retinal. This retinal is what is regenerated from vitamin A. When retinal absorbs light, its shape changes from a bent form to a straight form (from 11-cis retinal to all-trans retinal). This change in shape begins a cascade of events that result in a change in the voltage across the membrane of the photoreceptor. Briefly, the stimulation of rhodopsin (changing the shape of retinal) results in activation of a molecule called transducin. Transducin is a guanosine triphosphate (GTP)-dependent protein (also called a G protein, part of a family of signaling molecules within many cells). The activation of transducin in turn activates an enzyme called phosphodiesterase. Phosphodiesterase is an enzyme that catalyzes a reaction in which cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP; a signaling molecule within cells) is broken down to GMP. While the cyclic form of GMP is a signaling molecule, the noncyclic form is not. The removal of cGMP from photoreceptors results in a change in the membrane potential of the cells [7]. Photoreceptors have a collection of membrane-spanning channels that allow specific ions to pass through. One of these channels is specific for Na+ ions (sodium, a positively charged ion). This channel requires the presence of cGMP in the cell for its gate to open and Na to travel through. Since cells have more Na outside than inside, when the Na gate is open, the positively charged Na ions enter the cell, making the cell more positive in charge than it had been. These cGMP-gated Na channels then are open in the dark but become closed when the cells see light. Thus, when stimulated by light, photoreceptors become more negatively charged. This change in their membrane voltage is the first electrical sign that we have seen the light and is communicated to the next cells in the retina [1, 4]. Membrane Voltages The voltage across the membrane of a cell is a standard feature of all cells of the nervous system, and it is the change in this membrane voltage that is used by neurons to process and transmit information. Thus, for all neurons, small changes in their membrane voltage are elicited by incoming information, with the incoming information arising from other neurons or from sense organs. These voltage changes (additive or subtractive, as some changes are positive charges and some are negative charges) result in a net change to the cell’s membrane voltage. In certain neurons, when this excursion in the membrane voltage reaches a threshold voltage level, the cell creates a large spike in its membrane voltage called an action potential. The action potential is regenerative, so the electrical spike travels along the thin tubular extension of the neuron called the axon and travels along this axon at a high rate of speed (over 100 m/s in some cells). The amount of communication between neurons is determined in large part by the size of the change in the membrane voltage of the first cell. Now, while the change in
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membrane voltage is variable, the spikes along the axon are all-or-none. To accomplish this, there is a conversion of an analog signal (the gradual changes in membrane voltage) to a digital signal (the pulses or spikes along the axon) that occurs within the neuron. This conversion is very much like the action of an analog-to-digital converter seen in electronics as, for example, when a visual image is converted to a series of digital bits by the CCD of a digital camera. This pulsatile or digital signal is then reconverted back to an excursion in membrane potential (or analog signal) at the synapse. The synapse is a specialized region where two neurons come very close to each other. At the synapse, the first cell (the presynaptic neuron) releases a chemical called a neurotransmitter in amounts proportional to the number of action potentials. The postsynaptic neuron has receptor molecules in its membrane that bind to this neurotransmitter and open gates for ion channels, resulting in a change in the membrane voltage of the postsynaptic cell. Most neurons have many synapses, so all the changes in membrane voltage sum to create the new membrane voltage of the postsynaptic neuron, which determines its action potential rate and amount of neurotransmitter release onto a third neuron. This process continues, with the synapse essentially performing a mathematical function on the information transmitted. The result is that some synapses will simply add signals, some will determine their rate, some will integrate, and so on. In this way, our synapses act as individual processors, with their processing determined both by the chemical used as the neurotransmitter at that synapse and the molecule used as its receptor. These two combine to determine the type of processing that occurs at any one synapse. Given that our brains have about 100 billion neurons, and each neuron may have a thousand synapses, this makes our brains equivalent to a massively parallel computer comprised of 100 billion processors [1]. So, what does all this have to do with photoreceptors? The rods and cones are the cells of the visual system that create the first change in membrane potential, and they then communicate this information to the next cells via their synapse. The RPE regenerates the visual pigment, allowing the photoreceptors to continue functioning over and over. Blind Spot There is a unique spot in each eye where there are no photoreceptors of any type. This spot is where the optic nerve exits the eye and where the blood vessels that supply the retina enter and leave. The region is called the optic disk, or the blind spot, because we cannot see anything in that area. It is located nasal of the fovea by several millimeters and thus is in the opposite side of the visual field for each eye. The optic disk is centered about 4–5 mm from the fovea and is typically about 1.5–2 mm in diameter. It is not a perfect circle and varies somewhat in shape from person to person. It is necessary for our high-acuity vision as this is the port through which blood flows to nourish the metabolically active retina and information leaves from the eye. But, in that region we see no light. How is it that we do not notice this absence of vision [1, 2]? First, we have binocular vision, meaning that each eye is conveying information about the same visual scene, but from a slightly different vantage point. This, of course, allows us to determine the distance of various objects, but it also allows us to fill in the full information of a scene when a part of it is missing from one eye. Second, even when we are observing a scene with just one eye, the visual center of our brain fills in when there is information lacking. So, when we do not have information
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about a small space in our visual field, our brain fills this in with the same scene that we see in the adjacent areas. Thus, if it is a missing spot in the sky, the brain fills in the appropriate blue and continues the cloud pattern that is immediately adjacent. This means that if there is a single spot in an otherwise uniform field, and if that spot is only imaged onto the blind spot, it is invisible to us. You can test this directly with the diagram below. Close your left eye and focus on the cross with your right eye. Move this page closer and further from your eye until the mark on the right disappears. It should occur as you move this page slightly closer to your eye than reading distance.
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A great advantage of the optic disk and retinal arrangement is to give vertebrates higher acuity and speedier vision than would be otherwise possible. The reason is that the RPE, which provides essential biochemical regeneration necessary for photoreception, allows the photoreceptors to respond much more rapidly to changes in light than possible if they had to maintain their full biochemical function independently. And, the RPE provides that essential “black screen” behind our photoreceptors to retain our high visual acuity. Were the retina to be reversed, with photoreceptors in the inner retina, our acuity would likely be lessened and the speed of response reduced, and the profusion of blood vessels to provide nutrition for the added photoreceptor function would further limit this. Indeed, for invertebrates, for which the photoreceptors are first cells in the optical path, accommodations are made (such as having a compound eye, as seen in flies) that substantially restrict visual acuity. RETINAL PATHWAYS Through Pathway Once a rod or cone has transduced the light to a change in membrane potential, it then conveys this by its synapse onto a bipolar cell, with one group of bipolar cells receiving rod information and another receiving cone information. The bipolar cells are so named because they have processes going in two directions from their cell body. Their dendrites receive information from photoreceptors, and their axons transmit information to the ganglion cells. Bipolar cells thus span the inner half of the retina (see Fig. 1), from the outer plexiform layer (OPL; where the photoreceptors form their synaptic contacts onto bipolar and horizontal cells) to the inner plexiform layer (IPL; where the bipolar cells form synaptic contacts onto amacrine and ganglion cells). The cell bodies of the bipolar cells comprise most of the inner nuclear layer (INL), while the cell bodies of the photoreceptors comprise the outer nuclear layer (ONL) [4, 8]. Bipolar cells then synapse onto retinal ganglion cells in the IPL. The ganglion cell bodies comprise the ganglion cell layer (GCL), and their axons make the nerve fiber layer (NFL). This straight-through pathway also involves processing of the visual information. A significant part of this for the cone bipolar cells is to convert the signals into on and off signals, meaning responses to light onset or to light offset. So, half the bipolar cells
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are dedicated to transmitting an increase in signal when there is an increase in light in the region they subtend, while the other half of the cone bipolar cells convey a larger signal when there is a decrement in the light in the region they subtend. The first group is called ON bipolar cells, and the latter group is termed OFF bipolar cells simply to indicate they turn on or off with light, respectively. This on-and-off feature is conserved in transmission to the ganglion cells, so they also exhibit the same types of signals [4, 8, 9]. It is the ON pathway that facilitates our perception of light on a dark background; the OFF pathway provides the perception of dark images on a light background. These parallel channels to convey visual information are key in providing one other feature of our senses: the exquisite sensitivity to change. Like our other sensory systems, our visual system has the feature of observing any change in the visual image. One can readily observe this by staring at a constant image for tens of seconds. As you stare at one point in the image, the periphery gradually disappears and with time even the central portion of the image will fade. Anyone who has watched for meteors is especially aware of this; when you fixate on one star, all the others gradually disappear, but when a meteor (or airplane) crosses the sky it is vividly seen. Indeed, in reference to another point, when we then turn to look directly at the meteor, we see that it is much dimmer than when we saw it with our peripheral vision [4]. While cone bipolar cells are either ON or OFF, rod bipolar cells are all of the ON variety. Thus, for dim light, we are keenly aware when the light is on or increasing but less so when it is decreasing. Receptive Fields The visual field or receptive field of each photoreceptor is quite small. As discussed above, it is about 1 arc minute in size or the size of one pixel on an LCD monitor at normal viewing distance. In the central part of our vision, there is a correspondence of cones with their respective bipolar cells, so that this level of acuity is maintained. Thus, the receptive fields of cone bipolar cells approximate the receptive fields of the cone photoreceptors in the central fovea. But, as one moves further out, more and more cones synapse onto each bipolar cell, resulting in a lessening of acuity with distance from the fovea. Hence, the size of the receptive fields of bipolar cells is determined by the number of photoreceptors from which they receive input. Cone bipolar cell receptive fields are small, especially in the fovea, while rod bipolar cell receptive fields are much larger. One reason is that cones, in providing high-acuity vision, require each spot of light to be processed for us to maintain that resolution. The rod bipolars, which are used to determine if a dim light is present, combine the signals of many rods to increase the chance of seeing a very small light signal [1, 4]. Lateral Pathway Now, if we simply had the straight-through pathway from photoreceptors to bipolar cells to ganglion cells, we would have vision that is somewhat grainy, and we would not have the excellent discrimination of edges that is inherent in our vision. The two lateral paths in the retina are essential in rectifying this. The horizontal cells make lateral interactions in the outer retina, while the amacrine cells make lateral interactions in the inner retina.
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These laterally oriented cells are inhibitory, meaning that they provide negative feedback, or suppress the signals, to the adjacent cells. Thus, when a horizontal cell receives information of bright light from one photoreceptor, it emits a signal of darkness to the adjacent photoreceptors, lessening their light response. In any constant field of illumination, this simply decreases the overall response. But, in regions where there is a border of light and dark, this has the effect of increasing the lightness at the edge of the light region and increasing the darkness at the edge of the dark region. The result is contrast enhancement created by the outer retina, a feature that has been observed and re-created by many impressionist painters (one may readily call to mind the images of dancers by Edgar Dégas, in which the dark stage has a black line adjacent to a dancer, while the lightness of her arm or leg has a white line at its edge to denote the contrast enhancement perceived by the painter’s visual system). The other feature these laterally acting cells have is to create receptive fields in the bipolar and ganglion cells that are ON in the center and OFF in the surround for ON bipolar cells (and OFF center, ON surround for OFF bipolar cells). This is referred to as a center-surround receptive field, and it is the type of receptive field present for bipolar cells and ganglion cells. These center-surround receptive fields are due to the action of the horizontal cells, which connect to a large number of photoreceptors and thus make the larger inhibitory “surround” for each bipolar cell receptive field. Thus, the inhibitory feedback of the horizontal cells allows a sharpening of perception, calling to attention the contrasts inherent in our visual scenes [1, 4, 8]. Retinal Ganglion Cells The retinal ganglion cells, while being the third cell in the visual path (photoreceptor to bipolar to ganglion), also benefit from the lateral processing of the horizontal and amacrine cells. The horizontal feedback occurs in the outer retina, in the OPL, while the amacrine feedback occurs in the IPL. This IPL is a rich network of connections between bipolar, amacrine, and ganglion cells. And, it is spatially organized, with the OFF bipolar cells making synaptic contact in the outer half of the IPL and the ON bipolar cells making synaptic contact onto ganglion cell dendrites in the inner half of the IPL [4, 8, 9]. The ganglion cells that receive signals from ON bipolar cells are also ON center cells, having an OFF surround. The ones with OFF input are OFF center, ON surround ganglion cells. At this point in the retina, the visual information is much more processed, so the information that is transmitted to the vision center of the brain is not only of the color pixels we see, but also of the color contrast, contrast enhancement, and in some animals the information of the movement of objects. The ganglion cells are the innermost part of the retina; their axons join together at the optic disk and leave the eye by passing through the retina and sclera, creating the optic nerve. This nerve travels to the lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus, located in the center of the head. The ganglion cells are the first visual system cells to have a long axon, and they create action potentials to transmit their visual information from the eye. These action potentials thus carry information from the eye to the thalamus of the brain, where the information is then relayed to the visual cortex, which is located in the back of the brain in an area called the occipital lobe. It is in the visual cortex that we assemble the signals
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to find patterns and movements of those shapes as well as create the binocular image from the information sent by the two eyes [1]. Retinal Glia In addition to the neural cells of the retina, there are glial cells that span the thickness of the retina. These are primarily retinal Müller cells, and they serve several essential functions to maintain retinal function. The Müller cells extend from the photoreceptors to the ganglion cells and provide a biochemical support for retinal cells, removing excess neurotransmitter that has been released and restricting its diffusion. These cells also help balance the external ionic milieu around the neural cells, and they are implicated in other physiological processes. It is evident that when these cells or the RPE cells are not functioning properly in their physical and biochemical support, retinal neurons are subsequently damaged, and vision is attenuated or lost. This is the case for a variety of conditions and diseases of the eye [10]. REFERENCES 1. Dowling JE. The retina an approachable part of the brain. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1987. 2. Walls GL. The vertebrate eye and its adaptive radiation. Hafner, New York, 1967. 3. Westheimer G. Specifying and controlling the optical image on the human retina. Prog Retin Eye Res 2006;25:19–42. 4. Kolb H. How the retina works. Am Sci 2003;91:28–35. 5. Fisher SK, Lewis GP, Linberg KA, Verado MR. Cellular remodeling in mammalian retina: results from studies of experimental retinal detachment. Prog Retin Eye Res 2005;24: 395–431. 6. Bharti K, Nguyen MT, Skuntz S, Bertuzzi S, Arnheiter H. The other pigment cell: specification and development of the pigmented epithelium of the vertebrate eye. Pigment Cell Res 2006;19:380–394. 7. Chen CK. The vertebrate phototransduction cascade: amplification and termination mechanisms. Rev Physiol Biochem Pharmacol 2005;154:101–121. 8. Lukasiewicz PD. Synaptic mechanisms that shape visual signaling at the inner retina. Prog Brain Res 2005;147:205–218. 9. Baccus SA. Timing and computation in inner retinal circuitry. Annu Rev Physiol 2007;69: 271–290. 10. Newman EA. Calcium increases in retinal glial cells evoked by light-induced neuronal activity. J Neurosci 2005;25:5502–5510.
2 Development of the Foveal Specialization Keely M. Bumsted O’Brien CONTENTS Introduction Foveal Development Conclusions and Perspectives References
INTRODUCTION “Vision is the foundation of intelligence and the chief source of our knowledge”[1]. Vision, our primary sensory modality, is supported by a complex anatomy and physiology that coordinates the interpretation of and interaction with our world. The initial steps in seeing begin in the retina, where the processing of important features such as color, form, and movement is initiated. These functions are mediated by interactions between a great diversity of cell types in the retina, the three glial and six major neuronal cell classes. The approximately 55 distinct retinal cell types are each nonrandomly distributed across the retina to maximize retinal coverage and are organized in characteristic topographic patterns. The most highly specialized area of our retina, which is also the focal point of cell topography, is located at the center of gaze in a region known as the macula leutea or macula. Within the macula is a morphologically distinct region called the fovea Centralis or fovea, which is responsible for the most acute color, spatial, and temporal visual resolution properties in primates [1–4]. The fovea is defined as a small anatomical pit or depression in the retina at the center of gaze; it lacks rod photoreceptors and has the highest density of cone photoreceptors. In humans, the fovea is responsible for our high visual acuity, measured to be 6/6 (20/20 or approximately 30 cycles per degree). Among mammals, the presence of a fovea is restricted to primates; however, many other vertebrates, such as many birds, certain species of fish, and chameleons, have a fovea and enhanced visual acuity [5–10]. All foveae share the common feature of a retinal pit, although many other characteristics, such as pit depth, width, cell composition, and density, are variable between species. In general, bird and fish foveae are smaller in diameter with steeper walls, leading to the description of the these foveae as convexiclivate [7, 11]. In addition to being steeper, many other vertebrate foveae contain a continuous inner nuclear layer (INL) and ganglion cell layer From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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(GCL) across the center of their pit, whereas these layers are missing in the human fovea [10]. In the pigeon (Columba livia), northern blue jay (Cyanocitta cristata), and ostrich (Struthio camelus) the fovea is shallower compared to the human, although visual acuity is close to, but slightly poorer than, human acuity under comparable conditions (approximately 16–20 cycles per degree) [10, 12–16]. Only the large birds of prey such as the wedge-tailed eagle (Aquila audax; 140 cycles per degree) have a higher visual acuity compared to primates. This increased acuity is likely based in the higher foveal cone density and has been suggested to be optically augmented by the steep structure of the pit [10, 13, 17]. The primate fovea is located in the center of the macula, an oval 1.5-mm wide yellow spot visible while viewing the fundus. The yellow color of the macula lutea is due to the presence of the carotenoid pigments lutein and zeaxanthin. Within the macular region lies the fovea (Fig. 1A, circle). The morphological features of the human fovea are characterized by a pit 600–800 µm wide that is lacking inner retinal neurons, blood vessels, and rod photoreceptors but contains the highest density of cones in the retina (Fig. 1B, bracketed region). Maximum foveal cone densities range from between about 100,000 and 400,000 cones/mm2 in humans (Fig. 1D; [18–24]). The very center of the fovea, the foveola, is further specialized in that it contains long- (L) and medium- (M) wavelength specific cone density peaks, while short- (S) wavelength specific cones, which elsewhere comprise 8–10% of the cone population, are absent from the central 20 µm of the foveola [3, 25]. Cone densities decline rapidly with eccentricity, such that even in the fovea there is a steep density gradient [20, 26]. Outside the region of high cone density, the edges of the fovea form a slope where the number of inner retinal neurons begins to increase as the foveal region gradually transitions to a fully layered retina at the rim margin (Fig. 1B, arrowheads). The retinal capillary network is present on the foveal rim but not on the foveal slope. The foveal rim is also distinguished by an accumulation of cells in the GCL and the INL [1, 2, 10, 26–28]. The accumulation of retinal ganglion cells on the foveal rim is correlated with the high density of cone photoreceptors in the foveal center (Fig. 1D) because each foveal cone stimulates two midget ganglion cells (i.e., one ON and one OFF). Each ON or OFF midget ganglion cell receives information from a single cone through an ON or OFF bipolar cell, respectively (Fig. 1C) [1, 29–31]. This dedicated line of information flow and the small size of the ganglion cell arbors and receptive fields in the central retina mean that individual foveal cones represent one small region of spatial information that is transmitted to the parvocellular layers of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus with little information loss (reviewed in [32]). Outside the fovea, there is a regular decrease in the density of cones, which is in parallel with the decrease in ganglion cell density and increased rod density (Fig. 1D). As the number of ganglion cells decreases, there is an increase in the size of ganglion cell dendritic arbors and receptive field sizes [33, 34]. Therefore, relative to the macular region, the peripheral retina has a greater summation of information due to the larger ganglion cell receptive field, lower cone densities, and increase in rod number [10, 20, 21, 35, 36]. The complex organization of the retina centered on the fovea is essential for our optimal visual functioning. When this topographical arrangement is compromised in the adult or during development, the result is poor vision. Almost a quarter of all adult
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Fig. 1. Characteristics of the adult human fovea. A Fundus photograph of a human macular region. The circled region indicates where the foveal pit is located. B Cross section of the human fovea stained with cresyl violet. In the center of the fovea (bracket), all the inner retinal neurons have been pushed aside, and the cones are found at a high density. The edges of the pit (arrowheads) contain a high density of ganglion cells and are where the edges of the avascular zone are located. C Diagram of a foveal cone, ON and OFF midget bipolar cell and ganglion cell circuit. Note the long axon of the foveal cone. D Photoreceptor densities across the human retina (modified from [18]). Cones peak in the center of the fovea and then fall quickly into the periphery. Rods are absent in the foveal center and peak outside the fovea. GC ganglion cell, GCL ganglion cell layer, INL inner nuclear layer, OD optic disk, ONL outer nuclear layer.
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visual impairment and many cases of childhood blindness are caused by defects in the fovea and “central” visual loss [37–47]. While the development of the human fovea has been previously reviewed, there has yet to be an overview specifically aimed at incorporating data from retinal development in nonprimate species with data available from primates. In this chapter, four key steps necessary for foveal development are defined and discussed: (1) the specification of foveal location at the center of gaze; (2) the generation of the rod-free zone; (3) the progressive increase in cone packing density and initial pit formation; and finally (4) the lengthy centrifugal displacement of the inner retinal cells (cells move away from the foveal center), forming the adult foveal pit and increase in cone density overlying the fovea. These steps must be executed in the correct sequence or foveal development will be stalled, resulting in foveal hypoplasia (discussed at the end of the chapter). FOVEAL DEVELOPMENT Foveal development in primates occurs over a protracted period, beginning before birth and then extending far into postnatal life. While the region of the retina in which the fovea will become established is the first to differentiate in early fetal life, establishment of adult-like characteristics of the fovea occurs a considerable time after birth in the final stages of retinal development. Therefore, the mechanisms that control the development of the foveal region must be tightly regulated over a long temporal sequence. The proper execution of each step is dependent on the success of the previous step. Any change in the normal progression of development will affect foveal structure and function (e.g., the degree of visual acuity). Specification of Foveal Location In the adult eye, the fovea is located 4.9 mm from the optic nerve head with little variability between eyes and individuals (Fig. 1A) [48]. These measures indicate that the placement of the fovea during development is tightly controlled and likely established early during retinal development. One possible scenario for placing the fovea would be that the foveal region is developing in a particular molecular environment that instructs progenitor cells to generate the unique properties of the macula. What are the signals that set up this environment? In the case of the fovea, first the location must be established. Using a chicken model, it has been shown that the specification of spatial location in the retina is determined as early as optic vesicle formation (in humans, this is approximately fetal week 3.4) [49–52]. Dividing cells located toward the distal tip of the optic vesicle has been shown by fate mapping lineage analysis techniques to give rise to central retinal regions, and cells in the anterior and posterior optic vesicle will give rise to the nasal and temporal retina, respectively [50, 52, 53]. These experiments did not take into account specific retinal location or photoreceptor topography. Further refinement of this regional map will allow the exact mapping of the future center of gaze. What controls the formation of the various axes and the central region of the retina? The address given to cells in different regions of the optic vesicle and optic cup is thought to be mediated by the expression of regionally specific genes, which segregate the developing eye into functionally distinct domains along the anterior posterior (AP) and dorsal ventral
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Fig. 2. Examples of compartmentalized gene expression in the developing eye. A The DV axis of the eye and early neural retina is subdivided into several domains based on the expression of specific genes. The dorsal retina is delineated by Tbx5, ephrin B2, ephrin B1, BMP 4, and RALDH. The ventral retina expresses Vax2, Pax2, RALDH 3, and RALDH6. B The temporal retina expresses Foxd1 (brain factor 2), CBF3, and Eph A3. Foxg1 (brain factor 1), SOHo-1, GH6, and CBF-1 delineate the nasal retinal region. The molecules that are specific for this region are CYP26, BMP2, and FGF8. D dorsal, N nasal, T temporal, V ventral. Modified from Schulte D, Bumsted-O’Brien KM. 2008.
(DV) axes [50, 52, 54–57]. Work from many groups has led to the creation of a regionally distinct topographic map (Fig. 2). The dorsal retina is delineated by a number of transcription factors and signaling molecules, including Tbx5, ephrin B2, ephrin B1, BMP 4, and RALDH1 [56–66], while the ventral retina expresses Vax2, Pax2, RALDH 3, and RALDH6 [55, 56, 59, 65, 67, 68] (Fig. 2A). The temporal retina is delineated Foxd1 (brain factor 2), CBF3, and Eph A3 [69, 70]. Foxg1 (brain factor 1), SOHo-1, GH6, and CBF-1 are segregated to the nasal retinal region [55–71] (Fig. 2B). There is some overlap of the nasal and temporal expression gradients; however, this does not seem to be important in setting up the photoreceptor patterning (Fig. 2B, white zone). All of the nasal/temporal restricted genes tested so far are involved in retinal ganglion cell pathfinding as manipulating expression does not perturb photoreceptor topography [56, 57, 72]. The dorsal and ventral expression patterns do not overlap along the horizontal meridian where the center of gaze is located; instead, there is a middle ground where neither dorsal nor ventral genes are expressed (Fig. 2A). The molecules that are specific for this region are CYP26, BMP2, BMP7, and FGF8 [73–75]. The expression of CYP26 allows for an abrupt step in the diffusion of Retinoic acid (RA) levels in the central retina. Overexpression of CYP26 induces a loss of ephrin B2 expression, a dorsal-associated gene [76]. It has been shown previously that the disturbance of ephrin B2 leads to a disorganization of the normal topographically organized retinal ganglion cell projections [57]. The expression of BMP2 along the horizontal meridian and BMP7 in the chicken area centralis may indicate that it could play a role in locating the region that will form the area centralis
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or fovea [73, 77]. Pax 6, an important regulatory gene in eye development, is expressed throughout the developing retina; however, the highest level of expression is in the central swath [78]. Overexpression of PAX6 in the developing eye extends the normally dorsally restricted domain of TBX5 and BMP4 into the ventral retina. PAX6 was shown to interact with VAX, leading to the modulation of PAX6 enhancer activity such that PAX6 function was inhibited in the ventral retina [78]. Collectively, these results lend strong support to the view that positional specification along both major retinal axes is already in place in the optic vesicle and early optic cup, a time before neurogenesis has been initiated. Thus, positional identities are assigned to the progenitor cells of the optic vesicle and optic cup long before the first postmitotic neurons differentiate in the retina. Formation of a Rod-Free Zone The next step in foveal development involves the formation of a rod-free zone. This region could be formed by either the generation of rods followed by selective cell death in the fovea or signaling (active or passive) to the progenitor cells to exclude the production of rods in the developing fovea. In this section, I argue that the latter mechanism is likely to be used in the formation of the human rod-free zone. Experiments in the chicken have provided evidence to support this argument. While chickens do not have a fovea, their retina contains a rod-free area centralis at the center of gaze that allows them to have an acuity of 7 cycles per degree [79, 80]. The chicken experiments also showed the importance of the regionally specific genes to the generation of the retinal axes and the specification of the rod-free zone. When Schulte and colleagues manipulated the ventrally expressed transcription factor VAX2, the rod-free zone was lost [56, 72]. Overexpression of the dorsal gene TBX5 causes local disturbances in the rod pattern but does not remove the rod-free zone [72]. This indicates that the boundaries set up by regional gene expression patterns are critical to localizing and specifying the rod-free zone of the central retinal region. The data in the chicken suggest that rods are actively excluded from the developing fovea. In humans, by the time that the optic vesicle invaginates to form the optic cup (fetal week 4.5), the developing retina, which lies on the inner side of the cup, has a dramatic expansion in the number of dividing cells [81]. Cell birth starts at the site of the future fovea and then spreads from the retinal center toward the periphery in a wave of cell birth. There is no clear evidence regarding when ganglion cells are generated in the human. In a morphological study, Mann reported the appearance of the first axons in the optic nerve at fetal week 7 [28]. An estimation of human cell birth can be extrapolated from cell birth dating data obtained in the developing monkey. These data suggest that the first cells to exit the cell cycle in humans, the retinal ganglion cells, appear around fetal week 7 in the foveal region [81–84]. When correlated with morphology, the data indicate that retinal ganglion cells are born slightly before fetal week 7. The remaining retinal cell types are born in an orderly sequence beginning in the fovea and then spreading out into the periphery. Horizontal cells are born shortly after ganglion cells in the incipient fovea between fetal weeks 7 and 8, followed by cone photoreceptors. Next, amacrine cells and bipolar cells become postmitotic. The last cell types to be generated are the rod photoreceptors and Müller glia [84]. All cells are postmitotic in the fovea by fetal week 10. In the periphery, the last cells have been generated by fetal week 30 [85].
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Fig. 3. Development of the rod-free zone. A Fetal week 11 human fovea with short cuboidal cones in the outer nuclear layer. Rods are not present in the fovea. The inner nuclear layer (INL) and ganglion cell layer (GCL) with the intervening synaptic layers are present in the incipient fovea. B Fetal week 11 edge of the fovea. Rods begin to be detected (arrows) on the edge of the fovea. C Rods on the edge of the fovea are labeled with an antibody to NR2E3 (arrows) and D Nrl (arrows) (modified from [89]). D The location of the rod-free zone (pale shading) in relation to the rod-dominant retina (dark shading). E The unknown signals (?) working on the progenitor cell (PC) to produce rods and a rod-free zone are indicated in the diagram to the right of the retina diagram. OD optic disk.
From the earliest point of identification, fetal week 11, rod photoreceptors are missing from the foveal center (Fig. 3A). Rods are first observed on the foveal edge (Fig. 3B–D, arrows). This lack of rods in the fovea in the human appears to be intricately linked to cell generation rather than resulting from the death of inappropriately generated rods. During the development of the fovea, it has been shown that there is little cell death in the human photoreceptor layer, indicating that it is unlikely that excess photoreceptors are generated then eliminated by cell death [86, 87]. In addition, molecules associated with rod differentiation, Nrl and NR2E3, are never detected in the foveal region, suggesting that rods are developmentally excluded from the fovea [88, 89] (Fig. 3C,D).
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Therefore, in the case of rods it seems that they are never generated in the fovea center. While there has been progress investigating the inductive influences on progenitor cells to stimulate rod differentiation [89, 90], the signals that control the exclusive differentiation of cones remain to be established. Therefore, the first two steps of foveal development are intricately linked, although the exact mechanism utilized to establish foveal location and exclude rods remains elusive (Fig. 3E). Cones, Ganglion Cells, and Initial Pit Formation The lack of rods in the fovea appears to be an early developmental patterning event; however, other characteristics of the adult fovea such as the accumulation of a high cone photoreceptor density and the formation of the pit appear to be later developmental events. When the foveal region becomes identifiable at fetal week 11, foveal neurons are postmitotic, synapses have been formed, all the retinal layers are present, and foveal cones can be identified as short, fat cuboidal cells lying in a single layer at a density of 11,200 cones/mm2 (Fig. 4A) [2, 26, 83, 85, 91, 92]. Which forces act on the foveal cones to influence them to change from a cuboidal shape to the thin, elongated cone in the mature fovea? The first observable change in the foveal cone is the elongation of the axonal process (Figs. 4 and 5). This alteration of cell shape is necessary for the cones to maintain their synaptic connections as they pack tightly into the fovea to reach the average adult cone density of approximately 200,000 cones/mm2 [3]. The exact mechanism by which the cones begin to change their morphology such that they can pack more tightly in the center of the fovea is unknown; however, it has been proposed that the mechanism for this elongation is the differential expression of the fibroblast growth factor (FGF) family members and their receptors on foveal cones [93, 94]. FGF signaling may mediate the morphological cell shape changes of foveal cones that are associated with increased density in the foveal cone mosaic in the early phase of photoreceptor accumulation (Fig. 5) [92, 95]. In humans at Fetal week 14, the maximum spatial density of foveal ganglion cells is approximately 22,500 cells/mm2, and this density increases to about 31,500 cells/mm2 at Fetal weeks 16–17 [85]. Therefore, at the same time that the cones are changing shape, the ganglion cells begin to accumulate in the incipient foveal region (Fig. 4B, arrow) [28]. The timing of this peak in maximum ganglion cell density corresponds with the appearance of a distinctive dome in the GCL (Fig. 4B,C, arrow) [27, 28, 91]. Once the GCL reaches a critical thickness (approximately 7–9 cells thick), the initial formation of the pit is initiated between fetal weeks 24 and 28 (Fig. 4C,D, arrow) [28]. The beginning of the foveal pit begins as a shallow depression and is observed as a progressive decrease in the depth of the inner retinal layers [2]. By fetal week 28, the fovea contains a clearly defined pit with ganglion cells and inner retinal neurons beginning to move away from the foveal center (Fig. 4D, arrow). The foveal cones are further elongating, their pedicles are being pulled away from the foveal center, and the density of foveal cones increases to 22,268 cells/mm2 [26, 92]. The cells of the inner and outer nuclear layers move away from the foveal center (centrifugal migration), while at the same time foveal cones translocate in the opposite direction (centripetal), becoming more densely packed (18,500 cones/mm2) (Fig. 4E) [26, 92]. It is at this point that the third stage of foveal development is completed. In the next stage, there are additional influences on the
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Fig. 4. Morphological development of the human fovea. A A cross section of the fovea at fetal week 11 stained with cresyl violet. There are no rods present in the foveal center. B Cross section of a fetal week 16 human fovea stained with cresyl violet. Note the cuboidal shape of the foveal cones. C Fetal week 24 foveal retinal cross section. The arrow indicates the center of the developing fovea and where there is an accumulation of ganglion cells in the foveal center in the region where the pit will form. D A detailed drawing of a fetal week 28 foveal cross section. This is the first age at which an indentation in the fovea is observed (arrow). E Drawing of a fetal week 32 foveal cross section. The pit is becoming deeper and the inner retinal layers thinning. Note the length of the foveal cones compared to those in A. F Postnatal 8 week drawing of a foveal retinal cross section. The foveal pit is much deeper compared to fetal week 32, and the foveal cone axons have significantly elongated in the foveal center (arrow). (A and B modified from [91].) (C, D, E, and F modified from high-resolution scans from [27].) The arrows indicate the center of the developing fovea.
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Fig. 5. Drawing of the central foveal cones throughout development. At fetal week 11, the cones are cuboidal and then begin to slowly elongate from fetal weeks 16, 20, and 24. These ages correspond with the increase in cone packing that may be mediated by fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling. By fetal week 32, the cones begin to elongate further, such that after birth, they are significantly thinner with longer axons compared with fetal week 11. These cones are changing shape due to proposed mechanical influences that form the deep foveal pit. (Cones were traced from images in Fig. 4 and from images from [91].)
forming foveal region that mediate the further increase in cone cell density and complete pit formation. Retinal blood vessels are first detected emerging from the optic disk at approximately fetal week 14 and rapidly spread into the superior and inferior quadrants of the retina; however, the vascularization of the macular region is delayed. By fetal week 22, inner retinal vessels have grown out to cover greater than 50% of the retina, but the ring of vessels that will form the avascular zone in the adult has not yet begun to encircle the central retina. This ring of vasculature starts forming between fetal weeks 25 and 28, but the precise timing of the formation of the foveal avascular zone in humans has not been established. Interestingly, the foveal region is never vascularized during normal development, suggesting that there is a repulsive cue acting to repel the vessels [96–98]. There does seem to be a correlation between the formation of the avascular zone and the formation of the fovea; however, this has yet to be tested. A role for the vasculature in the formation of mature foveal pit is discussed in the next section. Deep Foveal Pit Formation The next stage of foveal development is the refinement of the pit to exclude all nonphotoreceptor cells and increase cone photoreceptor numbers. The initial increase in cone density follows a shallow slope; however, between fetal week 32 and birth, the slope flattens (Figs. 4E and 6). After birth, there is a marked change in the slope such that the accumulation of cones is accelerated (Fig. 4F). As cells of the inner and outer nuclear layers are displaced, they maintain their initial synaptic relationships, which are critical for the maintenance of acuity in the one–one circuitry of the midget system (Figs. 1C, 4F, and 5).
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The mechanism of deep foveal pit formation is not yet known. It is possible that these changes are related to the completion of the ring of vasculature around the fovea. The pit becomes progressively deeper and more pronounced through the rest of fetal development and early childhood. The length of the cone axons continues to increase, and the cell bodies become thinner (Fig. 5). The final adult cone density peaks at more than 200,000 cones/mm2 [2, 26, 28, 99]. There has been considerable debate concerning the mechanism of pit formation. This is because it is difficult to test the hypotheses since an animal model has not been available that has a foveal pit and is easily manipulated during retinal development. A recent model for foveal pit formation was proposed by Springer and Hendrickson and based on morphological observations in the developing human retina [100]. They applied a virtual engineering model combined with finite element analysis to identify mechanical mechanisms important for pit formation. They hypothesized that the pit emerges within the foveal region because it contains an avascular zone, which makes this region more elastic compared to surrounding vascularized retina (Fig. 4 E,F, arrowheads). The conclusion from their modeling study is that once differential elasticity is established by the avascular zone, pit formation and a concomitant increase in cone density can be driven by either intraocular pressure or ocular growth-induced retinal stretch. Foveal Hypoplasia The long developmental time frame of foveal development allows for numerous points where mutations or missteps can occur. These mistakes or defects can lead to foveal hypoplasia, a condition in which an individual lacks a foveal pit, avascular zone, and rod-free zone [41]. Foveal hypoplasia results in decreased vision with reduced acuity (6/24 to 6/120 or 20/80 to 20/400 [41, 101]). The underlying cause of foveal hypoplasia is not yet known, although it has been associated with many eye conditions, including albinism, microcornea, familial and presenile cataracts, and PAX6 mutations [38, 39, 44]. The degree of hypoplasia is likely correlated with the gene defect. For example, it has been suggested that PAX6 is associated with the specification of foveal location. If foveal location is not established (step 1), then the correct microenvironment for setting up the rod-free zone and pit formation will be missing, thus halting development at an early time point. In the case of albinism, the central retina is lacking a rod-free zone, which suggests that this step is critical to stimulate a fovea [41]. It may be that the presence of vasculature across the foveal region also inhibits pit formation. Taken together, the characteristics of foveal hypoplasia suggest that interruption of any of the steps outlined in this chapter will cause moderate-to-severe central retinal malformations that have a profound effect on functional vision (Fig. 6). CONCLUSIONS AND PERSPECTIVES Changes in the foveal cone photoreceptors and the progression of primate foveal pit formation are summarized in Figs. 5 and 6. These figures show the progression of the different steps of foveal development in relation to major cellular movements and developmental events. Step 1 is initiated very early in retinal development (approximately fetal week 3). Once the location is specified, the correct cellular environment must be
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Fig. 6. Summary of the stages of foveal development. The steps in foveal development are outlined with reference to the change in cone density, developmental age, and important morphological events. Fwk fetal week OD optic disk (Modified from [104].)
specified during the second step, which is completed by fetal week 11. Step 3 slowly increases the density of cones via signaling molecules such as the FGFs (Figs. 5 and 6). Step 3 is completed around fetal week 32. Once the avascular ring is completed around birth, there is a sharp rise in the density of cones and a concomitant increase in cone length and decrease in cone diameter (Figs. 5 and 6). The mature fovea is apparent at approximately 4 years of age [2, 26]. When the structure of the human foveal pit is compared to the deep foveal pits of fish, birds, and lizards, it is difficult to imagine that they are formed by a similar mechanism. For example, one of the requirements of the virtual engineering model is the presence of an avascular zone. As none of these animal models has retinal vasculature, any forces proposed to be acting on the avacular zone to form a deep pit would be missing. Therefore, step 4 may not be required for the formation of all foveae, but this restriction does not have to be placed on the other preceding three steps when investigating a mechanism for early foveal development in nonprimates. There may be a universal mechanism in place to carry out the initial steps in foveal formation, such as in step 1, the specification of location. All of the observed foveal pits are faithfully located in a particular retinal location, indicating that the placement of the fovea at the center of gaze is an important step in the formation of the fovea. The development of the rod-free zone (step 2) also appears to be a generally conserved foveal requirement. The majority of foveae studied have a clearly defined rod-free zone in the fovea [6–8, 102, 103]. An increased cone density (step 3) appears to be a common feature in the center of foveal pits. This suggests that it is possible that the mechanisms that function early in foveal development are conserved among species to create a rod-free, cone-rich foveal pit, but that the formation of either a deep, steep foveal pit or a wide, shallow pit (primates) is dependent on divergent mechanisms. The argument concerning the evolution of the fovea can be summarized in the question: Is there can be an evolutionarily conserved mechanism to create the foveal pit in all these creatures, or does the distant relation of the primates, birds, and lizards
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require that a completely separate mechanism exist? Likely, the answer lies somewhere in the middle. The primate fovea can be characterized by the modification of retinal lamination, specialization of photoreceptors, and variation of the retinal vascular pattern. All of these characteristics combine to mediate our high visual acuity. The development of the fovea begins early in fetal development and continues until at least 4 years of age. When the four steps outlined in this chapter are faithfully reproduced, a characteristic fovea is formed (Figs. 1B and 5). Future research will help to elucidate the mechanisms by which the foveal specialization is formed with the hope of recapitulating these events in congenitally malformed or diseased retinae. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank Drs. Jan Provis, Dorothea Schulte, and Anita Hendrickson for valuable discussions of this topic. A special thanks is extended to Dr. Provis for her critical reading of the manuscript. Research in my labs is supported by the Center for Vision Excellence, the University of Auckland Staff Research Fund, and the Auckland Medical Research Foundation. REFERENCES 1. Polyak S. The retina. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1941. 2. Hendrickson AE, Yuodelis C. The morphological development of the human fovea. Ophthalmology 1984;91;603–612. 3. Curcio CA, et al. Distribution and morphology of human cone photoreceptors stained with anti-blue opsin. J Comp Neurol 1991;312;610–624. 4. Robinson, S. Development of the mammalian retina. In: Dreher B, Robinson S, eds. Neuroanatomy of the visual pathways and their development. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press; 1991:69–128. 5. Collin SP, Collin HB. Topographic analysis of the retinal ganglion cell layer and optic nerve in the sandlance Limnichthyes fasciatus (Creeiidae, Perciformes). J Comp Neurol 1988;278:226–241. 6. Collin SP, Collin HB. The morphology of the retina and lens of the sandlance, Limnichthyes fasciatus (Creeiidae). Exp Biol 1988;47:209–218. 7. Collin SP, Collin HB. The foveal photoreceptor mosaic in the pipefish, Corythoichthyes paxtoni (Syngnathidae, Teleostei). Histol Histopathol 1999;14:369–382. 8. Collin SP, Lloyd DJ, Wagner HJ. Foveate vision in deep-sea teleosts: a comparison of primary visual and olfactory inputs. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 2000;355:1315–1320. 9. Fritsches KA, Marshall NJ. Independent and conjugate eye movements during optokinesis in teleost fish. J Exp Biol 2002;205:1241–1252. 10. Walls GL. The vertebrate eye and its adaptive radiation. Bloomfield Hills, MI: Cranbrook Institute of Science; 1942. 11. Kirk EC, Kay RF. The evolution of high visual acuity in the Anthropoidea. In: Ross CF, Kay RF, eds. Anthropoid origins: new visions, New York: Kluwer /Plenum; 2004:539–602. 12. Boire D, Dufour JS, Theoret H, Ptito M. Quantitative analysis of the retinal ganglion cell layer in the ostrich, Struthio camelus. Brain Behav Evol 2001;58:343–355. 13. Fite KV, Rosenfield-Wessels S. A comparative study of deep avian foveas. Brain Behav Evol 1975;12:97–115.
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3 An Update on the Regulation of Rod Photoreceptor Development Edward M. Levine and Sabine Fuhrmann CONTENTS Introduction Brief Overview of Retinal Development and Early Stages of Rod Photoreceptor Differentiation Transcription Factors Extracellular Factors and Signal Transduction Pathways Conclusions and Future Prospects References
INTRODUCTION Photoreceptors are the most abundant retinal cells in all vertebrate species, and rods significantly outnumber cones in humans. Many retinal degenerative diseases arise due to perturbations in rod photoreceptor physiology or survival. Replacing dying photoreceptors by de novo production of new photoreceptors from a stem cell source is a strategy much sought after for treating these diseases. This approach in its essence requires our ability to manipulate stem cells and recapitulate the process of rod photoreceptor development. Another treatment strategy is to preserve existing photoreceptor function or survival by delivery of cytokines or growth factors to the diseased retina. In this case, we need to understand how the factors affect the photoreceptor cell (and other exposed cells as well). Since several of the factors being tested in clinical trials have key roles in photoreceptor development (and retinal development in general), our understanding of these processes is essential for evaluating the cause-and-effect relationships between the factors and the observed changes in treated photoreceptors. In a review article published in 2000, we and our postdoctoral mentor, Dr. Thomas Reh, described what was known at the time regarding the importance of cellular interactions and the identities and roles of soluble factors in rod photoreceptor development [1]. In this chapter, we summarize the state of the field, with particular attention paid to the findings made since 2000 and with an emphasis on both cell-intrinsic and -extrinsic factors.
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BRIEF OVERVIEW OF RETINAL DEVELOPMENT AND EARLY STAGES OF ROD PHOTORECEPTOR DIFFERENTIATION To appreciate the complexity of photoreceptor differentiation, it is important to have a basic understanding of how the retina develops. Because of space limitations, we can only briefly outline the major points. However, there are many excellent reviews that consider retinal development from various perspectives, and listed here is a very limited sampling of what is available [2–8]. The seven neuroretinal cell classes all derive from a common pool of progenitor cells known as retinal progenitor cells (RPCs). RPCs are resident in the optic neuroepithelium and are produced as a result of patterning events that occur during optic vesicle formation. Early on, the RPCs proliferate extensively and soon after initiate neuro- and gliogenesis. These processes, collectively termed retinal histogenesis, occur over significantly different developmental timescales among different vertebrate species, but certain key aspects of retinal histogenesis are remarkably well conserved. For example, there is a temporal progression in the production of cells in each class, and this order does not vary appreciably. Retinal ganglion cells, horizontal cells, and cone photoreceptors are born the earliest, followed by amacrine cells and rod photoreceptors; born last are the bipolar cells and Müller glia. As an example, Rapaport et al. [9] published an impressive quantitative analysis of retinal histogenesis in the rat. Cell marking-based lineage analyses revealed that as a population, RPCs are multipotential and lineage independent, meaning that these cells can produce more than one cell type, and their pattern of cell division is not deterministic with respect to cell output (although see [10] for a provocative contrast). An important issue then is to understand how the temporal order is established. Several now-classic cell culture and cell ablation experiments led to the model proposing that extracellular environmental factors are the primary driving forces behind retinal histogenesis and the regulation of its temporal progression. As a result, many extracellular signals and their signal transduction pathways are now known that influence histogenesis, and their precise functions and interactions are actively under investigation. More recent studies showed that RPCs are not completely naïve, however. A modification of the above model states that the responsiveness of RPCs to signals changes as development proceeds, and that this is regulated by changes in gene expression. It is proposed that these changes influence the competence of RPCs to produce specific cells and to bias their output in a temporal and progressive manner. Thus, a more complete model of retinal histogenesis incorporates both cell-extrinsic and -intrinsic factors, and much effort is currently devoted to understanding how these factors are integrated into specific networks. It is generally thought that cell-type-specific differentiation does not occur until the RPC exits the cell cycle. This is based in part on the outcomes of the lineage experiments (e.g., a single RPC division [two-cell clone]) can produce daughter cells with different fates) and on the collective observations that the expression of markers specific or deterministic for any single cell class or cell type is extremely rare in RPCs. Soon after RPCs exit the cell cycle, changes in cellular behavior and gene expression begin, and this continues until differentiation is complete. In the case of murine rod photoreceptors, this progression can last for over 2 weeks. Since the period of murine rod photoreceptor
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generation from RPCs is known and certain early morphological and molecular markers exist, postmitotic cells differentiating along the rod photoreceptor pathway can be defined as rod precursors, which distinguish them from RPCs. Rod precursors are also distinguishable from mature rod photoreceptors on the basis that rod inner and outer segment morphogenesis and synaptogenesis are barely under way, and the genes specific for rod phototransduction are not yet expressed. Rods have been traditionally identified as such when they express the rhodopsin gene because of its exquisite cell type specificity. Perhaps because of this, many studies of rod development have focused on the cellular parameters and molecular factors associated with rhodopsin expression. For example, the timing of activation of rhodopsin expression in the rat retina varies between rod precursors born before and those born after E19 [11, 12] and the timing of rhodopsin expression in other species has been correlated with the timing of cone opsin expression in neighboring cells (see Chapter 1). There are now several signaling pathways and transcription factors identified that regulate these parameters as well as control the expression of other factors important for rod function and survival. As another example, the exquisite cell type specificity of rhodopsin expression prompted efforts to identify the cis-acting DNA sequences and associated transcription factors that regulate rhodopsin expression. Many of those factors, perhaps not surprisingly in retrospect, play important roles in the pathway leading to mature rods. In the next sections, we describe those factors that in recent work were strongly implicated in controlling the important early steps in rod photoreceptor differentiation. Table 1 summarizes extracellular and transcription factors implicated in different aspects of rod photoreceptor development. Included in the table are those factors we are not able to describe due to space constraints. TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Genes Basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) genes constitute a large class of transcription factors that contain a stretch of positively charged amino acids termed the basic motif, which is important for DNA binding, and a helix-loop-helix domain, which is important for dimerization with other bHLH proteins. The bHLH genes have important roles in the nervous system, from the earliest stages of embryogenesis to the survival and function of mature neurons. In the Drosophila retina, the bHLH gene atonal has an essential role in specifying the R8 photoreceptor, which sets in motion the wave of neurogenesis in each presumptive ommatidial unit [35]. No fewer than ten bHLH genes have been identified in the mammalian retina, and most have some role either in RPC maintenance or in promoting cell fate and differentiation of neurons and Müller glia [36–38]. Among the retinal expressed bHLH genes, Neuro D may have the most direct role in photoreceptor development because of its abundant, although not necessarily exclusive, expression in photoreceptor precursors and because its over- or misexpression is sufficient to promote photoreceptor differentiation in RPCs or in nonneural ocular cells such as RPE and iris epithelial cells [39–47]. Neuro D expression is also correlated with de novo photoreceptor differentiation in damage-induced regeneration in the chick retina [48], and Neuro D is expressed in the rod precursor lineage in the adult goldfish retina [49], a
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Factor Otx2 CRX QRX NRL NR2E3 Retinoic acid NeuroD Wnt4 Sonic hedgehog FGF Laminin β2 PEDF VEGF GDNF Activin
IGF-1 Rb Taurine
WIF-1 CNTF, LIF
EGFR
Description Activators TF, required for photoreceptor precursors TF, sufficient for photoreceptor fate, essential for expression of photoreceptor-specific genes (function) but not for fate TF, interacts with NRL and CRX, regulates survival or maturation of rods in chick and frog TF, sufficient and required for rod differentiation Nuclear receptor, suppresses cone fate, interacts with NRL to promote rod fate Nuclear receptor, stimulates rod differentiation, promotes NRL and CRX expression TF, promotes photoreceptor differentiation, required for rod differentiation in chick Secreted glycoprotein, promotes rod differentiation in vitro Morphogen, accelerates rod differentiation in vitro in rat, required for rod differentiation in zebrafish in vivo Fibroblast growth factor, promotes rhodopsin expression in vitro ECM component, promotes rod differentiation and required for inner and outer segment elongation Pigment epithelium-derived factor, promotes photoreceptor differentiation in frog Vascular endothelial growth factor, stimulates rod differentiation Glia-derived neurotrophic factor, promotes differentiation and survival of chick rods in vitro Growth factor, promotes rod differentiation in rat retinal cultures and inhibits terminal photoreceptor differentiation in chick Insulin-like growth factor, stimulates formation of rods in teleost fish Retinoblastoma protein, required for rod differentiation in mouse Promotes differentiation of rod photoreceptors in vivo and in vitro Inhibitors ECM component, inhibits rod differentiation in vitro Cytokines, inhibit terminal rod photoreceptor differentiation transiently in mammals via STAT3 phosphorylation and SOCS3 activation, can induce cell death of rod precursors Epidermal growth factor receptor and ligands such as EGF and TGFα inhibit rod differentiation
ECM extracellular matrix, TF transcription factor
Reference See text See text See text See text See text See text See text See text 13, 14 15–19 20–22 23 24 25 26, 27
28, 29 30, 31 See text
See text See text
32–34
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specialized neurogenic population that gives rise to new rods throughout the life of the organism. Resolving the requirement of Neuro D, and for that matter, other bHLH genes, in rod photoreceptor differentiation has been more difficult. Although work done in the chick retina suggests that Neuro D is required for photoreceptor development in that organism [50], the predominant photoreceptor phenotype in Neuro D knockout mice is decreased survival [42, 43]. One reason why Neuro D may not be required for rod photoreceptor differentiation in mice is because of redundancy or functional compensation by other bHLH proteins in its absence. To address this, Akagi et al. (2004) [51] developed multiple bHLH triple-knockout mice, and the most severe deficit in photoreceptor number was observed in the Mash1−/−, Math3−/−, Neuro D−/− triple-knockout mouse. However, rod photoreceptor development is still evident even in this combinatorial mutant. Furthermore, the high levels of photoreceptor apoptosis observed in this mutant leaves it unresolved whether elimination of these three genes causes a direct problem in photoreceptor specification or differentiation. Compounding the problem further, other bHLH genes are upregulated when certain bHLH genes are genetically inactivated, and there is ample evidence for functional redundancy among these genes. Otx2 Otx2 is a homeobox gene that is widely expressed in early embryos and becomes progressively restricted to the anterior portion of the neural tube. Consistent with its expression pattern, the Otx2 knockout mouse is embryonic lethal and lacks forebrain structures [52–54]. In the developing eye, Otx2 is expressed in the developing RPE and retina, and genetic studies in compound mutants of Otx2 and its paralog Otx1 showed that these genes are essential for RPE development [55–57]. Retinal Otx2 expression has been examined in several vertebrate species, and some differences in timing of activation have been reported (i.e., proliferating RPC vs. postmitotic precursors) [55–60]. In mice, Otx2 is expressed early in retinal development, but in postmitotic cells and in a pattern consistent with the generation of retinal neurons, most notably photoreceptors. Otx2 expression in the photoreceptors is transient and is ultimately expressed in the inner nuclear layer (INL) in presumptive bipolar cells, horizontal cells, and Müller glia [61]. Baas et al. (2000) [62] showed that Otx2 subcellular localization (nuclear vs. cytoplasmic) is developmentally regulated and cell type specific. To investigate the role of Otx2 in neural retinal development, Nishida et al. (2003) [61] generated conditional knockouts by crossing mice with a floxed Otx2 allele to mice with Cre recombinase expression controlled by the Crx promoter. Although some Otx2expressing cells persisted in these mice, the changes in retinal cell differentiation were dramatic. There was an almost-complete absence of rhodopsin-expressing cells and a major increase in the number of cells expressing markers of amacrine cells. The magnitude of these changes suggests that loss of Otx2 culminated in a change in fate from rods to amacrine cells, and this is consistent with Otx2 overexpression experiments. However, there is a large increase in apoptotic cells, and this could account in part for the loss in rods. Thus, although the effects of Otx2 inactivation on the retina are likely
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to be complex, these experiments demonstrated the essential nature of Otx2 for rod photoreceptor development or survival. Crx Crx is a homeobox gene that is closely related to Otx2. Initial reports showed that mutations in the human CRX gene cause autosomal dominant cone-rod dystrophy (CORD2) and late-onset retinitis pigmentosa [63, 64]. Subsequent studies showed that both dominant and recessive CRX mutations are also linked to Leber’s congenital amaurosis (LCA7), suggesting that CRX function is important for photoreceptor development in humans [65–71]. As described next, work done in animal models and in biochemical studies strongly supports this idea. Crx was discovered by its sequence similarity to other known homeobox genes [63, 72] and in a DNA–protein interaction screen (one-hybrid screen) using a retinal complementary DNA expression library and the Ret4 DNA sequence found in the rhodopsin promoter as bait [73]. Like Otx2, Crx expression begins early in retinal development [58, 60, 72, 74–78]. However, Crx follows Otx2 activation and is likely to be a direct transcriptional target of Otx2 in postmitotic rod and cone precursors [61]. Whereas Otx2 expression is downregulated in photoreceptors and remains strong in the INL in the mature retina, Crx remains highly expressed in the outer nuclear layer (ONL) and in a smaller subset of cells in the INL than Otx2. The importance of Crx in mammalian photoreceptor formation is now well established. Overexpression of Crx is sufficient to bias cells toward a photoreceptor fate in the embryonic retina and in adult iris epithelial cells [72, 79], and overexpression of a dominant negative form of Crx interferes with outer segment formation [72]. Consistent with these findings, genetic inactivation of Crx in mice causes developmental disruptions in outer segment formation and synaptogenesis as well as decreased expression of many phototransduction genes [80–83]. Crx acts as a direct transcriptional activator, and many studies showed Crx to be an integral component of multiprotein complexes that occupy the regulatory regions of several rod and cone photoreceptor genes [60, 72, 73, 75, 84–94]. Several interacting proteins have also been found that interfere with Crx-mediated transactivation, and these interactions may be important for the timing of photoreceptor gene activation during differentiation. These interactions may also function to restrict the transcriptional activation function of Crx to rods or bipolar cells [95–99]. Crx has also been shown to directly interact with Ataxin-7, a protein that undergoes polyglutamine expansion and is responsible for spinocerebellar ataxia type 7 (SCA7). While the interaction with wild-type Ataxin-7 is important for the assembly of a Crx transactivation complex, the polyglutamine-expanded, neurodegenerative form of Ataxin-7 interferes with this interaction, resulting in a downregulation of photoreceptor gene expression, and this appears to be a causative factor for the cone-rod dystrophy found in SCA7 [100–103]. Interestingly, Crx is not essential for the initial specification and differentiation of photoreceptors, as evidenced by their appearance in the Crx−/− mouse retina. This is somewhat surprising given its early onset of expression. However, Bibb et al. (2001) [74] showed that, in the fetal human retina, the expression of several photoreceptor genes that
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are targets of Crx regulation in the mouse precedes the onset of CRX expression, which further suggests that Crx is not required for early photoreceptor development. Why cell fate specification and early differentiation of photoreceptors occur in the absence of Crx is not known. One possibility is that Otx2 partially compensates or is redundant with Crx. Consistent with this idea, Crx and Otx2 are both in the Otx gene family [58, 76, 104], both are expressed early in photoreceptor differentiation, Crx expression is not maintained in the Otx2−/− retina, and Otx2−/− mice show no evidence of photoreceptor formation [61]. Furthermore, Crx can interact with Mitf and promote pigment cell differentiation in vitro to an extent comparable to Otx1 and Otx2 [58]. However, experiments in Xenopus suggest that Otx5b (Crx) and Otx2 are not redundant in retinal cell type specification: Otx5b and Otx2 promote photoreceptor and bipolar cell fates, respectively [60]. Zebrafish contain two Crx-related genes (Crx and Otx5), and each seems to have unique functions in regulating gene expression in the retina and pineal gland, which in mammals appear to be relegated to Crx alone (mammals contain a single Crx/Otx5 gene) [59, 75, 105]. In contrast to other species, zebrafish Crx is also expressed in RPCs, and morpholino-mediated RNA knockdown disrupts proximo-distal patterning of the retina and causes a general delay in neuronal differentiation [59]. To ultimately address the issue of whether redundancy or compensation accounts for the nonessential nature of Crx in photoreceptor cell fate specification in the mouse retina, it may be necessary to create a dominant negative Crx allele that interferes with the functions of both Otx2 and Crx. QRX/Rax-L/Rx-L QRX is a homeobox gene in the Rx family. Rx proteins contain paired-like homeodomains and are distantly related to other important retinal transcription factors, such as Chx10, Vsx1, Pax6, and the Otx cohort. QRX is found in the human and bovine genomes [106], and putative orthologs are identified in chick (Rax-L) [107, 108] and Xenopus (Rx-L) [109]. The role of QRX/Rax-L/Rx-L is not as well established as the other genes described in this chapter for two reasons: An ortholog has not been identified in the mouse, and a congenital photoreceptor disease has not been found in humans. Nevertheless, QRX, Rax-L, and Rx-L have all been shown to bind to conserved DNA sequences in the rhodopsin promoter, interact with Nrl and Crx, and promote transcription [106, 107, 109]. Furthermore, dominant negative experiments in chick and gene knockdown experiments in Xenopus both supported a role in the maturation or survival of photoreceptors [107, 109]. NRL The Nrl gene is a member of the Maf transcription factor family. Maf proteins contain a basic motif linked to a leucine zipper domain (bZIP), which is required for DNA binding and protein dimerization, respectively [110]. Several Maf genes have important roles in lens development [110–114] and Nrl has emerged as a key player in rod photoreceptor development. Genetic inactivation of Nrl (Nrl−/−) leads to a complete loss of rods, but interestingly, their absence is not due to a failure in photoreceptor cell production or in decreased survival. Rather, the ONL in the Nrl−/− retina is well
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Fig. 1. Interaction between extracellular signals and transcription factors that results in a stepwise progression of rod photoreceptor development. See Table 1 for definitions of abbreviations.
populated, and these cells have the characteristic expression profiles and physiological and morphological properties of cones, in particular S cones [115–117]. These observations strongly suggest that Nrl is an essential transcription factor for executing the rod differentiation program and, at the same time, for keeping the cone differentiation suppressed. Consistent with this, many studies showed that Nrl is a direct positive regulator of rhodopsin gene transcription. A prediction of this model is that Nrl should be expressed in postmitotic photoreceptor precursors. While true, some studies suggested that Nrl is expressed in the inner retina, and its onset of expression is earlier than the period of rod genesis [118, 119]. However, more recent studies examining Nrl protein expression in human and mouse embryos [120, 121] and in a transgenic mouse line expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP) under the control of the Nrl promoter [122] suggested that Nrl may be specific to postmitotic rod precursors. Although the discrepancies in the reported Nrl expression characteristics are not completely resolved, Oh et al. (2007) expressed Nrl under the control of the Crx promoter in both Nrl+/+ and Nrl−/− mice [123]. In both genetic backgrounds, the expression of Nrl drove rod photoreceptor development and did so at the expense of cones. In addition, transgenic Nrl expression in the Nrl−/− retina rescued the dysmorphic architecture of the ONL. These dramatic results showed not only that Nrl is sufficient to drive rod photoreceptor development when expressed in early postmitotic photoreceptor precursors, but also that cone precursors are competent to execute a rod photoreceptor program. Thus, “photoreceptor precursor” may be a more accurate description of earlystage rod and cone precursors, and onset of Nrl expression may signify a transition to a more restricted rod precursor state (see Fig. 1 and Conclusions).
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Given its key function in mouse rod development, it is reasonable to question whether Nrl is of similar importance in the human retina. Interestingly, most of the identified human mutations in NRL are associated with adRP [124–127]. However, Nishiguchi et al. (2004) [128] recently reported two mutations that are likely to encode loss-of-function alleles, and patients with these mutations have clumped pigmentary retinal degeneration and some preservation of blue cone function, both of which are indicative of an analogous function for NRL in human photoreceptor differentiation as in mice. Nuclear Receptors Nuclear receptors constitute a large family of transcription factors that function as activators on direct binding of a ligand [129] (see Pharmacological Reviews, Volume 58, Issue 4, for an extensive overview). Those in which a physiological ligand is not known or the receptor is suspected to lack a ligand are listed as “orphan receptors.” Most nuclear receptors homodimerize or heterodimerize in various combinations and are associated with large multisubunit complexes that can regulate transcription in positive and negative manners. Because of their diversity in structure and function and their direct regulation by environmental cues, nuclear receptors influence a large number of cellular responses and gene expression programs. Several nuclear receptors are implicated in photoreceptor development; they include the thyroid hormone receptor beta 2 (TRβ2), several retinoid X receptors (RXRs) and retinoic acid receptors (RARs), and the orphan receptors Nr2E3 (PNR, RNR), and retinoid orphan receptor beta (RORβ). TRβ2, RXRγ, and RORβ are implicated in regulating the timing and selection of opsin expression in developing cones [91, 130–134]. Because of space limitations, however, we focus here on the proposed roles of nuclear receptors on rod development, and much of the current effort has been aimed at understanding the role of Nr2E3 in this process. Nr2E3 Patients with enhanced S-cone syndrome (ESCS) suffer from progressive vision loss that is initially characterized by night blindness and variability in L and M cone- (L/M cone-) mediated vision and ultimately followed by rod photoreceptor degeneration. What sets this disease apart from most other forms of inherited retinal degenerations is an increased sensitivity to blue light, which is mediated by the S cones. Jacobson and colleagues first described this condition in the early 1990s and noted the similarities in severely affected patients to those with Goldman-Favre syndrome [135–137]. Subsequent psychophysical and electrophysiological studies led to the prediction that patients with ECSC had an unusually high number of S cones, possibly at the expense of the other cones and rod photoreceptors [138–140]. It is now known that mutations in the NR2E3 gene can cause ESCS, Goldman-Favre syndrome, and clumped pigmentary retinal degeneration, and histopathological studies confirmed an overabundance of S-opsin-expressing cells and a lack of rods [141–145]. Expression analysis of NR2E3 during human fetal development showed the transcript and protein to be expressed in a pattern most consistent with postmitotic differentiating rod precursors [146]. rd7 is a naturally derived mutation in Nr2E3, and it serves as an excellent model for the human NR2E3 mutation [141, 147]. As in humans, the rd7 allele is a recessive
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allele, although the exact nature of the mutation was not clear until recently [148]. Nevertheless, the long-standing interpretation that the rd7 mutation is a null still holds, and homozygotes have the ECSC phenotype and gradual photoreceptor degeneration. It is also well established that the enhanced S-cone activity is due primarily to changes that occur during retinal development. However, two models exist to explain how Nr2E3 functions in photoreceptor development; they are described next. One model states that Nr2E3 functions to prevent the excess production of cone photo receptors from RPCs by restricting their proliferation after the normal interval of cone photoreceptor generation [149, 150]. This model makes several predictions. One prediction is that a subset of late embryonic RPCs is committed, or at the very least, specified, to give rise to cones and is actively suppressed from doing so by Nr2E3. Although there is no evidence for a cone-restricted RPC from lineage studies in mice [151], ectopic proliferation is observed in the rd7 retina and it is suggested that these proliferative cells are either S-cone precursor cells that are normally postmitotic or are RPCs fated to give rise to cones [149, 150]. Another prediction is that Nr2E3 is expressed in RPCs after the normal period of cone production. While one study reports Nr2E3 expression in proliferating RPCs at the expected time [149], several others argued that Nr2E3 expression is initiated in postmitotic rod precursors [146, 152, 153], which are also generated during this interval. Expression analyses in zebrafish and mouse suggested that Nr2E3 is transiently expressed in postmitotic immature cones [152, 153], although one study argued that Nr2E3 expression in cones is not transient [149]. Another prediction is that any role for Nr2E3 in rod development is independent of its role in restricting cone production. The evidence given for this is that the size of the S-cone cell population in the rd7 retina does not increase at the expense of L/M cones or rods (the reduction in rods is proposed to occur by apoptosis [149]). While there is general agreement that the L/M cone population is not affected in the rd7 retina, there is disagreement on whether the extra S-cone cells originate from a source of ectopically proliferating cells or from cells normally fated to become rods, which brings us to the next model. The second model states that Nr2E3 functions as a differentiation factor for postmitotic rod precursors and does this in two ways: by repressing the cone gene expression program by acting as a transcriptional repressor and by facilitating the rod gene expression program by acting as a transcriptional activator. The evidence for this model is compelling on several levels. First, regardless of whether Nr2E3 is expressed in RPCs or cones, it is clear that it is expressed in postmitotic rod photoreceptors. Second, in the rd7 retina, many cone messenger RNAs (mRNAs) are highly upregulated and expressed throughout the ONL, which is largely composed of rods as determined by the expression of rod genes [149, 152–154] and by the presence of initially normal scotopic electroretinogram (ERG) responses [147]. Third, several studies have documented that Nr2E3 can function as a transcriptional repressor or activator, and this depends on the context of the cis-acting DNA regulatory sequences and on the protein complexes with which Nr2E3 is associated [150, 152, 153, 155]. It is important to note, however, that many rod genes are not significantly downregulated in the rd7 retina, and this could be due to the persistent expression of Crx, Nrl, and other photoreceptor transcription factors [149, 152–155]. Along these lines, comparison of the Nrl−/− and rd7 photoreceptor phenotypes shows considerable overlap, especially with respect to increases in the number of photoreceptors with
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S-cone gene expression characteristics. One difference, however, is that in the Nrl−/− retina, the expression of rhodopsin and other rod-specific phototransduction genes is significantly downregulated. Correlated with this is a lack of Nr2E3 expression [116]. Cheng et al. (2006) [156] developed transgenic mice expressing Nr2E3 from the Crx promoter and S-opsin promoter and analyzed the photoreceptor phenotypes in normal and Nrl−/− mice. Nr2E3 is activated in early-stage rod and cone precursors (photoreceptor precursor stage) when driven by the Crx promoter and is activated in S-cone precursors by the S-opsin promoter. The primary findings of this work are that Nr2E3 is sufficient to block cone gene expression in the presence or absence of Nrl, and it can activate rod gene expression in the absence of Nrl, although not completely. The sum of these observations supports the idea that Nr2E3 suppresses the expression of the cone phenotype, at the same time promoting the rod phenotype in combination with Nrl. Are these models mutually exclusive? While certain aspects of these models are discordant and need to be resolved, it is possible that both could be correct in their essential aspects. It is important to note that not all photoreceptors in the rd7 mouse are functional cones. In fact, it is estimated that the increase in S-cone number is from approximately 1% to 3% of the total retinal cells [154, 157]. Second, although it is clear that cone mRNA expression is inappropriately activated in the rd7 rod population, cone protein expression appears to be limited [149] and S-opsin protein has not been found in rhodopsin-expressing cells [154]. While the evidence is strong that Nr2E3 has a role in suppressing the cone and promoting the rod gene expression programs in developing rods, the source of the supernumary S cones, whether from cells that underwent ectopic proliferation or from cells normally fated to be rods, still needs to be resolved. Retinoic Acid/Retinoic Acid Receptors Vitamin A derivatives (retinoids) regulate many aspects of vertebrate development and homeostasis. They bind to and activate nuclear receptor proteins of the steroid and thyroid hormone receptor superfamily, resulting in derepression and transcriptional activation of target genes. Homo- or heterodimers of RARs and RXRs are activated by retinoids with high affinity, whereas unsaturated fatty acids such as docosahexaenoic or linoleic acids function as low-affinity ligands. Retinoic acid-synthesizing enzymes and receptors are present in the vertebrate eye during photoreceptor development [131, 158–162]. Several decades ago, Dowling observed that vitamin A is essential for development and maintenance of photoreceptors in cats [163]. Culture experiments in chick and rodents showed subsequently that the primary metabolite retinoic acid stimulates photoreceptor differentiation and survival [164–166]. In zebrafish, retinoic acid treatment resulted in precocious rod differentiation, whereas inhibition of synthesis using citral led to a delay in photoreceptor differentiation [167]. Similarly, retinoic acid injections into pregnant rats late during pregnancy accelerated rod differentiation after birth [168]. Another ligand for RXRs, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), is a major structural lipid of retinal photoreceptor outer segment membranes. In rat retinal cultures, DHA promotes maturation of CRX-positive photoreceptor precursors [169]. Thus, these studies indicate that RAR signaling is sufficient and required for photoreceptor differentiation in vertebrates.
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At which stage does retinoic acid act to regulate rod development? In vitro, double-labeling experiments with BrDU and rod markers indicated that retinoic acid acts on proliferating RPCs to increase the proportion of rods. This effect was accompanied by a decrease of amacrine cells, suggesting that retinoic acid instructs the rod fate in RPCs by compromising the generation of other cell types [164]. Conversely, in zebrafish, treatment with retinoic acid increased rhodopsin expression, but did not alter cell numbers, arguing against an effect on cell fate [170]. However, Khanna et al. showed that retinoic acid can directly transactivate the Nrl promoter and promotes expression of NRL in mammalian retinal cells in vitro [171]. Thus, retinoic acid indeed could act as an early extrinsic signal to instruct RPCs to adopt the rod fate. In agreement with this, Li et al. observed an increase of CRX expression in retinoic acid-treated human retinoblastoma cells [172]. In sum, these observations suggest that the outcome of retinoic acid action on rod development is species dependent. Interestingly, in mouse retinal explants physiological concentrations of retinoic acid have also been shown to induce rod-specific cell death when RPE is present [173]. Furthermore, since retinoic acid can induce expression of cone and rod photoreceptorspecific genes in retinoblastoma cell lines [172, 174–176], it might exert differential effects that activate distinct mechanisms in both cell types: alone to regulate rod differentiation or in combination with TRβ2 to regulate cone differentiation [131].
EXTRACELLULAR FACTORS AND SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION PATHWAYS Wnt/Frizzled Pathway Wnts are secreted glycoproteins that bind to Frizzled transmembrane receptors and regulate multiple developmental processes such as embryonic patterning, cell polarity, cell fate determination, and proliferation. Many Wnts, Frizzleds, and pathway modulators are expressed during retinal development, and more recently, Wnt/Frizzled signaling has been shown to regulate several aspects of eye development in vertebrates [177, 178]. Wnt-inhibitory factor (WIF-1) is a secreted antagonist of the Wnt/b-catenin pathway that is present in the extracellular matrix (ECM) and binds to Wnts in the extracellular space [179, 180]. It contains a signal sequence, a WIF domain, and five epidermal growth factor (EGF) repeats. Hunter et al. (2004) [180] identified WIF as an ECM component in the developing mouse retina. During the period of photoreceptor differentiation, WIF-1 is expressed in the subretinal space and interphotoreceptor matrix. Other potential partners of the Wnt pathway that are expressed appropriately are Wnt4, LRP6, and Frizzled-4. Furthermore, WIF-1 and Wnt4 appear to interact with each other [180]. In rat retina dissociated cultures, WIF-1 decreases, and Wnt4 promotes rod differentiation, suggesting that these components could modulate rod differentiation and maintenance. However, Frizzled-4 mutants do not show a photoreceptor phenotype, and Wnt/β-catenin activity in the photoreceptor layer of postnatal mice is not detected in Wnt/reporter mice [181, 182] (our unpublished observations). Furthermore, conditional inactivation of b-catenin in the mouse does not result in an obvious change of rhodopsin immunoreactivity [183].
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These studies suggest Wnt/β-catenin signaling might not be active and required for differentiation of postnatal photoreceptors. Taurine Another positive regulator of rod differentiation is taurine, a cystein derivative that is structurally similar to γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glycine. It is highly expressed in the developing and mature retina. When omitted in the diet, developmental defects of brain and retina occur in kittens (for review, see [184]). Moreover, Altshuler et al. showed that taurine promotes rod differentiation in rat retinal cultures [185]. Interestingly, taurine can activate glycine and GABA receptors, and the action of taurine is dependent on the activity of these receptors [184]. In mouse retinal cultures, application of glycine or GABA receptor antagonists abolished the effects of taurine on rod differentiation. Importantly, inhibition experiments using small interfering RNA (siRNA) against glycine receptor a 2 (GlyRa 2) revealed that fewer photoreceptors develop in vivo, which is compensated by a higher number of late-born cell types such as Müller glia and bipolar cells [184]. These and other experiments suggest that taurine/ glycine receptor signaling negatively regulates RPC proliferation and stimulates rod differentiation. This effect appears to be specific for the photoreceptor lineage since forced expression for GlyRα2 can induce photoreceptor-specific genes in E16 retinal progenitors. Conversely, without taurine/glycine receptor activation, progenitor cells might keep dividing and differentiate eventually into late-born cell types due changes in the extracellular environment. In agreement with the role of taurine and GlyRα2 during central nervous system development, disruption of the GlyRa 2 gene results in defects of electrophysiological and calcium imaging responses of cortical cells [186]. However, no abnormalities in development and function of retinae of GlyRa 2−/− could be observed; Nrl and rhodopsin expression and ERG analysis are normal without GlyRα2 [186]. Since expression of the other glycine receptor subunits is not changed, these results suggest that GABA receptor signaling may compensate or glycine receptor activation is not essential for rod development. Ciliary Neurotrophic Factor/Leukemia Inhibitory Factor/Pleiotrophin/Signal Transducer and Activators of Transcription 3/SOCS Ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) is a member of the interleukin 6 (IL-6) cytokine family and activates a trimeric transmembrane receptor complex consisting of the shared β receptors gp130 and LIFRβ (leukemia inhibitory factor receptor β) and a CNTFRαspecific subunit. Ligand binding leads to activation of gp130 and subsequently of associated tyrosine kinases (Janus kinases; JAKs), which phosphorylate the β subunits and signal transducer and activators of transcription (STAT) 1 and 3. CNTF can activate three pathways: JAK/STAT, mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase, and Akt/PI3 K signaling [187–191]. CNTF, other CNTF-like ligands, and LIF (activation by dimerization of gp130 and LIRFβ) exert diverse effects on photoreceptors in vertebrates. In developing chick photo receptors, CNTF promotes expression and relocalization of opsin proteins in cultured photoreceptors, as shown by labeling with the rho4D2 antibody, which recognizes
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rhodopsin and green cone opsin [192–194]. Although no such effect of CNTF was found on cones using peanut lectin as a marker [192], Adler’s laboratory later observed that CNTF specifically promotes expression of green cone opsin but not rhodopsin and, interestingly, can induce coexpression of green and red cone opsin [195, 196]. Thus, in the chick these experiments indicated that CNTF produced by Müller glia might function to increase production of green cone opsin specifically, which is supported by the expression pattern of CNTFRα in the photoreceptor layer [197–199]. However, loss-of-function experiments need to be performed to obtain further insight of a regulatory role of CNTF in developing chick photoreceptors in vivo. In the adult mammalian retina, CNTF protects, most likely indirectly, photoreceptors in models of retinal degeneration and injury [200–207]. In the developing rodent retina, CNTF exerts a different role. Here, CNTFR signaling controls the timing of terminal differentiation and the number of rod photoreceptors by acting on photoreceptor precursors. These functions are generally in good agreement with the spatiotemporal expression pattern of LIF, CNTF, and CNTF-like ligands such as neuropoeitin, CLF/ CLC rodents [208–210], or possible downstream mediators such as pleiotrophin [211], receptor expression [212–216], and with the activation of the signal transduction machinery [215, 217–219]. First shown in dissociated or explant cultures, CNTF and LIF act to suppress recoverin and rhodopsin expression [194, 220–223]. Interestingly, CNTF treatment does not alter the morphogenesis of rod outer segments; it acts reversibly on rod progenitors [218, 223]. The CNTF effect is transient since photoreceptor precursors become less responsive to CNTF with increasing age, and one explanation could be that CNTF receptor expression in photoreceptors decreases with maturation [218, 219, 221, 223]. These observations are supported by the timing of expression and activation of CNTFR pathway components in vivo and suggest that CNTF acts as a negative regulator pre- and perinatally to delay terminal photoreceptor differentiation [194, 215]. It is possible that formation of outer segments and concomitant changes in the surrounding ECM might interfere with cell division in the apical layer necessary to produce bipolar and Müller glia [223, 224]. Thus, the long delay between birth of photoreceptor precursors and their terminal differentiation could function to enable proper maturation of late-born retinal cell types. At higher CNTF concentrations (e.g., 20 ng/ml), more cells with bipolar-specific gene expression appear in vitro [220, 223, 225, 226]. Originally proposed as an effect on switch of cell fate, in vivo and in vitro studies now indicate that CNTF and LIF keep photoreceptor precursors in an immature state without affecting specification of other cell types [209, 220–223, 227]. For example, disruption of the CNTFRα gene leads to an increase or acceleration of rod differentiation in explant cultures but does not affect bipolar cells [220]. Very similar observations were made following in vivo injection of an inhibitor of the CNTF/LIF pathway [209]. A possible explanation is that CNTF might upregulate expression of its own receptor in vitro, suggesting that the promoting effect on bipolar cells depends on culture conditions and does not reflect a physiological role in vivo [223]. Although capable of activating different pathways, the CNTF effects on rod development are exclusively mediated through rapid phosphorylation and activation of STAT3, which is independent of EGF signaling, another inhibitor of rod differentiation
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[217–219]. CNTF appears to act on postmitotic rod precursors that express CRX and on newly differentiating rhodopsin-positive photoreceptors directly by increasing STAT3 phosphorylation in these cells [217–219]. However, phosphorylated STAT3 might not directly regulate rhodopsin transcription but rather upstream regulators. Supporting evidence comes from experiments using overproduction of LIF in transgenic mice [227]. Strong activation of LIF signaling early during retinal development results in suppressed expression of factors regulating the photoreceptor lineage, commitment to the rod fate, and rhodopsin production, such as CRX, Neuro D and both Nrl and Nr2E, which are required to transactivate the rhodopsin promoter. Interestingly, also inhibitory effects on cone-specific genes such as TRβ2 and S- and M-cone opsin were observed [227]. A new regulatory mechanism has been described that may function to ensure the maturation of rods in an otherwise inhibitory environment [218]. Residual STAT3 activation in the postnatal rodent retina is suppressed by upregulation of an intracellular negativefeedback modulator: suppressor of cytokine signaling 3 (SOCS3). SOCS3 expression is induced by cytokine signaling and inhibits STAT3 phosphorylation by blocking JAK activity. Conditional inactivation of SOCS3 delays photoreceptor differentiation and results in decreased CRX expression, whereas SOCS3 overexpression makes photoreceptor precursors insensitive to CNTF [228]. Interestingly, CNTF has also been proposed to function in regulating programmed cell death of postnatal photoreceptors [209]. In the postnatal mouse retina, natural cell death of photoreceptor precursor cells occurs, possibly as a correction mechanism to limit the number of differentiated photoreceptors. These cells are called “inner rods” because they are observed in the outer INL [229]. Elliott et al. (2006) [209] showed that inhibition of CNTFR/LIFR signaling or nitric oxide synthase activity in vivo decreases apoptotic cell death in this specific population. This effect was observed quickly after treatment (20 h), suggesting a direct effect on photoreceptor survival. Similarly, Graham et al. observed that overexpression of LIF leads to reduced thickness of the photoreceptor layer in the postnatal retina, although they did not investigate whether cell death is increased [227]. Since CNTF does not contain a signal sequence, secreted CNTF-like ligands such as LIF or CLC/CLF are likely candidates; they also increased developmental cell death in the rodent retina in vivo [209]. Together, these studies indicate that a more precise understanding of the mechanism of CNTF action is necessary, especially since CNTF is one of the factors currently being tested in clinical trials to prevent photoreceptor cell death in retinal degeneration. CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE PROSPECTS In Fig. 1, we propose a model of how the factors we discussed here may fit together to regulate rod photoreceptor differentiation. As RPCs exit the cell cycle, they begin to express transcription factors that in part define a precursor cell of photoreceptors, both rod and cone. As the photoreceptor precursor develops, it begins to express new transcription factors and respond to signals that push it into a more restricted fate, such as the rod precursor, and ultimately into a rod photoreceptor. While we hope to convey here the extraordinary progress made thus far in understanding rod photoreceptor development, we would argue that we still have a relatively
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rudimentary understanding of the cellular and molecular mechanisms. For example, it is still not clear when and if a photoreceptor precursor becomes irreversibly committed to becoming a rod. And, if commitment does occur, what are the necessary factors to ensure this? Photoreceptor precursors show a high degree of morphological plasticity [230] and molecular plasticity, and it is not clear whether this reflects an uncommitted precursor or a committed precursor passing through steps of maturation. As Adler lucidly described in a recent review [3], the study of cell commitment in the retina is extremely difficult and requires further development of tools to understand this process from a prospective outlook. However, progress is being made. MacLaren et al. (2006) [231] showed in an elegant study that Nrl expression in photoreceptor precursors significantly enhances the potential of these cells to differentiate into rods and to integrate into normal or degenerating retina when transplanted. This is an important advance with potential clinical implications because it suggests that Nrl may function as a rod commitment factor, even at a time when these cells are morphologically immature. Thus, even though several potential stem cell sources can be manipulated to produce photoreceptors [45, 232–242], this typically occurs at low frequencies, and it will be important to determine if Nrl expression can be more efficiently induced and, if so, if this is sufficient for robust rod production. Another important area of research that should make a significant stride in the next few years addresses how later aspects of photoreceptor differentiation are regulated, such as the formation of apical-basal polarity and assembly of the inner and outer segments. In this regard, mutations from genetic screens in zebrafish and Drosophila are beginning to provide some initial insights [243, 244]. It will be an especially gratifying day when we will have a comprehensive and integrated model of photoreceptor development from the earliest cell fate decisions in the RPC to the final assembly of the outer segment in the mature rod. REFERENCES 1. Levine, E. M., Fuhrmann, S., Reh, T. A. (2000). Soluble factors and the development of rod photoreceptors. Cell Mol Life Sci 57, 224–234. 2. Livesey, F. J., Cepko, C. L. (2001). Vertebrate neural cell-fate determination: lessons from the retina. Nat Rev Neurosci 2, 109–118. 3. Adler, R. (2005). Challenges in the study of neuronal differentiation: a view from the embryonic eye. Dev Dyn 234, 454–463. 4. Chow, R. L., Lang, R. A. (2001). Early eye development in vertebrates. Annu Rev Cell Dev Biol 17, 255–296. 5. Fuhrmann, S., Chow, L., Reh, T. A. (2000). Molecular control of cell diversification in the vertebrate retina. In: Vertebrate eye development (Fini, M. E., ed.), Vol. 31, pp. 69–91. Springer, Berlin. 6. Reh, T. A., Levine, E. M. (1998). Multipotential stem cells and progenitors in the vertebrate retina. J Neurobiol 36, 206–220. 7. Zhang, S. S., Fu, X. Y., Barnstable, C. J. (2002). Molecular aspects of vertebrate retinal development. Mol Neurobiol 26, 137–152. 8. Yang, X. J. (2004). Roles of cell-extrinsic growth factors in vertebrate eye pattern formation and retinogenesis. Semin Cell Dev Biol 15, 91–103.
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161. Mey, J., McCaffery, P., Drager, U. C. (1997). Retinoic acid synthesis in the developing chick retina. J Neurosci 17, 7441–7449. 162. Mori, M., Ghyselinck, N. B., Chambon, P., Mark, M. (2001). Systematic immunolocalization of retinoid receptors in developing and adult mouse eyes. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 42, 1312–1318. 163. Dowling, J. E. (1964). Nutritional and inherited blindness in the rat. Exp Eye Res 15, 348–356. 164. Kelley, M. W., Turner, J. K., Reh, T. A. (1994). Retinoic acid promotes differentiation of photoreceptors in vitro. Development 120, 2091–2102. 165. Stenkamp, D. L., Gregory, J. K., Adler, R. (1993). Retinoid effects in purified cultures of chick embryo retina neurons and photoreceptors. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 34, 2425–2436. 166. Wallace, V. A., Jensen, A. M. (1999). IBMX, taurine and 9-cis retinoic acid all act to accelerate rhodopsin expression in postmitotic cells. Exp Eye Res 69, 617–627. 167. Hyatt, G. A., Schmitt, E. A., Fadool, J. M., Dowling, J. E. (1996). Retinoic acid alters photoreceptor development in vivo. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 93, 13298–13303. 168. Kelley, M. W., Williams, R. C., Turner, J. K., Creech-Kraft, J. M., Reh, T. A. (1999). Retinoic acid promotes rod photoreceptor differentiation in rat retina in vivo. Neuroreport 10, 2389–2394. 169. Politi, L. E., Insua, F., Buzzi, E. (1998). Selective outgrowth and differential tropism of amacrine and photoreceptor axons to cell targets during early development in vitro. J Neurosci Res 52, 105–117. 170. Prabhudesai, S. N., Cameron, D. A., Stenkamp, D. L. (2005). Targeted effects of retinoic acid signaling upon photoreceptor development in zebrafish. Dev Biol 287, 157–167. 171. Khanna, H., Akimoto, M., Siffroi-Fernandez, S., Friedman, J. S., Hicks, D., Swaroop, A. (2006). Retinoic acid regulates the expression of photoreceptor transcription factor NRL. J Biol Chem 281, 27327–27334. 172. Li, A., Zhu, X., Brown, B., Craft, C. M. (2003). Gene expression networks underlying retinoic acid-induced differentiation of human retinoblastoma cells. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 44, 996–1007. 173. Soderpalm, A. K., Fox, D. A., Karlsson, J. O., van Veen, T. (2000). Retinoic acid produces rod photoreceptor selective apoptosis in developing mammalian retina. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 41, 937–47. 174. Bernard, M., Klein, D. C. (1996). Retinoic acid increases hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase activity and mRNA in human Y-79 retinoblastoma cells. J Neurochem 67, 1032–1038. 175. Boatright, J. H., Stodulkova, E., Do, V. T., Padove, S. A., Nguyen, H. T., Borst, D. E., Nickerson, J. M. (2002). The effect of retinoids and butyrate on the expression of CRX and IRBP in retinoblastoma cells. Vision Res 42, 933–938. 176. Li, A., Zhu, X., Craft, C. M. (2002). Retinoic acid upregulates cone arrestin expression in retinoblastoma cells through a cis element in the distal promoter region. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 43, 1375–1383. 177. Liu, H., Mohamed, O., Dufort, D., Wallace, V. A. (2003). Characterization of Wnt signaling components and activation of the Wnt canonical pathway in the murine retina. Dev Dyn 227, 323–334. 178. Van Raay, T. J., Vetter, M. L. (2004). Wnt/frizzled signaling during vertebrate retinal development. Dev Neurosci 26, 352–358. 179. Hsieh, J. C., Kodjabachian, L., Rebbert, M. L., Rattner, A., Smallwood, P. M., Samos, C. H., Nusse, R., Dawid, I. B., Nathans, J. (1999). A new secreted protein that binds to Wnt proteins and inhibits their activities. Nature 398, 431–436.
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4 Photoreceptor–RPE Interactions Physiology and Molecular Mechanisms Silvia C. Finnemann and Yongen Chang CONTENTS Introduction Retinal Adhesion Photoreceptor Outer Segment Renewal Perspective References
INTRODUCTION Photoreceptor rod and cone neurons are highly specialized to detect photons and initiate phototransduction. The machinery for these functions is localized to the outer segment, which faces the apical microvilli-rich surface of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) in the subretinal space. It is the function of the RPE to permanently and continuously support photoreceptor function and health through interactions with outer segments. These interactions may be direct, via receptor-ligand pairs that reside on the photoreceptor outer segment (POS) and RPE plasma membranes and link the two, or indirect, via extracellular compounds in the interphotoreceptor matrix (IPM) that act as soluble bridge molecules that are recognized by receptors on both neighboring cell types. Both RPE and photoreceptor cells are normally postmitotic in the healthy adult mammalian eye. Thus, interactions between specific POSs and RPE cells persist for life. Importantly, as RPE cells cover much larger areas of the retina than individual photoreceptor cells, each RPE cell faces between 30 and 50 POSs. Depending on its location in the retina, an individual RPE cell faces and functionally interacts with cones, rods, or (in most cases) a mixture of both. Like the photoreceptors they support, RPE cells are highly polarized cells with distinct protein composition at their apical and basolateral surfaces that face the retina and the choroid connective tissue, respectively. Tight junctions of the RPE serve as permeability barriers that separate apical and basolateral plasma membrane domains to prevent loss of membrane protein and lipid asymmetry by lateral diffusion in the plane of the membrane. From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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Fig. 1. Retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and photoreceptor contacts in the subretinal space. The subretinal space is separated from the vascularized inner retina and choroidal tissue by tight junctions (t. j.). Tight junctions between photoreceptor inner segments and Müller cells form the external limiting membrane (ELM). Tight junctions of RPE cells separate apical and basolateral domains of the RPE and form the outer blood retinal barrier. Cadherin-based adherens junctions (a. j.) between RPE cells further stabilize the RPE monolayer. Basally, RPE cells adhere to Bruch’s membrane via cell–substrate interactions. The subretinal space contains the interphotoreceptor matrix (IPM) with distinct composition around cones and rods (X and ▲ as indicated), photoreceptor inner segments (IS) and outer segments (OS), and RPE apical membrane with microvilli that extend to ensheathe the photoreceptor OS.
In addition, these multiprotein complexes seal off the subretinal space from the underlying connective tissue to prevent free exchange of extracellular molecules by transepithelial diffusion. Together with the external limiting membrane (ELM) generated by photoreceptorMüller cell junctions, the tight junctions of the RPE form the outer blood-retinal barrier isolating the avascular area of the subretinal space, which contains the apical plasma membrane domain of the RPE, the IPM, and photo-receptor rod and cone outer segments (Fig. 1). Regardless of size and charge, molecules trafficking between the subretinal space and the underlying choroidal circulation must cross the RPE via paracellular or transcellular routes that are largely controlled by RPE cells themselves.
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Concentrations of soluble compounds such as ions, metabolites, and macromolecules in the subretinal space are highly dynamic, varying both spatially and temporally. Changes that are best understood occur as a direct consequence of photoisomerization and phototransduction (recently reviewed in [1]): (1) All-trans retinal released from rhodopsin is reduced to all-trans retinol in the outer segment, which moves through the subretinal space to the RPE for reisomerization. Trafficking of 11-cis retinal from the RPE to the outer segment completes the visual cycle of rod photopigment regeneration. Several specialized retinoid-binding proteins sequester retinoids en route. Indeed, interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP) is one of the most abundant proteins in the subretinal space [2]. (2) Rhodopsin isomerization in POSs closes cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP)-gated cation channels in the plasma membrane of the outer segment, reducing the dark current that involves flux of Na+ into and K+ out of the outer segment. Thus, photoreceptor illumination directly decreases K+ (from ~5 to 2 mM) and increases Na+ in the subretinal space. These changes in ion concentrations are rapid and transient as ion transporters and channels of the apical surface of RPE cells and of photoreceptor inner segments respond to these changes with activity changes that compensate for them. The distribution and mobility of macromolecules of the IPM in the subretinal space are only poorly understood. Both RPE and photoreceptor cells contribute components to the IPM, generating a regionalized network of numerous glycoproteins and proteoglycans that sequesters small metabolites such as fatty acids and other nutrients [3–7]. Distinct sheaths consisting of high molecular weight proteoglycans and glycoproteins surround cones and rods [8, 9]. These matrix sheaths likely provide important mechanical support for outer segments and RPE apical microvilli that stabilizes their alignment. Moreover, they may serve to bind and sequester nutrients, growth factors, and other proteins for optimal access by either rods or cones [10]. There is much evidence that macromolecule distribution in the subretinal space is tightly controlled. Uehara in the LaVail group first demonstrated in 1990 that the binding pattern of wheat germ agglutinin lectin (WGA) to adult rat retina cross sections depends on illumination. WGA (as well as colloidal iron and antibodies to chondroitin-6-sulfate or IRBP) exhibited staining that was diffusely distributed and restricted to apical and basal zones of the outer segment layer in dark- and light-adapted retina, respectively [11]. The same investigators later showed that recognition sites for peanut agglutinin, which specifically labels components of the cone matrix sheath, do not redistribute in response to differences in illumination [12]. These are very intriguing observations, suggesting that the organization of extracellular macromolecules in the subretinal space may change to facilitate functions specifically associated with rod outer segments, such as the classical visual cycle that employs reisomerization within the RPE. However, the precise molecular nature of these changes and their physiological purpose remain unknown. Taken together, photoreceptor and RPE cells interact in the highly dynamic environment of the subretinal space. In the following, we discuss in detail interactions that take place between POSs and the apical surface of the RPE in the context of this complex extracellular milieu during retinal adhesion and during POS renewal.
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RETINAL ADHESION Physiology of Retinal Adhesion Efficient exchange of substrates between POSs, IPM, and RPE requires maximal alignment and interdigitation. The apical surface of the RPE, including microvilli, tightly adheres to IPM components and possibly photoreceptors in the healthy retina, maintaining this tissue organization. The importance of retinal adhesion to retinal function becomes obvious in the drastic consequences of retinal detachment. Persistent retinal detachment directly results in RPE dedifferentiation and proliferation, POS degeneration, and photoreceptor cell death [13]. Furthermore, retinal detachment causes irreversible changes in inner retinal neurons. For a comprehensive recent review of these effects of retinal detachment on retinal cells, please see [14]. In the context of RPE–photoreceptor interactions, it is particularly relevant that IPM proteoglycan rearrangement and RPE microvilli collapse are early, reversible responses to retinal detachment. A variety of physiological activities contribute to retinal adhesion. These include active fluid transport, intraocular pressure, and osmotic pressure gradients. In addition, apical surface receptors of the RPE adhere to specific IPM ligands [15]. The actin-binding protein ezrin is an important and abundant structural component of the apical microvilli of the RPE [16]. Ezrin expression is both necessary and sufficient for RPE microvilli extension [17, 18]. At the light microscopic level, ezrin distribution in the mammalian retina does not change with illumination or time of day [19]. This suggests that apical RPE microvilli extension and interdigitate in between POSs is constant in mammalian retina. In contrast, the strength of retinal adhesion as measured by RPE attachment to peeled-off neural retina (see Molecular Mechanisms of Retinal Adhesion and Fig. 2) increases by 58% between 2 and 3.5 h after light onset in mice entrained to a 12-h light/12-h dark cycle [19]. Retinal adhesion increases on time even in constant darkness in previously entrained mice. This suggests that murine retinal adhesion does not respond to light but may be regulated by circadian rhythms. In contrast, light onset directly increases retinal adhesion in Xenopus laevis retina [20]. Finally, strength of retinal adhesion decreases with age in mouse retina such that resistance of RPE to shear stress in 12-month-old mice is only 45% compared to the resistance in 1-monthold retina in animals of the same genotype [19]. The molecular basis of this change in RPE–photoreceptor interaction remains to be explored. Molecular Mechanisms of Retinal Adhesion Studying the molecular mechanisms of retinal adhesion in the healthy retina is hampered by the lack of experimental model systems. Because of the numerous participating components and their complicated and highly organized architecture, neither direct nor indirect, IPM-mediated adhesive interactions of RPE and POSs have been reconstituted ex vivo. However, Endo and colleagues in 1988 developed and characterized an assay testing strength of RPE–retinal adhesion in enucleated rabbit eyes [21] (Fig. 2). These investigators established that RPE adhesion directly correlates with the amount of RPE pigment fractionating with the neural retina when it is peeled from an open eyecup. Using this assay, Endo and colleagues found that postmortem, retinal adhesion in rabbit
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Fig. 2. Mechanical separation of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and neural retina allows quantification of retinal adhesion. In a modification of a protocol by Endo and colleagues [21], mice are sacrificed by CO2 asphyxiation. Lens and cornea are swiftly removed from each enucleated eyeball (A) in HEPES-buffered Hank’s saline solution containing Ca2+ and Mg2+ at room temperature, conditions that preserve retinal adhesion. After transferring an individual eyecup to an empty plastic dish, a single radial cut is performed toward the optic nerve, flattening the eyecup retina facing up. B The neural retina is then peeled off with forceps from one side of the cut to the other. C The isolated retina reveals attached apical portions of RPE cells that contain melanin pigment. D Bright-field microscopy of a whole-mounted peeled-off retina with exposed outer retinal surface demonstrates the extent of RPE retrieval with retina harvested from 2-month-old wild-type mice 2 h after light onset. Scale bar 100 µm (Printed with permission from [19].)
retina rapidly decreases if tissues are chilled on ice or incubated in Ca2+- and Mg2+-free buffer solution. This suggests that receptors involved in retinal adhesion require physiological temperature and the presence of divalent cations for ligand binding. Focusing on the role of glycosylated IPM components on retinal adhesion, Yao and colleagues subsequently found that subretinal injections of chondroitinase ABC, neuraminidase, and testicular hyaluronidase temporarily reduce retinal adhesion, suggesting that regulation of retinal adhesion in vivo may involve changes in glycosylation [22]. A similar experimental approach showed that the drug cytochalasin D weakens
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retinal adhesion in a concentration-dependent manner if applied to the subretinal space, suggesting a role for actin microfilaments in RPE–photoreceptor interactions [23]. While some progress has been made in characterizing the complex mixture of glycoproteins and proteoglycans molecules that comprise the IPM, we know l ittle about RPE surface receptors that participate in retinal adhesion. The homotypic neural-cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) localizes to the apical surface of RPE and to outer segments, suggesting that it may mediate direct interactions between the two cell types [24]. However, this hypothesis remains to be tested directly. Most recently, the increasing availability of mutant animal models has facilitated study of the contributions of individual molecules to retinal adhesion. For example, vitiligo mice, which carry a mutation in the microphthalmia transcription factor gene [25], display early onset retinal detachment likely due to a primary defect in retinal adhesion [26]. Expression of specific adhesive receptors or ligands that participate in retinal adhesion may thus be reduced in vitiligo mice. However, this possibility has not yet been investigated. The cell–substrate adhesion receptor αvβ5 integrin is the only receptor of the large integrin family that localizes to the apical surface of the RPE [27–29]. The apical surface of the RPE is the sole site of αvβ5 integrin expression in the retina. Localization of αvβ5 integrin at the RPE’s phagocytic surface is conserved between rats, mice, and humans [27, 28]. Comparing strength of retinal adhesion between β5 integrin knockout mice and strain- and age-matched, wild-type mice served to directly assess whether lack of apical αvβ5 integrin altered retinal adhesion. In a modification of the protocol of Endo and colleagues (Fig. 2), retina samples were solubilized in detergent buffer following mechanical peeling off the eyecup. This method of preparation allowed quantifying both RPE pigment and RPE and retinal proteins in each sample by spectroscopy and by immunoblotting, respectively. Importantly, melanin quantification of neural retina samples correlates very closely with partitioning of the RPE-specific cytoplasmic protein RPE65 and the RPE apical microvilli marker protein ezrin with the neural retina, confirming that RPE fractionation with neural retina accurately reflects RPE–retinal adhesion. As shown in Fig. 3, the experiments demonstrated greatly reduced pigment as well as proteins RPE65 and ezrin retrieved with the ripped-off neural retina at all times of day in β5 integrin knockout mice compared to strain- and age-matched wild-type mice. Thus, retinal adhesion is severely weakened in β5 integrin knockout mice. In addition, lack of αvβ5 greatly attenuates the synchronized daily fluctuation of retinal adhesion (Fig. 3B). Thus, αvβ5 integrin receptors contribute to retinal adhesion at all times and have a major role in maximizing retinal adhesion 3.5 h after light onset. β5 integrin knockout retina contain wild-type levels of other receptor proteins of the RPE thought to be relevant for retinal adhesion, N-CAM and integrin subunits other than β5 integrin’s partner subunit αv. This suggests that lack of αvβ5 integrin receptors decreases retinal adhesion directly. These experiments identified αvβ5 integrin as the first RPE surface receptor directly implicated in retinal adhesion. In summary, the recent identification of the role of αvβ5 integrin in retinal adhesion has confirmed the long-standing hypothesis that specific apical plasma membrane receptors of the RPE adhere to IPM components or outer segment surface receptors via cell–substrate or cell–cell interactions, respectively. Given the repertoire of extracellular glycoproteins
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Fig. 3. Decreased strength and attenuated diurnal peak of retinal adhesion in β5 integrin knockout mice. A Bright-field microscopy shows exposed outer retinal surface of peeled-off retinas harvested from 2-month-old mice at 8 a.m. β5 integrin knockout retina retains significantly less retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) pigment compared to wild-type retina. Scale 100 µm B Immunoblots of lysates prepared from individual peeled-off neural retina samples harvested from 2-month-old mice at indicated times of day show increased amounts of the RPE marker protein RPE65 in samples harvested at 9.30 a.m. compared with other time points. Ezrin, MerTK (tyrosine kinase Mer), and IRBP (interphotoreceptor retinol-binding protein) did not change significantly. Notably, RPE65 levels in β5 integrin knockout retina samples also increased between 9:30 a.m. and 8 a.m. but remained far below levels of RPE65 in wild-type retina samples at all times of day. (Modified with permission from [19].)
that serve as ligands of αvβ5 and related integrins in other tissues, it appears likely that there are specific ligands for αvβ5 integrin in the IPM that bridge the RPE–retina interface. These ligands, as well as RPE receptors that presumably contribute to retinal adhesion in addition to αvβ5, remain to be identified. Significance of Retinal Adhesion for Retinal Function Long-term retinal detachment causes outer segment degeneration [30] and, subsequently, apoptotic cell death of photoreceptors [13], proving that proper retinal attachment is critical for vision. Despite their obvious importance for photoreceptor survival and hence vision, we still know little about RPE surface receptors for IPM ligands that mediate
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retinal adhesion. Recent insight into the role of αvβ5 integrin in retinal adhesion gained by exploring RPE pigment and marker protein fractionation and localization in β5 integrin knockout mice has demonstrated an experimental strategy that may prove useful in identifying additional receptor proteins of both RPE and photoreceptor and their subretinal ligands in the near future. Our better understanding of the molecular mechanisms of retinal adhesion are much needed to develop new therapeutic strategies aiming to prevent irreversible vision loss following retinal detachment by providing a microenvironment in the subretinal space that maximally promotes recovery of both damaged photoreceptors and RPE cells. PHOTORECEPTOR OUTER SEGMENT RENEWAL Physiology of Outer Segment Disk Assembly and Disk Shedding Photoreceptor neurons normally do not renew themselves in the adult mammalian retina. However, Bairati and Orzalesi first hypothesized in 1963 that both rods and cones continuously turn over their outer segment portions, replacing the membrane disks that carry rhodopsin/cone opsins and the phototransduction machinery [31]. Since Young in 1967 provided the first direct evidence for such a process, now termed outer segment renewal [32], such de novo formation of outer segment disks has been extensively studied in numerous species [33, 34]. Photoreceptor cells synthesize outer segment resident proteins and lipids mainly in their inner segment. Following translation in the rough endoplasmic reticulum, nascent polypeptides mature while passing through the Golgi apparatus and traffic to the outer segment from the trans-Golgi network packaged in transport vesicles [35, 36]. Vesicles traverse the connecting cilium to contribute to the assembly of new membrane disks by evagination at the proximal end of the outer segment [35, 37]. Cones principally differ from rods with respect to protein turnover: Cone disks do not separate from each other, allowing diffusion of newly synthesized and assembled proteins within the length of the outer segment [38, 39]. In contrast, individual rod disks vary in age, with those in the proximal end of the outer segment most recently generated and those at the distal tip facing the RPE most aged. Outer segment protein biosynthesis follows a daily rhythm that is in part regulated at the transcript level, as amounts of rhodopsin and cone opsin messenger RNAs (mRNAs) are maximal at the onset of dark [40–42]. Circadian rhythms upregulate gene transcription in chick cone photoreceptors to raise iodopsin (red cone opsin) mRNA levels prior to the onset of the dark period [43]. It has not yet been reported whether rates of transcription or transcript stability increase to reach higher steady-state levels of specific mRNAs in mammalian retina. In amphibian retina, outer segment disk assembly does not occur evenly at all times but is regulated by illumination and circadian rhythms [33, 44, 45]. In contrast, illumination has little effect on rates of disk assembly in mouse rods [46]. Photoreceptor disk assembly is generally thought to be largely photoreceptor cell autonomous and independent of photoreceptor–RPE interactions. However, in the healthy retina, production of new POS disks is in a precise balance with elimination of most aged portions of outer segments to maintain constant length of outer segments with time. Young and Bok (1969) first demonstrated the disposal of distal, most aged
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rod outer segment tips in packets of uniform size at the interface of outer segments with the RPE in frog retina, a process that became to be known as disk shedding [47]. Unlike disk assembly, shedding of POS distal fragments most likely requires active participation of directly underlying RPE cells. RPE apical microvilli ensheathe rod and cone outer segments, and their extensions can be observed in between shedding POS and the remainder of the outer segment [48]. Moreover, outer segments cease to shed their distal tips in detached Xenopus laevis retina [49]. Rod POS shedding is highly synchronized in the retina and occurs at light onset in most species, regulated by circadian rhythms in mammals [50, 51], by illumination in frogs (Rana pipiens) [52], and by a combination of both in Xenopus laevis [53]. In the mouse retina, each rod photoreceptor sheds a packet of disks comprising approximately 10% of its total length once a day [46]. Similar rates of rod shedding are documented for other species. Newly synthesized protein distributes diffusely throughout the length of the outer segment of photoreceptor cones [54]. Therefore, distal cone outer segment disks do not contain most aged outer segment components as distal rod disks do. Nevertheless, cones shed distal tips of their outer segments in similar size fragments to rods regardless of species and retinal location [55]. In lizard, goldfish, and chick retina, cone photoreceptors shed after the onset of dark [56–58]. In ground squirrel retina, cones shed either following the onset of dark or in the middle of the dark period [59]. In the cat [60] and in the diurnal Nile rat [61] retina, cones, like rods, shed following the onset of light. Taken together, cones shed distal tips of their outer segments in synchronized bursts like rods, but there is considerable variability among species with regard to the timing of cone shedding. Physiology of RPE Engulfment of Shed Outer Segment Fragments The synchronicity of rod disk aging and shedding facilitated autoradiographic tracer studies that allowed Young and Bok in 1969 to demonstrate that RPE cells phagocytose shed rod POS [47]. Furthermore, the Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) rat strain has long provided an animal model of hereditary retinal degeneration caused by abnormal accumulation of POS in the subretinal space [62]. Mullen and LaVail generated and studied chimeric rats with mosaic RCS and wild-type RPE to demonstrate that the presence of wild-type RPE underlying RCS photoreceptor rods was sufficient to promote normal POS turnover. Therefore, POS accumulation in the RCS retina occurs as a consequence of deficiencies in the RPE rather than in photoreceptors [63]. The rapid and complete degeneration of the retina in the RCS rat illustrates the importance of the RPE and its phagocytic activity in POS renewal specifically and in retinal homeostasis in general. The rhythmic and continuous nature of POS phagocytosis in the retina renders RPE cells the most active phagocytes in nature. The enormous task of the RPE cells in POS disposal becomes immediately obvious when one considers that each RPE cell in the mammalian retina faces numerous photoreceptor rods (e.g., ~45 in the peripheral rhesus monkey retina and a staggering 300 in the rat retina; [64]), each one of which sheds its distal tip containing about 100 disks every morning. Each RPE cell must therefore completely dispose of several thousand outer segment disks before its next phagocytic challenge. Since RPE cells do not turn over in the adult mammalian eye, each individual cell must clear its enormous phagocytic load promptly and efficiently every 24 h over many decades.
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The RPE cells in the healthy mammalian retina respond to circadian rod POS disk shedding with a vigorous phagocytic response and then cease phagocytosis until the next shedding event. Indeed, electron microscopy images of the retina–RPE interface acquired from samples of tissues harvested at times of POS shedding usually reveal POS that still remain attached to the outer segment or POS that were already internalized by the RPE. Observation of shed POS that reside in the subretinal space awaiting RPE engulfment is very rare. This suggests that RPE cells may be optimally prepared at light onset to respond to shed POS with prompt internalization. At other times, intact outer segment distal tips remain in immediate proximity to RPE apical projections without triggering phagocytic attack. Taken together, this suggests that the phagocytic function of the RPE may be tightly temporally regulated in the retina. The rhythmic nature of RPE clearance of POS requires that RPE cells rid themselves of phagocytosed material before the next phagocytic challenge to avoid gradual accumulation of POS with time. Despite its importance in maintaining RPE long-term function, few studies have focused on digestion of POS. Lysosomes of different size and enzymatic content fuse with POS phagosomes by as early as 30 min after light onset [65]. Electron microscopy images show that the disk structure of engulfed POS in RPE phagosomes disappears gradually starting at around 2.5 h after light onset in light-entrained rats [65]. At the light microscopic level, numbers of discernible phagosomes in albino mouse RPE return to baseline levels approximately 3 h after light onset [66]. Finally, at least some of the final products of POS digestion, such as docosahexaenoic acid, are transported back for reuse by photoreceptors [67–71]. Molecular Mechanisms of Shedding and RPE Phagocytosis Studies seeking to identify the molecular machinery used by photoreceptors and RPE cells for POS renewal have greatly benefited from the fact that RPE cells in tissue culture retain their phagocytic activity toward POS. Recording the binding and internalization kinetics of POS by RPE in culture ideally complements the classical microscopic characterization of outer segment uptake by RPE in vivo (Fig. 4). First, outer segment recognition cannot be studied separately from outer segment internalization in vivo because shed outer segments in the subretinal space are juxtaposed to the RPE surface whether or not they are recognized or bound by RPE receptors. Second, far greater numbers of RPE cells can be evaluated in each sample in assays in vitro than in tissue sections. Therefore, small but significant alterations in RPE phagocytic activity may be detected by in vitro assays that may be missed in the light and electron microscopy studies of postmortem tissues. Third, RPE cells in vitro can be studied following specific manipulation of their phagocytic mechanism by pharmacological compounds, recombinant proteins, protein overexpression or downregulation, just to name a few. Gain- and loss-of-function approaches are well suited to unequivocally identify critical components of the RPE phagocytic machinery. Fourth, in vitro phagocytic challenge of RPE cells allows one to test directly the phagocytic activity of RPE cells toward POS, while altered photoreceptor shedding or IPM may indirectly alter the phagocytic activity by RPE cells in vivo. Importantly, however, RPE cells in vitro only provide a phagocytic assay system with relevance to RPE phagocytosis in vivo if cells are studied as differentiated, polarized epithelial monolayers that assemble their phagocytic machinery at their apical surface,
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Fig. 4. Fluorescence microscopy quantification of photoreceptor outer segment (POS) phagocytosis by retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells in vivo and in vitro. A–C Cryosections of eyecups from 2-month-old wild-type mice were labeled with rod opsin antibody B6-30 [105]. Maximal projections of confocal microscopy x–y sections representing tissue sections 5-µm thick are shown. A High-magnification view of the RPE–POS interface shows intact rod outer segments and opsin-positive phagosomes (white) in RPE cells adjacent to RPE nuclei (gray). B and C Lowmagnification view of similar opsin signals without nuclei stain illustrates that these images can be used to count opsin phagosome numbers in the RPE. B At 1 h before light onset, the RPE cell layer shows few opsin-labeled phagosomes. C At 2 h after light onset, the RPE cell layer shows numerous opsin-labeled phagosomes, confirming the daily burst of rod POS phagocytosis by the RPE. D Maximal projection of confocal microscopy x–y sections of primary wild-type mouse RPE cells in culture 1 h after phagocytic challenge demonstrates vigorous uptake of fluorescent isolated bovine POS by RPE cells in vitro. Phagocytosed POS appears in white, RPE cell junctions stained with ZO-1 tight junction marker antibody appear in gray. All scale bars 20 µm.
like RPE cells in vivo. Finally, while all evidence suggests that the phagocytic activity of polarized RPE cells in vitro retains the primary characteristics of the phagocytic activity of RPE cells in vivo, this is not the case for the nature of particle contact. In experimental phagocytosis assays, RPE cells must establish firm binding of isolated POS that is stable enough to withstand shear forces during sample processing, including vigorous washing steps. This is in sharp contrast to the contact of apical RPE receptors with shedding/shed POS in the subretinal space, where mechanical stress is absent and a stable binding event per se may not occur. Thus, comparison of in vivo and in vitro RPE phagocytosis counting fluorescence- or opsin antibody-labeled POS as illustrated in Fig. 4 are both required to fully elucidate the phagocytic machinery of the RPE. The events that cause and accompany shedding of photoreceptor tips remain largely obscure. As outlined in the previous section, it is generally thought that RPE microvilli– outer segment interactions as well as photoreceptor intrinsic mechanisms contribute to
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POS shedding. However, the molecular mechanisms that promote outer segment shedding remain yet to be uncovered. This includes the identification of putative “shed me” and “eat me” signals exposed by photoreceptor tips. Molecular changes likely designate the distal tip for shedding and may also serve as recognition signals triggering subsequent RPE phagocytosis. POS changes in surface structure or composition may promote recognition by RPE phagocytic receptors directly. Alternatively, POS changes may promote recruitment of ligands, concentrating or presenting it for engagement of RPE surface receptors. This scenario predicts that the same ligand–ligand complex binds to POS and to RPE receptors. Although there is no evidence for such ligand as yet for retina, a precedent exists. Most cells undergoing apoptosis flip the anionic phospholipid phosphatidylserine from the inner to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane lipid bilayer [72]. External phosphatidylserine serves to signal the apoptotic process to phagocytic cells. Phagocytes may express surface receptors that recognize phosphatidylserine directly [73]. In addition, soluble phosphatidylserine-binding proteins form a bridge between apoptotic and phagocytic cells. It has not yet been demonstrated whether shedding POS in the retina exposes external leaflet phosphatidylserine. However, phosphatidylserine-enriched liposomes have been reported to affect in vitro outer segment uptake [74]. Furthermore, apoptotic cells and POS compete for binding by RPE cells and by macrophages in culture [75]. This strongly suggests that these different phagocytic particles share “eat me” signals. The only such signal conclusively identified for apoptotic cells is phosphatidylserine. Much progress has been made over the past decade identifying the components that form the RPE phagocytic machinery. Most important, it is now clear that RPE cells use a mechanism to phagocytose shed outer segment that belongs to a group of related clearance mechanisms used by other cell types, such as macrophages, to phagocytose apoptotic cells [75, 76]. Professional phagocytic mechanisms like the RPE’s are saturable, receptormediated processes with distinct phases of particle recognition/binding, internalization, and digestion. All known phagocytic mechanisms employ multiple phagocyte receptors, five of which have been described in RPE cells as described below. In vitro evidence suggests that pattern recognition receptors also associated with inflammatory phagocytosis may participate in POS uptake. Inhibiting a mannose-binding protein using antibodies reduces POS uptake by rat RPE in culture [77]. Toll-like receptor 4 has been shown to redistribute at the apical surface of human RPE cells in response to POS isolated from human but not from bovine retina and to induce a cytoplasmic signaling response in the RPE that may be involved in triggering POS clearance [78]. Little is known yet about the significance of these receptors for POS renewal in vivo. The scavenger receptor family member CD36 facilitates apoptotic cell clearance, fatty acid transport, and cell–matrix interactions by recognizing structurally defined lipid peroxidation products [79–82]. Blocking CD36 with CD36 antibodies partially inhibits outer segment engulfment by RPE cells in vitro [83]. Clustering of CD36 is sufficient to alter the rate with which RPE cells in culture internalize surface-bound outer segment [84]. In vitro assays suggest that CD36 clustering may activate intracellular signaling processes that ultimately target the internalization mechanism of the RPE. Lack of functional or morphological retinal abnormalities in CD36 knockout mice suggests that CD36 may be dispensable for POS renewal in the healthy eye, at least in mice kept under standard vivarium conditions. However, acute high-intensity illumination generates oxidized
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phospholipids in rat retina that are specifically recognized by CD36 [85]. In vitro, these ligands impair POS phagocytosis by RPE cells in a CD36-dependent manner. Notably, rats that harbor a deletion variant in the scavenger receptor CD36 were found to be more sensitive to intense light-induced retinal damage [86]. Thus, CD36 signaling may not be essential for RPE phagocytosis under basal conditions but may be involved in outer segment clearance under conditions that increase oxidative stress in the retina. A deletion in the coding region of the gene for the receptor tyrosine kinase Mer (MerTK) abolishes RPE phagocytosis in the RCS rat [87, 88]. MerTK deficiency also causes rapid retinal degeneration and defective apoptotic cell clearance by macrophages in MerTK kinase-deficient transgenic mice [76, 89]. MerTK-deficient RCS RPEs in culture retain the ability to recognize and bind outer segment but fail to internalize surface-bound outer segments [90, 91]. Despite the critical importance of MerTK for outer segment phagocytosis in vitro and in vivo, its downstream effectors in RPE cells remain to be identified. The permanent RPE cell lines RPE-J (rat), ARPE-19 and d407 (both human), and mouse, rat, and human RPE in primary culture employ the integrin adhesion receptor αvβ5 to recognize and bind isolated POS in experimental phagocytosis assays [28, 92– 94]. The αvβ5 integrin is essential for POS binding in vitro as RPE cells derived from β5 integrin knockout mice in primary culture largely fail to bind isolated POS [95]. RPE cells in β5 integrin knockout mice in vivo retain basal levels of phagocytic activity but lack the characteristic burst of phagocytosis upon early morning rod shedding (Fig. 5A) [95]. Moreover, αvβ5 integrin deficiency is sufficient to cause age-related vision loss in β5 integrin knockout mice accompanied by excessive accumulation of lipofuscin lipid storage bodies in the RPE, a cardinal feature of RPE aging and disease [95]. These findings illustrate that αvβ5 integrin receptors of the RPE are critical for retinal function. Furthermore, studies comparing wild-type RPE cells with RPE cells lacking αvβ5 receptor in vivo and in vitro indicated that αvβ5 integrin receptor engagement initiates intracellular signaling processes in the RPE that promote POS engulfment. Integrin receptors do not possess intrinsic enzymatic activity. However, integrin cytoplasmic domains assemble cytosolic signaling proteins and often bind different sets of proteins depending on receptor occupancy. Indeed, phagocytic challenge with POS rapidly increases the presence of multiple tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins associated with apical αvβ5 integrin in cultured RPE cells [96]. One of these proteins is focal adhesion kinase (FAK) [96]. FAK is a cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase that relays integrin signals [97]. Dramatic reduction of POS internalization by RPE cells in which FAK is specifically inhibited demonstrates that FAK is an important mediator of RPE phagocytic signaling downstream of αvβ5 integrin. MerTK tyrosine phosphorylation is thought to reflect MerTK activity. Strikingly, silencing FAK signaling in RPE cells abolishes MerTK tyrosine phosphorylation induced by POS phagocytosis [96]. MerTK is thus a target of FAK signaling in RPE cells. Furthermore, a strict temporal regulation of both FAK and MerTK activities precisely coincides with circadian shedding of rod outer segments in intact mouse retina [95]. These synchronized signaling events are completely abolished in αvβ5 integrindeficient retina [95] (Fig. 5B). These data provide the first direct evidence of a crosstalk of the recognition receptor αvβ5 integrin and the internalization receptor MerTK: The αvβ5 integrin-dependent signaling via FAK controls the efficiency of RPE phagocytosis by promoting peak MerTK activity at the time of rod outer segment shedding.
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Fig. 5. Loss of the daily burst of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) phagocytosis and synchronized activation of FAK (focal adhesion kinase) and MerTK (tyrosine kinase Mer) in mice lacking αvβ5 integrin. A Phagosome quantification reveals that β5 integrin knockout mouse retina lacks the characteristic burst of phagocytosis that follows light onset at 6 a.m. in wildtype mouse retina. Bars represent mean numbers of phagosomes ± standard deviation (n = 3). B Immunoblotting compares protein expression and phosphorylation profiles in eyecup detergent lysates harvested at different times of day. Promptly after light onset at 6 a.m., levels of active, phosphorylated FAK and MerTK increase in wild-type but not in β5 integrin knockout mouse eyecups. The rise in FAK phosphorylation precedes the increase of MerTK phosphorylation. This agrees well with earlier data from in vitro phagocytosis assays showing that MerTK activation during photoreceptor outer segment (POS) uptake requires FAK activation [96]. (Modified with permission from [95].)
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Taken together, all available evidence indicates that αvβ5 integrin at the apical surface of the RPE has important functions in POS phagocytosis as well as in retinal adhesion. These functions may be largely independent of each other since both are defective immediately following the establishment of mature RPE–photoreceptor interactions in the β5 knockout mouse retina. It is possible that αvβ5 receptors at the same plasma membrane domain of the RPE exist in two independent functional pools that mediate retinal adhesion and POS phagocytosis, respectively. Notably, αvβ5 integrin-dependent FAK-MerTK signaling coincides with the daily burst of rod POS phagocytosis but not with the daily peak of retinal adhesion [19, 95]. Thus, the two distinct functions of αvβ5 receptors at the apical surface of the RPE may utilize different downstream signaling pathways to promote two distinct aspects of RPE–photoreceptor interactions. Significance of Photoreceptor Outer Segment Renewal for Retinal Function Photoreceptor function strictly depends on efficient RPE phagocytosis of spent OS. Complete failure of RPE cells to engulf POS causes the rapid photoreceptor degeneration in the RCS rat [63, 98, 99]. Furthermore, the continuous nature of outer segment renewal implies that delay in POS removal will gradually cause POS components to accumulate. Indeed, lipofuscin storage bodies containing a complex mix of lipid and protein buildup in human RPE over time as a direct consequence of incomplete POS digestion [100]. Delayed outer segment opsin degradation in transgenic mice causes lipofuscin accumulation and retinal dysfunction with age [101]. Loss of synchronicity of outer segment clearance in β5 integrin null mice is sufficient to promote accumulation of lipofuscin and loss of photoreceptor function with age [95]. Lipofuscin components likely directly decrease RPE function and viability [94, 102]. Finally, there is much evidence that impaired RPE phagocytosis also contributes to human retinal disease, such as retinitis pigmentosa and age-related macular degeneration [103, 104]. PERSPECTIVE Numerous interactions between RPE and photoreceptor cells take place at all times in the retina. Important physiological functions of these interactions, such as retinal adhesion and POS renewal, occur at the same site and sometimes simultaneously. In addition, RPE–photoreceptor interactions are highly dynamic and differ among retinal regions with the circadian rhythm or with illumination. Although important recent progress has been made, many aspects of these interactions remain poorly understood at the molecular level. This is particularly true with regard to specific interactions of the RPE with photoreceptor cones. Given the enormous significance of cone function for human vision, it is thus imperative to elucidate the molecular mechanisms of renewal and adhesion, specifically of cone photoreceptors, in the mammalian retina in future studies. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We apologize to those colleagues whose work we did not cite due to space restrictions. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants EY13295 and EY17173. S.C.F. is the recipient of a William and Mary Greve Special Scholar Award by Research to Prevent Blindness and of an Irma T. Hirschl Career Award.
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5 Molecular Biology of IRBP and Its Role in the Visual Cycle Diane E. Borst, Jeffrey H. Boatright, and John M. Nickerson CONTENTS Introduction IRBP Protein Studies IRBP Null Mice IRBP Induces Experimental Autoimmune Uveitis IRBP Expression During Development Variability in IRBP Expression Molecular Biology of IRBP IRBP Genomic Cloning Evolution of IRBP Importance of the STUDY of the Control of Gene Expression Identification of DNA CIS-Acting Controlling Elements: In Vitro and In Vivo Experiments Transcription Factors and Their Role in the Control of IRBP Expression Transgenic Mice Repressors of IRBP Gene Expression Summary and Conjecture References
INTRODUCTION Interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP; Unigene RBP3) is found in the eye and is critical for vision. It is a 144-kDa glycolipoprotein that is synthesized by the photoreceptor cells and secreted into the interphotoreceptor space (IPS), where it facilitates the transport of retinoids between the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and the photoreceptor cells. IRBP, the only retinoid-binding protein found in the IPS, is critical for vision because free retinoids damage cells; yet, retinoids must traverse the IPS twice during the visual cycle. IRBP is a chaperone protein for retinoids. IRBP is known
From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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to induce experimental autoimmune uveitis (EAU) in mice and rats. EAU serves as an animal model for several sight-threatening ocular inflammatory diseases. Increasing our knowledge of the normal expression of IRBP and its regulation will further our understanding of normal retinal cell biology. IRBP PROTEIN STUDIES During the visual cycle, retinoids must traverse the IPM twice. Unbound retinoids can be easily degraded. Also, they are cytotoxic. Retinoid-binding proteins act as chaperones to retinoids, binding them and preventing either of these untoward effects [1]. IRBP is the only retinoid-binding protein known to be present in the IPS and is the major soluble protein found in the IPS [2]. IRBP is a 144-kDa glycolipoprotein that is synthesized by the retina, is present in a number of different vertebrate classes, and is secreted into the IPS. It is known to bind retinoids (e.g., 11-cis retinal, alltrans retinol, and retinoic acid) and fatty acids. Using Western blot analyses on dissected tissue extracts, IRBP is found to be most abundant in interphotoreceptor matrix (IPM) washes, but it is also found in the retina cytosol, aqueous, vitreous, pineal gland cytosol, and the cerebral cortex cytosol [3]. It was not present in the cytosols prepared from the cornea, lens, liver, testes, Harderian gland, or cerebrospinal fluid [3]. Immunoelectron microscopic staining has localized IRBP to the photoreceptor cells and pinealocytes [4]. IRBP NULL MICE IRBP may function in the visual system via its retinoid properties [5–16]. Several investigators have found that IRBP impedes the flow of retinoids from the RPE (or an equivalent vesicle-like source) to the photoreceptors or outer segments. Corresponding in vitro experiments in the transport of retinoids from one type of artificial vesicle to another favor a buffering model of the function of IRBP. Many of these experiments reflect the notion that there are several sinks, pools, or reservoirs of retinoids, and that under different physiological conditions, the connections from one pool to the next is rate limiting. Further experiments are needed to determine the following: (1) Are there additional points where IRBP may participate in regulating retinoid cycling? (2) Is there a receptor for IRBP on either the RPE apical membrane or the plasma membrane of the rod or cone photoreceptor cell? (3) How does IRBP extract retinoids from the RPE or outer segment plasma membrane? IRBP knockout mice were constructed several years ago [17]. Homozygous mice lacking the IRBP gene exhibit a normal life span and have no obvious abnormal phenotypic characteristics outside the eye. Heterozygous mice appear normal as well. The absence of IRBP has no apparent deleterious effect on the rate of retinoid shuttling between the RPE and the photoreceptor cell, an essential process known as the visual cycle [17, 18]. This is not to imply that visual function in IRBP knockout mice is normal. On the contrary, the absence of IRBP yields a visual system with reduced a-wave magnitude, as is demonstrated by electroretinography. This corresponds proportionally to a reduced thickness of the outer nuclear layer (ONL) of roughly 50% as is seen in histological
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sections. IRBP knockout mice appear to have half the a-wave signal and about half the number of rod photoreceptor cells when compared to wild-type mice [17, 18]. The outer segments of the IRBP null mice appear slightly disorganized, and a few small vacuoles are found in the IPS between outer segments [18]. These knockout mouse studies suggest a function for IRBP in the development and maintenance of the photoreceptors. It is not yet clear how or when the absence of IRBP gene expression affects the number of photoreceptor cells. It is not known whether this effect is manifested at the level of the number of rod cells that are born (that is, too few rods being born) or whether too many rod cells die prematurely during retina development. It is fairly obvious by simple inspection of the published images of the IRBP knockout retinas that this defect is not a change in the fate of the cells being born as there is no increase in the number of other kinds of cells in the retina. Similarly, simple inspection also suggests that there is no corresponding diminution in the thicknesses of the other layers of the retina, suggesting that there is no general reduction in the number of bipolar, amacrine, horizontal, Müller glial, or ganglion cells. This decrease in the number of photoreceptor cells but not of the other retinal cells might point to the potential for abnormal development of synapse formation in the knockout mouse, although this has not been reported in the literature. Preliminary findings suggest that the manifestations of the absence of IRBP occur early in the development of the retina as changes are detected at or before P10 by both morphology and microarray analyses [19]. IRBP INDUCES EXPERIMENTAL AUTOIMMUNE UVEITIS Experimental autoimmune uveitis (EAU) serves as an animal model for the study of autoimmune diseases that lead to retinal degeneration. IRBP has been shown to induce EAU in rats, mice, and monkeys when it is injected into the footpad of the animal (for review, see [20]). The pathology of IRBP-induced disease is restricted to the retina and pineal gland: Photoreceptors are missing or degenerated while the rest of the retina remains intact. The disease characteristics are similar to those seen in human uveitis, thus making it an excellent model for study. Specific IRBP peptides are known to be uveitogenic in rats and mice and have been shown to have a common sequence for both the immunological and immunopathological sites [21–26]. IRBP EXPRESSION DURING DEVELOPMENT The neural retina is a well-ordered laminar structure consisting of alternating layers of cells and their synapses. The outermost layers contain the photoreceptor cells. The innermost layer of the retina is the nerve fiber layer containing ganglion cell axons that travel through the optic nerve and carry the visual signals to the brain. Early in development, the retina consists of a single layer of retinoprogenitor cells that, in time, proliferate to form enough cells to comprise all of the different cell types of the retina. A single progenitor cell can generate all of the different retinal cell types [27–30]. During development, populations of progenitor cells stop dividing and differentiate into the different retinal cell types, including both neurons and glia. The different retinal cell types are not all generated at the same time.
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Differentiation occurs in a defined, specific sequence. Developing retinal cells begin to differentiate between embryonic day 10 (E10) and 11 (in mice and rats) into different cell types: ganglion cells, horizontal cells, or cone photoreceptors (mice [31], rats [32]). Cone cells are the first photoreceptors to differentiate in the retina, comprise 3–5% of the photoreceptor population in mouse, and first appear at (E10) (mice [33]; rats [32]). Their differentiation is complete before birth. In mice, rods first appear at E13, and their generation continues until postnatal day 7 (P7) [33]. Rod photoreceptor genesis begins and ends a few days later in rats [32]. In mice, rats, humans, and presumably other mammals, IRBP expression begins early in retinal development. Using Western blot analysis, the presence of the mouse IRBP protein was identified as early as E17, but IRBP was not detected at E15 [34]. Using the more sensitive technique of ribonuclease (RNase) protections analysis, Liou et al. [35] identified low levels of IRBP message in mice at E11.5 and suggested that IRBP may be expressed as early as E10.5. The early expression of IRBP in the mouse retina was confirmed by reverse transcriptase-coupled polymerase chain reaction [rtPCR] experiments that show an amplification product at E10.5 but not E9.5 [36]. Expression of IRBP increases from E13.5 to E20.5, when expression plateaus at E20.5 and adult levels are seen [35]. To label cells that are still proliferating at P2, mice were injected with Bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU). IRBP and BrdU co-localization demonstrated that 40% of the proliferating cells at this age synthesize IRBP protein [35]. Using in situ hybridization, IRBP gene expression is detected in the retina very early in development at E10.5, with stronger expression seen at E13.5 [37]. At later stages in development, when the retinal cells have differentiated, IRBP expression is localized only to the photoreceptor cells. Unexpectedly, IRBP expression was seen in the eye lens at E10.5, with the signal disappearing after E15.5. It is not known at this time whether the disappearance of the signal is due to a masking of the signal by high levels of crystallin gene expression or if IRBP expression is shut down. IRBP expression is seen in the prenatal pineal gland and possibly in the prenatal ciliary body as well [37]. The two different techniques reveal a delay in developmental timing of IRBP expression: Western analyses show IRBP expression at E17 but not E15, whereas rtPCR and in situ hybridization show IRBP expression as early as E10.5. This difference could be due to the increased sensitivity of the rtPCR and in situ hybridization techniques or a delay in the synthesis and accumulation of IRBP protein. As was seen in mice, IRBP expression in humans is present early in development. Using complementary DNA (cDNA) from whole retina as a template in rtPCR experiments, a faint rtPCR product for IRBP is seen at fetal week 10.5 (Fwk 10.5) but not at Fwk 9.5, indicating that the onset of IRBP expression is between Fwk 9.5 and 10.5 [36]. In similar experiments done by another group, rtPCR analysis did not detect IRBP expression at Fwk 10, but cone rod homeobox gene (Crx) expression was detected at this time. Later in human eye development, at Fwk 12, IRBP, Crx, and Nrl expression was detected by rtPCR [38]. (More information about Crx expression is found in a later section). In humans, retinal differentiation first occurs in the fovea and moves in a central-toperipheral wave through the retina [38]. To determine the earliest time of IRBP expression and the specific cellular localization of the IRBP protein, immunocytochemistry (ICC)
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was performed on human eyes specifically looking at the fovea. ICC detects IRBP protein in some foveal cone precursor cells by Fwk 9. NRL-positive nuclei were first found in the fovea at Fwk 11 [38]. At Fwk 12, IRBP protein is still detected only in the fovea and now is seen in the apical region of the fovea cone precursors as a continuous band of immunoreactivity, indicating that many of the cells are expressing IRBP [39]. rtPCR of cDNA from whole eyes underestimates the time of onset of expression of IRBP but accurately recapitulates the order of expression. IRBP is expressed early in retinal development in cone precursors and is one of the earliest photoreceptor-specific proteins to be expressed. VARIABILITY IN IRBP EXPRESSION Conditions under which animals are raised and maintained also affect IRBP expression. Kutty et al. [40] demonstrated that ambient lighting conditions play a role in the regulation of IRBP but not S-antigen gene expression. Dark-reared mice showed a marked decrease in IRBP messenger RNA (mRNA) levels when compared to control animals. The dark-reared animals showed normal morphological development and normal distribution of IRBP protein. Light deprivation had no effect on IRBP protein levels, yet IRBP mRNA levels were decreased in these animals. The mechanism of light regulation on IRBP expression is unknown and could be at the level of gene transcription, RNA stability, or protein degradation. Dietary intake of retinoids can also affect IRBP expression. Katz et al. [41] fed animals a diet containing vitamin A in the form of retinyl palmitate (+A) or retinoic acid (−A). It is known that the −A diet does not support visual function but can satisfy the vitamin A metabolic requirements of most other tissues. Retinal degenerative changes occurred in the animals fed the −A diet, and decreased levels of IRBP were also found in retinoiddeprived animals (animals on the −A diet). However, the localization of IRBP immunoreactivity was not affected in these animals. This work raises the possibility that the IRBP content of the retina is regulated by retinoids that are functioning in the visual cycle. MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF IRBP The DNA sequence for IRBP reveals an internal quadruplication in the IRBP protein structure [42, 43]. Northern blot analyses using an IRBP cDNA clone as a probe have shown that the mRNA size varies depending on the species, approximately 8 kb (bovine [44]) or 4.4 kb (human [45]). IRBP mRNA has been detected in a number of animal orders, including primates, ungulates, rodents, lagomorphs [46], amphibians [47], chickens [48], and fish [49–51]. Northern blot analyses have also been performed to demonstrate IRBP tissue-specific expression. IRBP mRNA has been found in the retina and pineal gland but not in the lens or the liver [44, 52]. Surprisingly, there have been no reports on multiple-tissue Northern blots that were probed with IRBP to search for other tissues that might express this protein. In situ hybridization of selected organs has localized IRBP mRNA to the photoreceptor cells and pinealocytes [53]. IRBP is expressed in both rods and cones [54]. Recent searches of the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ geo/) and related microarray resources suggest
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that the bulk of expression is in the pineal and retina, with low-to-nonexistent levels elsewhere. The exception is some expression in the thymus of some mouse strains [55]. There are case reports of IRBP expression in cultured cell lines (e.g., 17440 Thy+ cells), the significance of which is unknown, and numerous accounts of IRBP expression in cultured retinoblastoma cell lines, as would be expected [56]. IRBP GENOMIC CLONING We [43] were the first to describe the complete sequence of the IRBP gene. The bovine IRBP gene is compact considering the large size of its mRNA; it contains only four exons, two of which are large. The deduced amino acid sequence indicates that the protein contains a leader sequence, which would be expected in a secreted protein. We hypothesized that the unusual gene structure and fourfold repeat is the result of gene duplication and intron loss. Our group mapped the CAP site, the start of transcription, to denote where the promoter region of the gene and the gene itself begin. Other groups deduced the sequence for the human IRBP gene [45, 57]. Subsequently, we determined the sequence of the mouse gene [58]. More recently, the genomes of several vertebrates have been determined; as a result the IRBP gene structure is known in those species. These structures are discussed in more detail in the section Evolution of IRBP. Comparison of the nucleotide sequences of the 5′ flanking region from mouse, bovine, and human reveals sequence similarities between all three species in two places: upstream from the CAP site for about 300 bp, the proximal promoter region, and another 260-bp stretch that is upstream a further 1.2 kb, the distal promoter region [59]. Although these IRBP orthologs do not contain a canonical TATA or CAAT box, the nucleotide sequence around the CAP site matches the consensus sequence for a transcriptional initiator, Py Py A+1 N T/A Py Py [60]. EVOLUTION OF IRBP Because of IRBP’s location in the space between the photoreceptor outer segments and the RPE, IRBP might be necessary to maintain retinoid isomerization and chemical forms while retinoids cross back and forth [1, 61]. This hypothesis is consistent with the absence of IRBP in the invertebrates and the entirely different way that invertebrates reisomerize all-trans retinal back to 11-cis retinal while still bound to opsin in the photoreceptor cell. The mammalian IRBP gene includes a remarkable quadruplication of a 300-amino acid long repeat or module [58], while the zebrafish IRBP gene appeared to contain only two repeated modules [49]. These two different but related gene structures were puzzling. We recently expanded our search for variations in IRBP that might rectify those observed structures with prior prediction of a common ancestral gene, which was hypothesized to have appeared coincident with the vertebrate eye. We examined the IRBP gene ortholog from seven mammals: Xenopus tropicalis, the chicken, and four teleost fish. We also looked for the IRBP gene in urochordates, but we could not find an ortholog. The tetrapod IRBP gene retains a single common gene structure, with a large first exon encoding three full repeats and parts of the fourth and final repeat spread among the first through fourth exons (Fig. 1).
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Fig. 1. The tetrapod interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP) gene. Orthologs of the IRBP gene are illustrated. A Mammals; B a bird and an amphibian. The same pattern of exons and introns are found in all these orthologs. Exon 1 encodes about 1,000 amino acids of the 1,200 that are normally found in IRBP and encodes three full repeats. The remainder of the protein, which includes only repeat 4, is split among exons 2–4. The positions of the introns are virtually identical in all the orthologs. (Reprinted from [119].)
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Fig. 2. The interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP) gene locus in four teleost fish. The complete genome sequences have been obtained for four fish: zebrafish (A), tetraodon (B), fugu (C), and medaka (D). Each of these fish contains a single locus that contains all the IRBP gene paralogs in each whole genome. In one case, the locus contains only one gene (medaka), in a second species, there is one full copy of an IRBP gene and a small fragment of an additional gene (tetraodon), and in two species, there are two IRBP genes in the single locus (zebrafish and fugu). In the latter case, the two genes are oriented head to tail. Also, the two paralogous genes of the single locus are quite different in gene structure. The first gene contains only a single exon, which resembles exon 1 of the tetrapod gene (as though the remaining three exons were deleted). Gene 2 has four exons like the tetrapod gene, except the two internal repeats have been deleted from exon 1. (Reprinted from [119].)
The teleost fish IRBP gene locus exhibited marked differences from the tetrapods. The fish locus possesses a single IRBP gene in the Japanese rice fish (medaka; Orizias laptipes). Yet in the other three species (zebrafish, fugu, and tetraodon), there was clear evidence of an additional gene, or a remnant, upstream of the ortholog of the rice fish IRBP gene (Fig. 2). We were surprised to detect this upstream paralog, but its gene structure is illuminating. The upstream gene, in its full form, includes the first three repeats of the tetrapod IRBP gene, while the teleost fish second gene includes only the first and fourth repeats. Each teleost gene structure contains the pattern of exons that are predicted based on the content of the specified repeats from the tetrapod gene. This provides compelling evidence that the apparently unusual gene loci in the teleost fish all arose from a common ancestral gene that resembles the tetrapod gene in structure. This is illustrated in Fig. 3 along with a model of the evolution of the IRBP gene. We suggest that the IRBP gene arose about the same time as the vertebrates. We expect that IRBP arose by exaptation of another superfamily member of the IRBP protein family, which includes numerous members, all of which contain a similar three-dimensional fold
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Fig. 3. A model for the evolution of the interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP) gene. The IRBP gene likely arose when the vertebrates diverged from the urochordates. This is the time period when nature “invented” the neural crest and the skull. The intent in this model is to highlight that the proposed early internal quadruplication of the IRBP gene occurred shortly after the vertebrate diverged from the urochordates (which lack the IRBP gene). This model is based on the work of Borst et al. [43] and Rajendran et al. [49]. The major revision is the addition of a two-gene IRBP locus in the teleosts. We propose that the teleost IRBP genes were formed as a result of the combination of an early whole-genome duplication and, following a short period of drift, compaction by unequal recombination to produce a two-gene locus in head-to-tail orientation [51]. A second possibility is a single-gene tandem duplication with subsequent drift of the paralogs [51]. (Reprinted from [119].)
with a substrate-binding site for hydrophobic substrates or ligands. We predict that this gene rapidly quadruplicated itself internally. Because the urochordates and the invertebrates all lack the IRBP gene, this pins the earliest appearance of IRBP to the vertebrates. This could be tested by further examination of sighted invertebrates, especially those having ciliate-type photoreceptors or intermediates having both ciliate- and rhabdomeric-type photoreceptors. Scallops bearing numerous eyes might be an appropriate test case. This model predicts that shark rays and cartilaginous fish should possess a tetrapod-like fourrepeat, four-exon gene. The elephant shark whole-genome project is being completed and might reveal informative data in the near future. The genome and IRBP sequences from nonteleost bony fish such as gars and bowfin might be informative: We predict that they will possess a single IRBP gene much like the tetrapod structure. In summary, the origins and evolution of the IRBP gene appear to coincide with the emergence of the vertebrates and the vertebrate style of eye. This coincidence may reflect fundamental changes needed with the inversion of the photoreceptor layer
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between vertebrates and invertebrates and the development of the choroid and RPE as a source of nutrients for the outer layers of the retina. This inversion of layers may in part account for the Darwinian success of the vertebrates in terms of evolutionary advantage offered by a sensory system having heightened visual acuity and improved pattern and motion detection systems. A final comment on the extraordinary teleost fish is needed: The teleost fish underwent a whole-genome duplication at about the time they diverged from other bony fish [62]. The resulting excess genetic material was freed from selective pressures, allowing three potential scenarios for each and every duplicate copy: deletion, neofunctionalization, or subfunction partitioning [63–65]. The term neofunctionalization simply represents the divergence of one of a pair of duplicate genes, one retaining the parent gene’s function while the other duplicate takes on a new and different function. Subfunction partitioning occurs when one of the daughter duplicates takes on one part of the parent’s gene functions, while the other daughter retains only complementary parts. Together the two genes complement each other and retain all the capabilities of the parent gene. Neofunctionalization occurred in the zebrafish IRBP locus, where one of the genes is expressed in the photoreceptor cells and the pineal gland, as expected, while the other gene is newly expressed in the inner layers of the retina [51]. A guiding principle should be recognized: The teleost fish genomes represent a huge opportunity to investigate how multidomain proteins work. There are over 20,000 teleost fish, each with about a one third chance of bearing a neofunctionalized or subfunction-partitioned gene of interest. It is now possible to find unusual gene structures by database searching of the several teleost fish whole genomes that are publicly available. These new gene structures, having different functions or subfunctions, help to assign physiological roles to any human gene that previously was refractory to analysis. IMPORTANCE OF THE STUDY OF THE CONTROL OF GENE EXPRESSION All cells with nuclei contain the same genetic information, yet cells are different from each other due to the expression of the different subsets of genes within each cell. The pattern of RNA abundance is characteristic of a particular cell type. The retina contains five major classes of neurons with specialized cell types within each class. The study of the control of gene expression begins the elucidation of what makes cells different from one and other. There are many different points at which gene expression can be controlled. The regulation of gene expression can occur at the level of transcription or translation. External signals can change the repertoire of genes expressed by a cell, as was seen by the dark rearing of animals and IRBP expression levels [40]. It was noticed in the late 1970s and early 1980s that the 5′ flanking region of mammalian genes contain conserved sequence motifs that are important in the control of transcription [66]. These DNA sequence features were initially used to build models of eukaryotic transcription based loosely on the classical works of molecular biology on bacterialpromoters, operators, and repressors, which usually are located immediately adjacent to the gene that they control [67, 68]. Elegant models of the process of eukaryotic RNA polymerase II complex formation and the initiation of RNA synthesis have since been built.
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Within the niche of vision research, there is a notion that more or less the exact same transcriptional processes occur in the human eye, but with specialized sets of transcription factors and transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) that ensure specificity and selectivity of transcription during the development of the eye and, following that, during the required maintenance of terminally differentiated cells of the eye. Transcription factors are proteins that bind to sequence-specific regions of DNA and decipher (switch on) the genetic information that encodes the regulation of gene transcription (for review, see [66]). These proteins contain a DNA-binding module that is linked to one or more activation or repression modules. There is a variety of DNA-binding modules, including those containing helix-loop-helix (HLH), homeodomain, zinc finger, and leucine zipper motifs. Some transcription factors, such as those containing an HLH or homeodomain motif, can interact to form homo- or heterodimers. Transcription factors are members of multigene families that have expanded during evolution [69]. As each gene that is expressed in the eye was sequenced, inevitably it was compared with known conserved TFBS motifs and patterns in the hunt for the elements that might control its promoter. Computer-mediated studies of this type can make numerous cross comparisons, among them cross-species comparisons of orthologs and cross comparisons of genes that share expression patterns. From these computer-mediated studies of DNA sequences, many candidate cis elements were predicted, and numerous studies sought to test whether the predicted motifs had any effect on the promoter activity of the gene in question. Great debates have arisen over the precise nucleotide sequence of a binding site or exactly which of a series of closely related trans factors is just the right one that stimulates cell-typespecific gene expression of someone’s favorite eye protein. The net result so far has been an incomplete story, but within the story certain promoters and transcription factors are well studied. A few relationships of TFBSs and the paired protein transcription factors show some promise for adequately describing the complex behavior, interrelatedness, and coregulation that generate proper levels of the myriad transcripts needed for visual function. Initial work on the IRBP and other photoreceptor-specific promoters started in the middle-to-late 1980s and consisted of, for the most part, two joint strategies. Once sequence comparisons had been made that provided testable hypothesized cis elements, these joint experiments included first the manipulation of the 5′ flanking regions of the IRBP and other photoreceptor-specific protein genes (which included nested deletion series, point mutations, replacements, and combinations with other known cis elements) and the construction of reporter constructs. These constructs were introduced into retina cells or animals by transient transfection or creation of transgenic animals, usually mice or frogs (cf. [70]. Playing important parts in the transient transfection strategy was the implementation of permanently established cell lines such as Y79 and WERI from human retinoblastoma tumors [59, 71] and primary cultures of chick retina cells [72]. Many other variants on this approach have been used, including knockdown strategies and cotransfection of trans factor constructs for expression in cells normally devoid of any photoreceptor specific proteins. These promoter activity measurement studies have been best in the determination of the factors and sequences that stimulate or activate the promoter. They have been somewhat less successful in the measurement of circumstances that suppress or repress promoter activity. The second component of the joint strategy was to study the physical interaction of the DNA (the putative TFBS) with a protein (the putative trans factor) by electrophoretic
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mobility shift assays (EMSAs) [73], DNA footprinting assays, or numerous variants (with the chromatin immunoprecipitation [ChIP] assay a very important one). Other approaches include the yeast one-hybrid method to find proteins that interact with a putative DNA TFBS [74]. These measurements of binding interactions have been best once a TFBS has been shown to control the given promoter. The detection of legitimate, biologically significant interactions has been less successful when only a match to a consensus sequence motif has been detected. This may be explained by the relatively high backgrounds in EMSAs and too low a stringency employed in detecting matches to the consensus. Strategies to overcome these weaknesses include the use of sequence alignments among numerous species with known common visual capabilities, a strategy called phylogenetic footprinting [75]. This strategy will become much more powerful once the number of whole genomes that are completely sequenced becomes greater. Gene expression is controlled by both genetic and epigenetic elements. The genetic elements include the DNA sequences (cis-acting controlling elements) and the protein complexes that bind to the specific DNA sequences. The proteins are called trans factors and are also known as transcription factors. Some transcription factors bind DNA, and others form protein–protein interactions to act in combination and regulate expression of an individual gene. Each transcription factor may contribute to the control of many genes. There are some genetic elements that are found in every cell for basal expression and the initiation of gene transcription. Other gene regulatory proteins are not ubiquitous and are found in specific cells to either activate or repress (gene silencer) gene expression. Cell- and tissue-specific transcription factors work to control and maintain terminal differentiation. Recent work has shown that noncoding RNAs (microRNAs) also have the ability to silence activated genes. The epigenetic elements known to control gene expression include DNA methylation and chromatin structure. Histone deacetylases condense chromatin to make these regions inactive. Methylated DNA is found in transcriptionally silent regions of the genome. The IRBP gene methylation states were studied by Liou et al. [76] and Boatright et al. [77]. The study of the control of gene expression will lead to a better understanding of development, cancer, tissue-specific expression, and transcription factors. As an example, mutations in the Crx transcription factor are found in patients with retinal degeneration named cone-rod dystrophy (CORD2) [78, 79]. IDENTIFICATION OF DNA CIS-ACTING CONTROLLING ELEMENTS: IN VITRO AND IN VIVO EXPERIMENTS Determining the sequence of the IRBP gene provided the information necessary to study the mechanisms that control the expression of the IRBP gene. The regulation of IRBP gene expression has been studied using IRBP promoter/reporter gene fusion constructs. These constructs have been tested in transient transfection assays and in transgenic mice. Transient transfection assays show that −204 bp of the IRBP promoter are sufficient for gene expression in Y79 retinoblastoma cells [80]. Transgenic mice have also been used to study the regulation of IRBP expression by its promoter.
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A 1.3-kb fragment of the human IRBP promoter was shown to direct transgene expression to the retina and pineal gland in transgenic mice [81]. This same transgene expression profile was also seen using a 1.8-kb fragment of the mouse IRBP promoter [82]. In other studies, the 1.3-kb human IRBP fragment was shown to direct transgene expression to the photoreceptor cells of transgenic mice, but expression was heterogeneous throughout the retina [83]. The region required for tissue-specific expression was reduced to −212-bp of the human IRBP [84] and then to −123 bp [85, 86]. The critical region in the mouse IRBP promoter is similar in size [70]. A tissue-restricting factor is present between −156 and −70, and this region was refined further by Boatright et al. [87] to between −156 and −140 (Fig. 4 ), as illustrated by the differential expression of these promoters but not of the −70 promoter in Y79 and Neuro2a cells. This site appears to be the same one as described by Otteson et al. [88, 89] as the site to which Krüppel-like factor 15 (KLF15) binds in the human IRBP and opsin promoters. Two sequences in the IRBP promoter were identified within the −123-bp fragment of the IRBP 5′-flanking region that are important for the regulation of IRBP gene expression. They consist of the GATTAA sequence and its inverted repeat, AATTAG, just upstream (Fig. 5; [71, 85]. The region containing these two sites is protected from digestion in in vitro deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) protection experiments and has been identified by several groups (see Fig. 5; [74, 85, 86, 90]. These different groups used different protein pools in the DNase I footprinting assays yet achieved very similar results. Bobola et al. [85] used a 147-bp fragment of the human IRBP promoter and nuclear extracts from retinoblastoma cells to identify a 14-bp footprint in this region of the IRBP promoter (Fig. 5]. Other groups [74, 86, 90] identified larger footprints of the same region (Fig. 6). Fong and Fong [90], also using a fragment of human IRBP promoter sequence and nuclear extracts from retinoblastoma cells, identified the larger footprinted section from −38 to −73 bp of the IRBP promoter, and this region binds to the protein OTx2 in a yeast one-hybrid experiment. Fei et al. [86] used a fragment of the human IRBP promoter sequence and a nuclear extract isolated from bovine retinas to identify a retinal-specific footprint between −42 and −76 bp of the IRBP promoter. Chen et al. [74], using a fragment of the bovine IRBP promoter and a recombinant fusion protein containing the Crx homeodomain, footprinted the region −29 to −81 bp. It is likely that numerous proteins bind to the DNA located in the footprinted region between −45 and −75 bp of the IRBP promoter. Possible candidates for proteins that bind to this region include Rx, Otx2, Crx, and Mok2. The AATTAG element had been previously identified in the mouse arrestin gene and named PCE I (photoreceptor conserved element I) because it binds retina-specific nuclear factors [91]. The PCE I core consensus sequence was determined to be CAATTAG. Closely related sequences are found in promoter regions of other vertebrate photoreceptor-specific genes, including the IRBP and opsin 5′-flanking regions. In the IRBP promoter, the PCE I sequence is conserved between the mouse, bovine, and human genomic sequences. The two regions in the mouse IRBP gene containing the PCE I are antisense strand between −1415 and −1397 and on sense strand between −74 and −55 upstream of the transcription start site [91].
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Cell Type Fig. 4. Suppression of interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP) transcription in nonphotoreceptor neuronal cells. A small specific conserved sequence between positions −156 and −140 in the mouse IRBP 5′ flanking region is utilized to repress IRBP transcription in neuronal cells that are not photoreceptors. The left four columns illustrate high-level expression of a reporter gene, chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT), in photoreceptor-like WERI-Rb1 cells, which originated from a retinoblastoma tumor and exhibit several photoreceptor-like properties. The right four columns illustrate the corresponding expression levels in Neuro2a cells, which originated from a neuroblastoma tumor and exhibit numerous neuronal-like characteristics but none that are specific to photoreceptor or light-sensitive properties. In the absence of a promoter, the base expression vector, (labeled pSVOATCAT), shows low background levels of CAT activity in each of the two cell lines. An IRBP promoter fragment from −70 to +101 (labeled p70) exhibits high CAT expression in both cell lines, demonstrating that this fragment is sufficient to promote IRBP transcription in these two neuronal cell lines, and we further demonstrated in a transgenic frog [70] that this holds true for all neuronal cell lineages. A construct containing −140 to +101 (labeled p140) exhibited the same expression pattern in the WERI and Neuro2a; however, a construct containing −156 to +101 (labeled p156) was active in WERI cells but inactive in Neuro2a cells. This pair of constructs highlights the region between −140 and −156 as a critical sequence in the IRBP 5′ flanking region that is apparently essential to prevent expression in an incorrect type of neuronal cell. We proposed that an active suppression event occurs, such as the binding of a trans factor to this sequence, to repress an otherwise active promoter. Further, we proposed that this factor would be absent or lack repressive activity in photoreceptor cells. Subsequent work by Otteson et al. [88, 89] identified KLF15 as a factor with exactly these properties when tested with the human IRBP promoter and human rhodopsin promoter. The sequence numberings of the mouse and human IRBP promoters are slightly different because of small insertions/deletions across the two orthologous sequences.
TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS AND THEIR ROLE IN THE CONTROL OF IRBP EXPRESSION Rx/rax Transcription Factor The transcription factor Rx binds to the PCE I element in vitro. Transfection of HEK293 cells with the mIRBP-1783/CAT (chloramphenicol acetyl transferase) construct, and hRX expression plasmid shows that Rx transactivates CAT expression up to
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Fig. 5. Footprint overlap comparison in the −70 to −45 region of the interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP) 5′ flanking sequences. This sequence is identical in the human and mouse IRBP genes. Boxes represent the DNA sequence of the IRBP promoter protected in deoxyribonuclease (DNase) I footprinting experiments. Medium gray: This sequence is a portion of the entire footprint (bovine [74], human [86, 90]. Light gray [85]. The short, solid lines directly above or below the DNA sequence denote core consensus sites for nuclear factor binding. Dashed lines denote the sequence is on the reverse strand (1: [91]; 2: [74]; 3: [105]). The GATTAA invert repeat is in bold [71, 85].
14.8-fold in a concentration-dependent manner [92]. Rx-specific antibodies were used on immunoblot to show that Rx is present in adult mouse retina and iris but not liver, lens, or brain. Immunohistochemistry of adult rat retina shows Rx staining in ONL (nuclei of photoreceptors) (92). Rx/rax is a member of the paired-like homodomain family of transcription factors (93, 94). In the mouse, strong Rx/rax expression is found in the anterior neural plate of E8.5 embryos. By E10.5, Rx/rax expression is restricted to the developing eye and forebrain regions. At E15.5, Rx/rax is expressed uniformly in the neuroretina of the eye. In later stages of retinal development, there is a progressive reduction in Rx/rax expression in the retina and by P6.5 Rx/rax expression is found only in photoreceptor and inner nuclear layers. As cell proliferation ability decreases so does Rx expression. There is a correlation of expression of Rx/rax to the temporal and spatial patterns of mitotic activity in the retina (93, 94). By P13.5, in the mouse, Rx expression is undetectable in in situ hybridation experiments (94). However, northern blot analysis shows that Rax is expressed in the adult mouse retina (93). The differences seen in Rx/rax expression levels in the adult mouse may be due to the different probes that were used to detect Rx/rax expression. A 1.2-kb fragment that codes for almost the complete rax cDNA sequence was used in the northern blot experiments (93) while homeobox sequences were used in a 5’-RACE reaction to generate probes
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Fig. 6. Footprint overlap comparison in the −351 to −1 region of the interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP) 5′ flanking sequences. The mouse IRBP 5′ proximal flanking sequence is shown and marked with protected regions that are color coded according to each indicated study [59, 76, 86, 85, 74, 89, 90]. There is a degree of concordance in that about 200 nucleotides are not protected by any form of retina-specific protein or nuclear extract, and most of the sequences that are protected are confirmed by two independent experiments. This is despite the (1) differences in sequences across three species, (2) differences among the several different sources of proteins (some very crude nuclear extracts and others highly purified individual proteins), and (3) differences in techniques and stringencies in deoxyribonuclease (DNase) digestion conditions.
used in the in situ experiments (94). Rx/rax is required for eye formation from the early stages of eye development. The initial specification of retinal cells and their proliferation is likely regulated by the Rx/rax transcription factor. NrL Transcription Factor Neural retina leucine zipper (Nrl) is a transcription factor that is preferentially expressed in rod photoreceptor cells. It contains a basic motif–leucine zipper and has a synergistic effect with Crx on rhodopsin transcription regulation. In the mouse retina, Nrl transcripts are detected at E12 [93]. Ablation of the Nrl gene in gene-targeted mice results in a complete loss of rod photoreceptor function but enhanced cone-mediated activity that is attributed to S cones. At 5 weeks of age, Nrl null mice retinas contain
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a similar number of nuclei in the ONL when compared to wild-type retinas; however, the rods have shorter outer segments with an abnormal disk morphology. Northern blot analysis shows that IRBP expression levels are unchanged between wild-type (+/+; 1.0), hemizygous (+/−; 1.7), and Nrl null (−/−; 1.5) mice at P10 [94]. This result is unexpected. In vitro transactivation assays measure the ability of a transcription factor to regulate the transcription of a reporter gene that is downstream of a promoter. HEK293 cells were transfected with an IRBP promoter-reporter gene and plasmids that express transcription factors. Although no statistically significant differences were observed in transactivation activity when cells were transfected with or without an Nrl expression plasmid, a synergistic affect on transactivation activity was seen when both Nrl and Crx expression plasmids were used in these in vitro experiments [88]. Peng and Chen [95], however, showed that Nrl does transactivate the IRBP promoter in HEK293T cells. Both groups used the same IRBP-reporter gene plasmid, bRbp3-300-luc. The different results found by these two groups may be due to different levels of recombinant protein expression that is caused by different transfection efficiencies or the use of different expression plasmid vectors or different cell lines. Peng and Chen used the HEK293T cell line, while Otteson et al. [88] used HEK293 cells. HEK293T cells contain a stably integrated copy of the SV40 large T antigen [96] that could produce higher copy numbers of the expression plasmid in the transfected cells. A higher concentration of Nrl protein may be required to elicit detectable transactivation activity of the IRBP promoter. Peng and Chen found that there is synergistic activity of Nrl with either Crx or Otx2 on the regulation by the IRBP promoter. Also, Nrl binds to a fragment of the IRBP promoter in ChIP assays, indicating that Nrl interacts with the IRBP promoter in vivo [95]. This interaction is not dependent on the Crx binding because ChIP assays show that Nrl binds to the IRBP promoter in retinas from Crx null mice [95]. Crx Transcription Factor The cone rod homeobox gene (Crx) encodes a paired-like homeodomain protein, is a member of the otd/Otx gene family, and was first identified in the rhodopsin promoter [73, 74]. Northern blot analysis for Crx shows a single, abundant message in the adult mouse retina, and this expression was not seen in any other organ that was studied [73]. Crx expression is first detected in the mouse at E10.5 by rtPCR analysis [36] and at E12.5 by in situ hybridization experiments [73]. In human retinas, the onset of Crx expression is between Fwk 9.5 and 10.5 as shown by rtPCR analysis, and expression is maintained in the adult [36, 38]. The use of other techniques shows that Crx mRNA is first detected by in situ hybridization experiment at Fwk 13, while ICC experiments first detect Crx protein 2 weeks later at Fwk 15 [36]. The difference in timing is likely due to the difference in the threshold of sensitivity between the different techniques. In vitro, Crx transactivates IRBP promoter-reporter gene constructs in a dose-dependent manner [74, 92]. Transactivation activity of the IRBP promoter is enhanced when both Crx and Nrl expression plasmids are used [95]. When the Crx site in the mouse IRBP promoter was mutated, there was a suppression of activity, but it was not abolished. The remaining transcription activation activity detected is likely due to the PCE I/Ret1 element [71]. ChIP assays show that Crx binds to the IRBP promoter in vivo [95].
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In both human and mouse retina development, the onset of expression for both Crx and IRBP mRNA is very similar. Bibb et al. [36] did not find Crx protein until Fwk 15—several weeks after the mRNA expression is detected. The developmental expression pattern and the in vitro work both suggest that Crx is a transcriptional activator of IRBP expression (positive transcription factor for IRBP). A Crx knockout mouse was created by a targeted deletion of the homeodomain region of the Crx gene [97]. At P10, before the outer segments begin to form, there is no phenotypic difference seen in retinas of the different Crx null mouse genotypes. At P14, outer segments are not seen in Crx null mouse retinas, and in Crx hemizygotes the outer segments are shorter than those of wild-type mice. The expression levels of photoreceptor-specific genes were determined in Crx null mice mutant retinas by densitometry of northern blots from P10 wild-type, hemizygous, and Crx null mice. The expression levels for IRBP are the same in all three genotypes of mice, unlike other photoreceptor-specific genes such as rhodopsin and cone arrestin, which have expression levels that are tenfold lower when the hemizygous and null phenotypes are compared [97]. Transcription factors interact with specific sequences of DNA and with other proteins to regulate gene transcription/expression and cellular differentiation. The Crx null mice were used in a study designed to identify the Crx transcriptional networks [98]. Crx gene targets were identified by microarray analysis of gene expression patterns from normal (wt) and Crx null developing retinas. Photoreceptor-specific and enriched genes were divided into two categories based on the downregulation of their expression in the absence of Crx expression: genes that are downregulated more than 2.5-fold or genes downregulated less than 2.5-fold. IRBP is in the second category of genes, and this agrees with earlier work that the knockout of Crx does not have a large effect on the expression of IRBP [97]. In addition, comparison of the upstream sequences from genes that were downregulated in the absence of Crx led to the identification of a 11-base sequence motif that contains one strong Crx-binding element (CBE) upstream of a second, weaker CBE-like sequence [98]. The IRBP promoter contains two GATTA sequence motifs that are slightly similar to the CBE motif (Fig. 5). It contains the second weaker CBE-like sequence but not the first, stronger element, suggesting that Crx is not a main contributor to the activation of the IRBP gene. These two GATTA motifs are required for IRBP expression because mutations in both GATTA motifs, found in the −58 to −45 bp region and the second one just upstream (inverted), abolish expression of the reporter gene in transgenic mice photoreceptors [85]. The regulation by Crx may not contribute significantly to the overall transcriptional regulation of the IRBP gene, or the expression of IRBP may be regulated or coregulated by Otx2 because the consensus sequences for Crx and Otx2 are similar. Crx and Otx2 have an 86% homology in the homeodomain [99]. In Crx null mice, Otx2 activity may compensate for Crx activity in the regulation of IRBP gene expression, thus resulting in a minimal change in IRBP expression levels in these mice. Crx antisense knockdown suppresses p70 activity, suggesting that whereas Crx is not required for IRBP expression, it may in fact be used endogenously [100]. OTX2 Transcription Factor Otx2 is another paired-type homeodomain protein, a member of the Otx homeobox gene family, and is expressed in the retina [101]. Otx2 is an essential developmental gene. It has
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multiple roles in gastrulation and brain and retinal development. A targeted disruption of the Otx2 gene leads to embryonic lethality at midgestation, thus preventing the analysis of the influence of Otx2 expression retina development [102]. Conditional knockout mice show that Otx2 is required for neuronal specification of the retina and for pineal gland development. Absence of Otx2 results in the conversion of differentiating photoreceptor cells into amacrine-like neurons and to deficiency of pinealocytes in the pineal gland [103]. In adult mice, Otx2 immunoreactivity is found in several retinal cell types, including the nuclei of photoreceptors [99] or the cytoplasm of rod photoreceptors [101]. The subcellular location of the Otx2 protein appears to be antibody specific. In situ hybridization experiments studying Otx2 expression in the developing mouse retina show that at E11.5 strong staining is seen in the RPE, while staining is weak in the neural retina [103]. At E12.5, expression of Otx2 in the neural retina has increased, and by E17.5 there is very strong staining for Otx2 in the outer region of the neuroblastic layer. At P6 and in the adult, faint staining is detected in the ONL, suggesting that there is weak expression of Otx2 in adult photoreceptor cells [103, 104]. This is in contrast to Crx (another member of the Otx gene family) expression. In the adult mouse retina, strong staining for Crx expression is found in the ONL [103]. Otx2 was identified as binding to the IRBP promoter in a yeast one-hybrid screen using a human retina library and an IRBP sequence that was protected in DNA protection experiments [90]. The Otx2 protein transactivates the IRBP promoter in vitro. When HeLa cells are cotransfected with a 123-bp hIRBP promoter-reporter gene construct and an Otx2 expression plasmid, IRBP transcription is activated five- to sevenfold [99]. Cotransfection of the hIRBP reporter gene construct and a Crx expression plasmid increases IRBP promoter activity four- to fivefold, which is in agreement with the transactivation experiments of Chen et al. [74] in HEK293 cells. Transfection of HeLa cells with the 123-bp hIRBP reporter gene construct, Otx2 expression plasmid, and Crx expression plasmid does not increase IRBP promoter activity, suggesting that the Otx2 and Crx proteins do not act synergistically on the human IRBP promoter [99]. Otx2mediated transactivation of the IRBP promoter was also seen when a plasmid containing the region −66 to +68 bp of the IRBP promoter and a reporter gene was cotransfected with an Otx2 expression plasmid into HeLa cells [90]. This same plasmid was used to study the transactivation activity of different isoforms of Otx2 in 293T cells [104]. In these experiments, the B isoform had stronger stimulation of the IRBP promoter than the A or C isoforms; this was attributed to higher levels of translation of the B isoform of Otx2 in this in vitro model [104]. Transactivation activity of the IRBP promoter is enhanced when both Otx2 and Nrl expression plasmids are used [95]. Also, Otx2 binds to a fragment of the IRBP promoter in ChIP assays, indicating that Otx2 interacts with the IRBP promoter in vivo [95]. ChIP assays also show that Otx2 binds to the IRBP promoter in retinas from Crx null mice, so the interaction between the IRBP promoter and Otx2 is not dependent on Crx binding [95]. Otx2 is expressed before Crx in mouse retinal development. Experiments in which the Otx2 genes are inactivated under the control of the Crx promoter (in conditional knockout mice) show that Otx2 is a direct regulator of Crx gene expression [103]. The above-listed trans factors are some of those needed to achieve cell-type selectivity and specificity of expression in the retina. It is widely recognized that the rod photoreceptor [93] does express many other trans factors, as is indicated by microarray
106
Borst et al.
studies. Given this plethora of trans factors, it is not yet possible to predict when the story of IRBP transcription will be complete. TRANSGENIC MICE Transgenic mice were generated using the hIRBP promoter fragment −123 to +18 upstream of a reporter gene. When both the PCE I and CRX elements are mutated in transgenic mice, reporter gene activity is abolished in photoreceptor cells [99]. In vitro experiments show that mutation of either the Ret-1/PCE I or the CRX elements suppresses IRBP promoter activity [71]. The same fragment of the hIRBP promoter (−123 to +19) upstream of a reporter gene was used to make transgenic mice, and either the PCE I element or the CRX element was mutated [86]. Mutation of the CRX but not PCE I element abolishes reporter gene activity in photoreceptor cells. When the PCE I element but not the CRX element is mutated in the IRBP promoter, 9 of 17 lines of transgenic mice show photoreceptor-specific expression of the reporter gene [86]. These studies indicate that the CRX DNA element is required for photoreceptor-specific expression of IRBP. rtPCR experiments, using the different lines of transgenic mice, show that to have IRBP promoter activation, a protein interaction with the PCE I element is not required but is enhanced when the PCE I element is present [86]. REPRESSORS OF IRBP GENE EXPRESSION A potential strong silencer was identified in the region between −206 and −66 bp of the mouse IRBP promoter in transient transfection experiments using nested deletions of the 5′-flanking region controlling expression of a reporter gene [90]. KLF15 Krüppel-like factor 15 (KLF15) was identified in a yeast one-hybrid assay using a bovine retinal cDNA library and a 29-bp fragment of the bovine rhodopsin promoter as bait. Transactivation experiments were performed in vitro to study the activity of KLF15 on the IRBP promoter since the rhodopsin and IRBP DNA sequences share some gene regulatory elements [88]. HEK293 cells were transiently transfected with a KLF15 expression plasmid and an IRBP promoter-reporter gene construct containing the proximal region of the bovine IRBP gene, −300 to +132 bp. Expression of KLF15 reduced reporter gene activity of the IRBP-reporter gene construct in a dose-dependent manner [88]. CRX expression is known to transactivate the IRBP promoter in vitro [74]. Reporter gene activity was also repressed by KLF15 expression when CRX or CRX and NRL were cotransfected with the IRBP-reporter gene construct and the KLF15 expression plasmid [88]. The zinc finger domains of the KLF15 transcription factor bind to the IRBP promoter [89]. DNA footprinting experiments using a KLF15 fusion protein identified three KLF15 binding sites in the bovine IRBP promoter. The same footprints are found on both positive and negative strands and are conserved among three species. DNA binding is zinc dependent, and there is evidence that retinal proteins bind to the KLF15 site. The footprinted site, K1-c, is next to the CpG dinucleotide (−115) that is hypomethylated specifically in retinal cells
IRBP Molecular Biology
107
[35, 77]. Perhaps KLF15 is regulating the methylation/chromatin structure of the IRBP 5′-flanking region for the repression of IRBP expression in the inner retina. MOK2 MOK2 is a Krüppel/TFIIIA-related zinc finger protein. MOK2-binding sites are present in the IRBP gene, and experiments were performed to determine if IRBP is a potential MOK2 target gene [105]. In the IRBP promoter, 8 bp of the MOK2 core sequence is found (TTAAGGCT) in the reverse orientation, and this overlaps the CRX/ OTX2 site (Fig. 5). The IRBP DNA sequence defined as the MOK2 site is conserved between human, bovine, and mouse IRBP promoter sequences. A MOK2-binding site is also found in intron 2 of the human and bovine IRBP genes [105]. The IRBP promoter region binds to MOK2 recombinant protein in EMSAs, and the band is supershifted with an anti-MOK2 antibody showing that MOK2 protein binds to the IRBP promoter in vitro [105]. In transient transfection experiments of Weri-RB1 cells with an IRBP promoter-reporter construct alone or with MOK2 expression plasmids, a significant reduction in transcription activity was observed when the MOK2 protein was present, showing that MOK2 can act as a transcriptional repressor of the IRBP promoter activity in vitro. However, the sensitive technique of in situ rtPCR was required to detect a low level of Mok2 expression in a subset of nuclei in the ONL of 1-month-old mouse retinas [105]. Chx10 Chx10 gene expression is required for retinal progenitor cell proliferation and bipolar cell differentiation. Chx10 is required to block rod cell differentiation but is not essential for the proliferation of progenitor cells in the postnatal retina [106]. It contains a pairedlike homeodomain [107]. Chx10 represses transcription in vitro [108]. Chx10 knockdown inhibits the generation of bipolar cells and differentiation of rod photoreceptor cells. When overexpressed in newborn mouse retinas, Chx10 promotes the differentiation of bipolar cells without affecting cell division or survival [106]. The expression of Chx10 is found early in retinal development in the mouse at E9.5 in the outermost region of the evaginating optic vesicle, the area that will form the neuroretina later in development [107]. At E16.5, when lamination of retina is starting and differentiated ganglion cells have been formed, Chx10 expression is detected in the neuroblast layer but not in the ganglion cell layer (GCL). Expression of Chx10 at P4 is further restricted to the future inner nuclear layer and is not found in the future ONL [107]. In the adult mouse retina, Chx10 expression is found in bipolar cells and a subset of Müller cells [109]. In the ocular retardation mouse mutant (Chx10or-J/or-J), ocular development is abnormal. The phenotype is characterized by blindness, small eyes (micropthalmia), abnormal photoreceptors, and absent optic nerve. Analysis of expression of other known transcription factors in the retina was performed to study the effect the absence of Chx10 has on these proteins. Unlike wild-type mice, Crx expression was not detected during retinal development in the embryo but was expressed after birth [110]. rtPCR experiments were performed to study the expression of proteins that are putative targets of Crx, and expression of many of these proteins was delayed in the Chx10or-J/or-J retina. The expression of
108
Borst et al.
IRBP was not delayed in the Chx10or-J/or-J retina [110], further supporting the idea that Crx expression is not required for IRBP expression in the embryonic retina. ChIP assays were used to identify potential gene targets of Chx10 in the in vivo chromatin context [111]. Mouse retina samples were obtained from mice at different ages and treated with formaldehyde to cross-link the proteins to their DNA targets and to each other. Sonication was performed to cut the DNA into an average size of about 1 kb. After incubation with anti-Chx-10 antibodies, the complexes were immunoprecipitated, purified, and the cross-links reversed. Three regions of the IRBP promoter were specifically chosen (targeted) for amplification by PCR to determine if Chx10 binds to the IRBP promoter at these sites. These sites were chosen because they are known to contain homeodomain-binding sites [91]. ChIP shows that Chx10 binds (in vivo) to one site in the IRBP promoter, upstream at −1.4 kb. This result was unexpected because the proximal IRBP promoter contains a PCE-1 element that is also present in the arrestin promoter. The PCE I element in the arrestin promoter does bind Chx10 both in vitro and in vivo, as shown by ChIP assays. The ChIP assays show that protein binding to DNA is dependent on chromatin context. Chx10 binds IRBP promotes in vivo at P0, P6, and P14. The consensus TAATtgac that they identify is part of the DNA fragment identified by ChIPeven though this sequence is outside of the fragment that was PCR amplified [111]. These ChIP experiments are not conclusive because Chx10 could be binding to regions of the IRBP promoter that were not identified and amplified by PCR. Chx10 may be repressing IRBP gene expression in bipolar and Müller cells, but it is not acting by itself. Other factors are at work. IRBP gene expression is controlled by a combination of factors that include positive and negative regulators. The IRBP gene is not expressed in bipolar and Müller cells because repressors and not activators of IRBP expression are found in these cells. Needless to say, nature can often switch a repressor to an activator, and vice versa, with posttranslational modifications. It is worth considering potentially analogous systems that use closely related or the same proteins. In muscle, myogenesis occurs when myoblasts differentiate into myotubes. An analogous set of proteins, including homeodomain proteins and basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) proteins can form highly coordinated and synergistic complexes to activate transcription of genes needed to build myofibers. Figures 7 and 8, which show the IRBP 5′ flanking region, illustrate that matches to consensus trans factor binding sites are located upstream of the IRBP gene in numerous species. In particular, two such sites, a COMP1 and a Chx10 match, are found about 1,200 nucleotides upstream of the transcription initiator site in a well-conserved region (hereafter called the upstream conserved region). These sites are about 65 nucleotides apart. Chx10 is well known to the vision sciences community, but COMP1, which stands for COoperates with Myogenic Proteins 1, is a poorly understood cis element [112]. This element is known to bind trans factors cooperatively and to synergistically enhance transcription of a reporter gene when transfected into myoblasts that are differentiating into myotubes. Since this trans factor binding site was first recognized in 1992, it was found [113] that the COMP1 cis-element sequence TGATTGAC can be bound in a cooperative manner by a heterodimer of PBX/Meis1-Prep1 with another heterodimer consisting of E2a bound to MyoD, myogenin, Mrf-4, or Myf-5 (PBX/Meis1-Prep1 are homeodomain proteins whereas E2a, MyoD, myogenin, Mrf-4 and Myf-5 are bHLH proteins). While it is not clear that any of these proteins are available in the adult retina or actually bind to the
B
A
RBP3
48005000
47900000
48000000
ANXA8L1
Fig. 7. (continued)
ost Conserved
Conservation
V$CHX10_01 V$BRN2_01 V$NCX_01 V$BRACH_01 V$COMP1_01 V$CHX10_01 V$ER_Q6 V$COMP1_01 V$HOX13_01 V$USF_C V$YY1_02 V$GRE_C V$GATA1_05 V$PAX5_01 V$RP58_01 V$PAX4_03 V$OCT_C
chr10:
Most Conserved
Conservation
FBS Conserved
chr10:
48000000
48050000
48020000
RefSeq Genes
48015000
48025000
48030000
12 3
4
PhastCons Conserved Elements, 17-way Vertebrate Multiz Alignment
Vertebrate Multiz Alignment & Conservation (17 Species)
HMR Conserved Transcription Factor Binding Sites
48010000
PhastCons Conserved Elements, 17-way Vertebrate Multiz Alignment
Vertebrate Multiz Alignment & Conservation (17 Species)
RefSeq Genes ZNF488 GDF2 RBP3 GDF10 HMR Conserved Transcription Factor Binding Sites
47950000
GDF2
48035000
4810000 0
IRBP Molecular Biology 109
48012380
48012390
48012400
48012420
48012430
48012440
48012450
48012460
48012470
48012480
48012490
48012500
48012510
48012520
48012530
7 1 4 A GG T C T GGGGC T A A A C T C C T G A G T T GGGGC A A GGC T T C C A GC T C C A G T A A GC C T T T A A T C C T G T C T A A T T C A A GC A C A T C A A C C C T GGG T A T CGGGG A GG A G T GGC C A GGG T GG T T T G A C C C A G A A GG T A GG T C T GGGGC T C A A T G T GGG A G T T A G A G T G A GGC T T C C A GC T C T GC T A A GC C T T T A A T C C T G T C T A A T T C A A GC A C A T G A GC T - - - - GG A C T C T G A A G A A G A GGC C A GGG T GG T T T G A C C CGG A A GG A A GG T C T GGGGC T C A A CG T GGG A G T T A G A G T G A GGC T T C C A GC T C T GG T A A GC C T T T A A T C C T G T C T A A T T C A A GCGC A T G A A C C A - GG A G A C T C A G A A G A A G A GGC C A GGG T A G T T T G A C C CGG A A GG A A GG T C T GGGGC T A A A C T CGGG A G T T GGGG T GCGGC T T GC A GC T C C A G T A A GC C T T T A A T C C CG T C T A A T T C A A GCGCG T C A GC C C C GGGG A C CGGGG A GC A GGGGC C G CGGCGG T T T G A C C C A G A A GG C A A GC C T T A T GC T A A A T A T GGG A GC A GGGGG A A GGC T T T T A T C T C C A T T A A A C C T T T A A T C T C A T T A A A T T G A A G T GC A T C A GC C - - - - - - - - - - - - A A A GGG T G A T A A T GG T GGC C A G T C C T GC T G T T T A A T C T C T GC A T A G A A T A CGGG T GC A C CG A A A A A T C T T T T A T C T GC A T T A A A C C T T T A A T C T C A T T A A A A T GG A G T GC A T C A T C C - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A A A G - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T GC A C C A A T A G A T ===================== = ==================== = ===================== = =================== = = ===================== = ==================== = ===================== = ==================== = ===================== = ==================== = ==================== = = ==================== = PhastCons Conserved Elements, 17-way Vertebrate Multiz Alignment
48012410
T GC A GC T GC C T T C CGC C C T T G T C C T T C T C A GC T GG T GG A C A G A T GC A GC T GC C T C T C T C C C T T G C C C T T C T T A GC A GGC A G A C A G A T GC A GC T GC C T T T C T C T G T T G C C C T T C T T A GC A GGC A G A C A G A T G T GGC CGC C T T C C T C C C T CG T C C T T C T C A GCGGG T GG A C A G A - - - - GC TGTGTGT CCC T C T T - - - TGT C T A TGAC T A T AGACAG A = = = = GC TGT C - - - - - - - - - - - - CC TGT T TGTGA A T CAC AC TG A ===================== = ==================== = - - - GGC T GC C - - CGG T C T T T G T = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
HMR Conserved Transcription Factor Binding Sites Vertebrate Multiz Alignment & Conservation (17 Species)
AT C TGC TC AG T CAG T T AG T CA A GC A T C CGC T C == = == = == == = == = == == = == = == == = == = ==
T T T T = = = =
TT CT CT CT == == == ==
GGA A A T C GGA A GC C GGA A A T C G GG A A T C = == = == = = == = == = = == = == = = == = == =
AT AT AT AT == == == ==
T T T T = = = =
AT AT AT AT == == == ==
C C C C = = = =
T G A GG A TG A CG A TGA AGA T G G GG A == = == = == = == = == = == = == = == =
TGT TGT TGT TGT == = == = == = == =
T T T T = = = =
T T T T = = = =
A CC A A CC A A CC A A CC A = == = = == = = == = = == =
AC T GC T A G T GG T AG T AG T A G T GG T == = == = == = == = == = == = == = == =
T T T T = = = =
T T T T = = = =
A TGA A GG A A CG A A TGA = == = = == = = == = = == =
AGGCC A AGGCC A AGGCC A AGGCC A == = == = == = == = == = == = == = == =
AAGAGG TC A AGGAGG TC A AGGAGG TC A AAGAGG TC A == = == = == = == = == = == = == = == = == = == = == = == =
A T T AGC T A A AA C AA A C A T A T T T T T AGCT C A T T AGGA T A T T AGC T A A AA C AA A C A T A T T T T T AGCT C A T T AGGA T A T T A G C T A A A A C A A A C A T A T C T T T A G C T C A C T GG G A T A T T AGC T A A AA C AA A C A T A T T T T T AGCT C A T T AGGA T = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = A T TC T T AGCT C A T T AGGA T == = == = == = == = == = = = == = == = == = == = == = == = == = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = T T C T AGGT C A T T TGGA T == = == = == = == = == = = = == = == = == = == = == = == = == PhastCons Conserved Elements, 17-way Vertebrate Multiz Alignment
T T T T T = T =
2 4 TGTGT TGT T T TGT T T TGT T T TGT T T == = == TGT T T == = ==
2 A ATGCT CAAGTGACA T A A T A CCC AAG TGA CA T A A T A CCCGAG TGA CA T A A T GCCC AAG TGA CA T A A T GCCC T AG TGA CA T = == = == = == = == = == = T AT CCT AGTGT T ACA T = == = == = == = == = == =
AT AT AT AT AT == AT ==
GGT GGT GGT GGT GGT = == GCT = ==
CACA CTCA CTCA CCC A GATG = == = CACA = == =
TC TC TC TC TC == TC ==
A C T C CA C CG T A CCCCA C TG T A CC C CGC TG T ACT CCAC TGT T CCCCA C TG T = == = == = == = T GA CCA T TCC = == = == = == =
A T T T T = T =
T GCAGCC A T GCAGCC A T GCAGCC A T GCAGCC A T T CA A CC A = = == = == = T A CA A CC A = = == = == =
1 A T GGA AGT GAG A T GGA A A T GAG A T GGA A AC A AG A T - GAGGT GAG A T GGA A A T GAG == = == = == = = = A T T GA A AGC AG == = == = == = = =
Fig. 7. Human interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP) gene 5′ flanking region and locus. A The locus containing the IRBP gene and adjacent bounding genes spans from roughly nucleotide positions 47,800,000 to about 48,100,000 and contains the Annexin 8 and Znf488 genes on the proximal side and the GDF2 and GFD10 genes on the distal side. GDF10, GDF2, and RBP3 (the IRBP gene) are transcribed in the same head-to-tail orientation (from right to left), while the Annexin 8 and ZNF488 genes are transcribed in the opposite orientation. B A close-up of the DNA sequence that spans from the beginning of the GFD2 gene through the IRBP gene and the positions of HMR conserved transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) are indicated. In the two tracks below that, conserved sequences are noted.
lod=133
Gaps human mouse rat dog opossum chicken x_tropicalis tetraodon
Conservation
chr10: ---> A T C T G C T C T T T G G A A A T C A T T A T C T G A G G A T G T T T A C C A A C T G C T T T A T G A A G G C C A A A G A G G T C A A T T A G C T A A A A C A A A C A T A T T T T T A G C T C A T T A G G A T T T G T G T A A T G C T C A A G T G A C A T A T G G T C A C A T C A C T C C A C C G T A T G C A G C C A A T G G A A G T G A G RefSeq Genes RefSeq Genes HMR Conserved Transcription Factor Binding Sites V$COMP1_01 V$CHX10_01 Vertebrate Multiz Alignment & Conservation (17 Species)
2
lod=45
Gaps human mouse rat dog opossum chicken x_tropicalis tetraodon
Conservation
V$ER_Q6
RBP3 Gene
48010970 48010980 48010990 48011000 48011010 48011020 48011030 48011040 48011050 48011060 48011070 48011080 48011090 48011100 48011110 48011120 chr10: ---> T G C A G C T G C C T T C C G C C C T T G T C C T T C T C A G C T G G T G G A C A G A A G G T C T G G G G C T A A A C T C C T G A G T T G G G G C A A G G C T T C C A G C T C C A G T A A G C C T T T A A T C C T G T C T A A T T C A A G C A C A T C A A C C C T G G G T A T C G G G G A G G A G T G G C C A G G G T G G T T T G A C C C A G A A G G T RefSeq Genes
1
C
110 Borst et al.
The predictions were generated from the Multiz Alignment (which compares sequences from 17 species) and the PhastCons algorithm. Exons are well defined by these programs, but several other sequences are denoted that are strongly conserved. Four of these conserved elements are marked with arrows and numbered 1 through 4. The elements labeled 3 and 4, although strongly conserved, do not contain any currently known TFBSs. Elements 1 and 2 contain well-known TFBSs, including Chx10-binding sites. It is worth noting that GFD2 and IRBP are transcribed in the same orientation, and both genes bear TFBSs for Chx10; we speculate that these two genes might be coregulated. C Close-ups of elements 1 and 2. Element 1 is contained in the proximal IRBP promoter, and the zoom-in shows roughly 130 nucleotides of the promoter. A leftward pointing bent arrow at position 48,010,996 indicates the transcription start site. Strong sequence conservation at the transcription start site extends to either side of the start site for a few nucleotides into the gene and for about 15 nucleotides into the 5′ flanking region. Found about 50 nucleotides upstream of the transcription start site, the highly conserved element identified as “lod=45” contains the Ret-1/PCE-I- and CRX-binding sites. This sequence is almost identical in the mammals and highly conserved through the chicken, more so in the CRX binding element than in the Ret-1/PCE-I site. The latter sequence difference may reflect variation in IRBP gene expression patterns of the rod-dominant mammals compared to the cone-dominant chicken retina. Element 2 is illustrated in C2. This conserved sequence spans about 160 nucleotides and contains conserved Chx10 and COMP1 TFBSs. The work of [113] raises the possibility that cooperative binding of Meis/PBX/Prep1 may bind to these two sites with an intermediate loop in cells of the retina. This hypothesis should be testable given the availability of looping assays and antibodies that are specific to these DNA-binding proteins. It would require the isolation of photoreceptor nuclei separated cleanly from other neurons of the retina. At least two possibilities exist: the use of NRL-GFP transgenic mice [93] and cell sorting to obtain a pure population of photoreceptor cells and another of other neurons. Alternatively, it may be possible to recover chromatin from the outer nuclear layer (ONL) and other nuclear layers of the retina isolated with laser capture microscopy.
IRBP Molecular Biology 111
Lrrc18
chr14:
CpG: 19 0.1 _
0_
32775000
Mapk8
1 2
32780000
32790000
32795000
3
PhastCons Conserved Elements
Vertebrate Multiz Alignment & Conservation
ESPERR Regulatory Potential (7 species)
CpG Islands (Islands < 300 Bases are Light Green)
UCSC Known Genes Based on UniProt, RefSeq, and GenBank mRNA Rbp3 Zfp488
32785000
Vertebrate Multiz Alignment & Conservation
32800000
32805000
RefSeq Genes Gdf10 LOC432838 Ppyr1 Syt15 Glud1 Syt15 2200001I15Rik Gdf2 Antxrl Rbp3 Anxa8 3110001K24Rik Sncg Zfp488 Mmrn2 Bmpr1a
Superfamily/SCOP: Proteins Having Homologs with Known Structure/Function
Ptpn20
32810000
Ldb3 Ldb3 Ldb3 Ldb3 Ldb3 Ldb3 Ldb3 Opn4
Fig. 8. Mouse interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP) locus. A The mouse IRBP gene and a region containing about 20 genes nearby from roughly position 31,800,000 to 33,400,000. The IRBP gene is bounded immediately by the same GFD2 and Znf488 genes, and there are some other genes that might be of interest, including the optineurin 4 gene and the Bmpr1a gene. Most of the identified genes possess homology with superfamilies of known proteins. An expanded view of the locus is shown in B, showing the GFD2, RBP3, and Znf488 genes. Sequence conservation illustrated in several tracks in this panel demonstrate the positions of exons in each of these three genes. Three elements indicated by the digits 1, 2, and 3 highlight sequences that are strongly conserved but found between the GDF2 and RBP3 genes. It is not clear yet whether the first two sequences represent random occurrences, whether they have a role in the termination of the GDF2 gene, or whether they function in the promoter of the RBP3 gene. The sequences indicated with “3” corresponds to element 2 in Fig. 7. This site contains matches to the consensus transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) for COMP1 and Chx10.
Most Conserved
rat human dog opossum chicken x_tropicalis tetraodon
Conservation
Gdf2
32770000
Arhgap22
31900000 32000000 32100000 32200000 32300000 32400000 32500000 32600000 32700000 32800000 32900000 33000000 33100000 33200000 33300000 33400000
chr14:
Reg Potential 7 species
B
Conservation
Superfamil y
A
112 Borst et al.
IRBP Molecular Biology chr10:
48011000
48011100
48011200
48011300
113 48011400
48011500
48011600
48011700
48011800
48011900
48012000
48012100
48012200
48012300
48012400
48012500
48012600
GenomeTrafac-UCSC Mapping -9710-85972
Human RBP3 exons
NM_002900 1_
Alignment Curve
Concise Alignments 0.48 _
V$CP2.01:118 V$PAX5.01:610 V$PAX5.01:608 V$ELK1.02:609 V$NBRE.01:607 V$GKLF.02:606 V$OTX2.01:605 V$MEL1.01:604 V$GSH2.01:601 V$TST1.01:602 V$MSX2.01:603 V$CHR.01:600 V$ZIC2.01:599 V$ER.01:597 V$AML3.01:598 V$CHOP.01:596 V$MEL1.01:594 V$GATA1.02:595 V$CRX.01:593 V$TH1E47.01:592 V$HNF1.01:591 V$HNF1.01:590 V$XVENT2.01:373 V$CDP.01:372 V$NKX25.02:589 V$FAST1.01:371 V$CDP.01:370 V$CART1.01:369 V$GATA3.02:368 V$AREB6.04:367 V$PAX2.01:366 V$MYT1L.01:365 V$AP4.01:116 V$MYF5.01:117 V$ATF6.02:114 V$XBP1.01:115 V$DICE.01:471 V$DICE.01:470 V$AP4.01:113 V$AP4.01:112 V$COMP1.01:469 V$BARX2.01:468 V$GATA1.02:467 V$MEL1.03:466 V$FREAC2.01:465 V$VDR_RXR.01:464 V$FXRE.01:463 V$GSH2.01:461 V$S8.01:462 V$HFH3.01:459 V$CABL.01:460 V$ISL1.01:457 V$GSH2.01:458 V$DEC1.01:455 V$NKX25.01:456 V$OCT1.06:454 V$PARAXIS.01:452 V$NEUROG.01:453 V$COMP1.01:449 V$NFY.01:450 V$CAAT.01:451 V$MEL1.02:448
Conserved TF binding sites on this gene.
RefSeq Genes
RBP3
GNF Gene Expression Atlas Ratios Using Affymetrix GeneChips - Arrays Grouped By Tissue Median
GNF Ratio V$ER_Q6
HMR Conserved Transcription Factor Binding Sites
V$COMP1_01 V$CHX10_01
Fig. 9. Stringency of searching and the number of detected trans factor binding sites. Many more transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) are detected as the search stringency is dropped. Numerous TFBSs can now be detected in addition to the high-stringency search, which identified only three conserved sites. Now, about 50 TFBSs are detected in the proximal and upstream conserved sequences of the human interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP) gene. With the drop in stringency, now Otx2, Zic2, CRX, Pax2, Myf5, RxR, neurogenin, and numerous other TFBSs are also detected.
IRBP promoter (at these two imperfect matches to the Chx10 and COMP1 sites), it might be possible that related proteins form an analogous heterotetramer, perhaps even involving Chx10, that might up- or downregulate IRBP gene transcription. That said, there is clear evidence that abnormalities in Prep1 can affect Pbx and Meis1 expression and result in major phenotypic defects in the formation of the eye. Pax6 expression is concomitantly reduced [114]. Meis1-defective mice also have eye abnormalities [115]. Last, Meis1 directly interacts with Pax6 during lens formation [116]. Thus, it seems possible that these trans factors may play significant roles in the control of IRBP gene expression. Within the more proximal 5′ flanking sequences of the IRBP gene, there is only one highly conserved trans factor binding site that is detected by the HMR-conserved TFBS algorithm, and this site is an estrogen receptor alpha site (V$ER_Q6, in Transfac Database v 7.0). However, with a less-stringent set of computer parameters, about 50 trans factor binding sites can be found as illustrated in Fig. 9. Proximal to the transcription initiator site (within the first 500 nucleotides between 48,011,000 and 48,011,500), there are about 25 TFBSs, and these sites notably include Otx2, CRX, and Zic2, and all are found in the publicly available version of Transfac v7.0. The analysis of these trans factor binding sites shows few TFBSs between about positions 48,011,550 and 48,012,300, a region where homology between orthologous mouse and human sequences is limited. Just distal to 48,012,300, there is another collection of another 25 or so TFBSs in a span of about 220 nucleotides, which is the previously discussed upstream conserved region.
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This abundance of putative TFBSs highlights the remaining challenge to determine which TFBSs play a role in activating or repressing IRBP transcription. This problem is solvable, as illustrated by the important work on the very limited number of these trans factors that we discussed above. The Chx10 site between 48,012,428 and 48,012,441 in the upstream conserved region might play a role in the repression of IRBP transcription in nonphotoreceptor retinal cells. It is worth consideration of the binding properties of Chx10 in the proximal part and the upstream conserved region of the IRBP promoter [111]. It was found that in vitro in EMSAs Chx10 can bind to the Ret1/PCE I site in the proximal promoter and to the Chx10 site in the upstream conserved element. However, by in vivo CHiP assay, they found that Chx10 does not bind well to the proximal Ret1/PCE I element immediately adjacent to the CRX-binding site on the IRBP promoter. Importantly, it was found that Chx10 is strongly associated with the IRBP upstream conserved element. These findings were the same whether using mice at P0, P6, or P14. These findings may be affected by the use of whole neural retinas, as opposed to cell-type-specific chromatin (cf., from purified rod photoreceptors or highly enriched populations containing bipolar cells only). SUMMARY AND CONJECTURE Transcription factors have been identified that activate or repress the IRBP promoter activity in vitro, but their role in the control of IRBP gene expression in vivo is uncertain. Likely candidates for transcription factors that activate IRBP gene transcription and control its tissue-specific expression in adult photoreceptors are Crx, Nrl, and Otx2. These photoreceptor transcription factors do not work independently in the regulation of IRBP gene expression because the proteins pairs of Crx/Nrl and Otx2/Nrl work synergistically in transactivation assays [88, 95]. Interactions between these transcription factors may be different in rods versus cones. Crx transactivates the IRBP promoter in vitro. When mice carrying a transgene that consists of the IRBP promoter with a mutation in the CRX element upstream of a reporter gene, reporter gene expression is not found in photoreceptor cells of any of the transgenic mouse lines, indicating that the CRX element is necessary for IRBP expression in vivo [86]. Expression patterns of IRBP and the Crx element during retina development in the mouse are very similar to each other. The Crx message is first detected at E10.5 by rtPCR in mouse embryonic eyes [36], while IRBP is detected by RPA at E11.5 [35]. In the mouse, E12.5 is the time of cone cell genesis [33]. CRx protein is found in the neural developing retina at E12.5, and it is highly expressed in the adult [73, 74]. Surprisingly, however, IRBP expression levels appear unchanged in Crx null mice compared to wildtype mice [97], suggesting that Crx expression is not required for IRBP expression. Suppression of Crx by antisense treatment results in loss of promoter activity for p70, suggesting that while Crx is not absolutely requisite (Otx2 may be substituting), it may be the endogenous factor under normal (e.g., not knockout) situations [100]. Otx2 has an implied function in the activation of the IRBP gene; however, Otx2 expression in the adult is weak, suggesting that Otx2 is not the primary activator of IRBP gene expression in the adult. But, Crx expression is robust in adult photoreceptor cells. Crx and Otx2 are both members of the Otx gene family, which contains the
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paired class of homeodomain within their proteins. Homeodomain-containing proteins bind to DNA as a monomer, different homeodomain proteins can bind to the same DNA sequences, and other mechanisms are needed to achieve functional specificity for specific homeodomain transcription factors [117]. Perhaps there is a redundancy of function between Crx and Otx2. In the Crx null mice in which IRBP expression is basically normal, adequate amounts of Otx2 protein may be present and sufficient to maintain IRBP expression levels in the adult. Another transcription factor that may be required for IRBP gene expression is Rx/ rax, which is known to transactivate the IRBP promoter in vitro. During development, Rx is located at the correct time and place to activate IRBP gene expression in early retinal development. However, later in development, Rx expression in the retina becomes very low at E13.5 [118], whereas there is robust IRBP expression at this age. This indicates that the Rx/rax gene expression does not have a role in IRBP gene expression in the adult. Clearly, there are transcription factors that are required for the correct spatial and temporal expression of the IRBP gene that are yet to be identified. The retina is an excellent model for the study of brain development because it is part of the central nervous system, is easily accessible, and has a layered organization. Unlike many transcription factors found in the brain, retina-specific proteins are not required for viability and fertility, so null mutations do not have an adverse affect on the overall health of the animal. The mechanisms of cell fate determination and the gene families expressed by the progenitor cells are shared by the retina, cortex, and cerebellum. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This work was supported by NIH EY11726 (D.E.B.), USU-CO70VY (D.E.B.), EY12514 (J.B.), R01EY014026 (J.B.), R01EY016470, R03EY013986, R24EY017045, and P30EY006360; the Foundation Fighting Blindness; Fight for Sight; Research to Prevent Blindness Inc.; and Knights Templar of Georgia. REFERENCES 1. Crouch RK, Hazard ES, Lind T, Wiggert B, Chader G, Corson DW. Interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein and alpha-tocopherol preserve the isomeric and oxidation state of retinol. Photochem Photobiol 1992;56(2):251–255. 2. Pfeffer B, Wiggert B, Lee L, Zonnenberg B, Newsome D, Chader G. The presence of a soluble interphotoreceptor retinol-binding protein (IRBP) in the retinal interphotoreceptor space. J Cell Physiol 1983;117(3):333–341. 3. Wiggert B, Lee L, Rodrigues M, Hess H, Redmond TM, Chader GJ. Immunochemical distribution of interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein in selected species. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1986;27(7):1041–1049. 4. Rodrigues MM, Hackett J, Gaskins R, Wiggert B, Lee L, Redmond M, et al. Interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein in retinal rod cells and pineal gland. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1986;27(5):844–850. 5. Chen Y, Saari JC, Noy N. Interactions of all-trans-retinol and long-chain fatty acids with interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein. Biochemistry 1993;32(42):11311–11318. 6. Chen Y, Houghton LA, Brenna JT, Noy N. Docosahexaenoic acid modulates the interactions of the interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein with 11-cis-retinal. J Biol Chem 1996;271(34):20507–20515.
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6 Regulation of Photoresponses by Phosphorylation Alecia K. Gross, Qiong Wang, and Theodore G. Wensel CONTENTS Introduction Inactivation of Photoactivated Rhodopsin by Rhodopsin Kinase Cone-Specific Kinase, GRK7 Protein Kinase C cAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase, PKA Cyclin-Dependent Kinase, CDK5 Tyrosine Kinases Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase and Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase II Protein Phosphatases Conclusion References
INTRODUCTION In common with virtually all signaling pathways in biology, phototransduction in rod and cone photoreceptors of the vertebrate retina is regulated by protein phosphorylation. Most of the attention of researchers has focused on rhodopsin kinase (RK), an enzyme unique to photoreceptors that is the essential first step for normal photoresponse recovery kinetics (Fig. 1). In addition to this important enzyme, myriad other protein kinases are expressed in photoreceptors, and their functions are much less clear. Along with protein kinases, the activity of protein phosphatases determines the dynamics of protein phosphorylation, and therefore activity, and these have been the subject of many previous and ongoing studies as well. Thus, phosphorylation of photoreceptor proteins, its regulation, and its functional consequences for photoresponses have been and remain active areas of research. Previous reviews provide further information on specific topics [1–15].
From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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Fig. 1. The role of phosphorylation by rhodopsin kinase in the inactivation of photoexcited rhodopsin, metarhodopsin II (MII or R*). In the dark-adapted rod, rhodopsin is not a good substrate for rhodopsin kinase (RK), so on photoactivation and conversion to R* it catalyzes rapid guanosine diphosphate–guanosine triphosphate (GDP-GTP) exchange on the α-subunit of the G protein transducin, Gαt. Activated Gαt-GTP activates cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) phosphodiesterase (PDE), leading to closure of cGMP-gated cation channels and plasma membrane hyperpolarization. R* binds to and activates rhodopsin kinase, which uses adenosine triphosphate (ATP) to add multiple phosphates to the carboxyl-terminal region of R*, inducing a state that binds with high affinity to arrestin. Arrestin binding to phosphorylated rhodopsin effectively quenches the activity of R* until decay of metarhodopsin II and regeneration of rhodopsin lead to dephosphorylation by protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A). Although the decay of metarhodopsin II and regeneration eventually lead to inactivation of the phototransduction cascade in the absence of rhodopsin kinase or its target sites, this process is much too slow for normal recovery kinetics. The presence of multiple phosphorylation sites enhances the reproducibility of inactivation kinetics by decreasing the variation in the amount of time each R* remains active.
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Fig. 2. Locations of domains and functional sites within the primary structure of rhodopsin kinase. Diamonds represent phosphorylation sites, with the numbers indicating sequence positions. The RGS domain is homologous to the catalytic domains of RGS proteins but is not known to demonstrate GAP (guanosine triphosphatase accelerating protein) activity. The kinase domain is homologous to other serine/threonine protein kinases. At the carboxyl terminus, the CaaX-box sequence CSVS is subject to posttranslational modification in which the last three amino acid residues are proteolytically cleaved, the cysteine is farnesylated, and the terminal carboxylate is converted to a methyl ester.
INACTIVATION OF PHOTOACTIVATED RHODOPSIN BY RHODOPSIN KINASE Inactivation of photoexcited rhodopsin (metarhodopsin II, MII, or R*) is initiated via its enzymatic phosphorylation by rhodopsin kinase (RK, Fig. 2). The activity of RK was first described 35 years ago [16–19] when isolated rod outer segments (ROSs) were incubated with γ-32P adenosine triphosphatase (ATP) in the presence of light, causing 32P to be incorporated into MII. This light-dependent process was shown to occur in vivo [20], and later phosphorylated rhodopsin was shown to be necessary for signal attenuation in bovine rod outer segment preparations [2, 3] and subsequently in vivo [21]. After over a decade of attempts, RK was purified, stabilized, and characterized [22]. Since then, experiments from many laboratories have shed light on both the properties of the enzyme and its importance in the visual transduction process. Rhodopsin kinase, also known as G protein-coupled receptor kinase 1 (GRK1), was the first member discovered of the GRK family of Ser/Thr kinases specific for seventransmembrane G protein-coupled receptors [23]. It is responsible for phosphorylating MII on its C-terminus (see structures in Fig. 3) with an upper limit of nine phosphorylation sites per MII [24]. This phosphorylation allows the binding of arrestin to occur, effectively quenching the signaling pathway by no longer allowing the G-protein transducin (Gt) to interact with MII [25]. Depending on reaction conditions, addition of phosphates to the C-terminus of rhodopsin can either decrease [25, 26] or fully attenuate [27] its interaction with transducin. Rhodopsin kinase is a single-polypeptide chain enzyme with a molecular weight of 62–64 kDa [28] and is posttranslationally modified: it is farnesylated at the C-terminus consensus sequence for isoprenylation, CaaX, which is followed by limited proteolysis of aaX and subsequent methyl esterification of the isoprenylated Cys [29, 30] (Fig. 2). Without these modifications, the activity of RK is approximately four-fold lower, suggesting that this hydrophobic modification is important for targeting RK to disk membranes and conferring full enzymatic activity toward MII. RK is autophosphorylated on serine residues, and the reaction is unaffected by the presence of bleached rhodopsin [11–13]. This autophosphorylation does not alter the rate of rhodopsin phosphorylation.
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Fig. 3. Models of structures of the C-terminus (residues 330–348) of rhodopsin (left) from x-ray crystallography (PDB file 1U19) of the dark state of rhodopsin [131] and (right) from nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) (PDB file 1NZS) of the peptide chemically phosphorylated at the seven labeled serine and threonine residues and bound to arrestin [132]. These structures suggest that photoactivation, phosphorylation, or arrestin binding may involve dramatic differences in the conformation of this region.
The kinetic parameters of the purified enzyme for MII are as follows: Km= 4 µM (rhodopsin), Km = 2 µM (ATP), and Vmax = 700 nmol-min−1-mg−1, corresponding to a turnover number, kcat = 0.8 s −1 [22]. However, in vivo, rhodopsin is inactivated with a time constant of 80 ms or less [31]. Proof that RK binding to MII is required for normal inactivation of MII in rods first came from recordings of photocurrent responses of single mouse rods expressing a C-terminal truncation mutant of rhodopsin [21] and subsequently from responses of mouse rods with a null mutation of RK [32]. Mutations in RK cause defects in the kinetics of deactivation and an increase in the amplitude of the light response. While RK can phosphorylate many serine and threonine residues on the C-terminus of rhodopsin, only a few (Ser 334, Ser338, and Ser343) have been identified biochemically as major phosphorylation sites in intact retinas [33, 34]. Based on experiments using rapid quench followed by mass spectrometry, it was reported that in mouse retinas the sites closest to the C-terminus of rhodopsin are the first to be phosphorylated; Ser343 is phosphorylated most rapidly, followed by Ser338. Ser334 is phosphorylated after a delay of more than 10 s [35]. In relating these experiments to electrophysiological results, it must be borne in mind that these experiments required supersaturating levels of light to obtain sufficient product for analysis, and therefore the kinetics may differ in the dim flash or single-photon regimes. The requirement for multiple biochemical steps to inactivate MII has been proposed to play an important role in reducing the variability in the lifetime of catalytically active
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Fig. 4. Structure of recoverin bound to an N-terminal peptide from rhodopsin kinase (RK), illustrating interactions that may help mediate Ca2+-dependent inhibition of this kinase. Structures (2I94) are based on nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) [133] of recoverin in the presence of Ca2+, which is bound at the third and fourth EF hands, and a peptide, RK25, corresponding to the first 25 amino acid residues of rhodopsin kinase.
rhodopsin [36]. A recent electrophysiological study using rhodopsin transgenes encoding proteins with different numbers of phosphorylation sites [37] elegantly demonstrated the importance of the multiplicity of these sites in single-photon reproducibility. The activity of RK for isolated peptide substrates derived from the C-terminal region of rhodopsin is around 1,000-fold lower than for the full-length MII [38]. Peptide competition studies and alanine-scanning mutagenesis of rhodopsin have shown the interaction site of RK with rhodopsin to include cytoplasmic loops 1 through 3 [28, 39]. Early studies of rhodopsin phosphorylation have shown that at low light levels (sufficient to activate < 1% of the total rhodopsin pool), for every mole of activated rhodopsin several hundred moles of phosphate were added to the rhodopsin pool [17, 40]. A straightforward explanation of this phenomenon, known as high-gain phosphorylation, is that the nonspecific substrate, inactive rhodopsin, is being phosphorylated in a light-dependent manner in trans. While RK has been shown to exist in two states (an inactive and an active state using proteolytically digested rhodopsin from bovine rod outer segments and synthetic peptides [41]), trans-phosphorylation does not occur in heterologously expressed chimeras of rhodopsin [42], still leaving the underlying cause of transphosphorylation uncertain. Lack of functionally active RK in humans has been shown to cause blinding diseases: Oguchi disease, a form of congenital stationary night blindness, and retinitis pigmentosa. While Oguchi disease is characterized by profoundly slowed rod dark adaptation [43], patients with retinitis pigmentosa undergo progressive blindness [44]. The visual functions of a patient with an inactivating mutation in the RK gene have been thoroughly characterized by electrophysiological and psychophysical methods [45]. In mice, absence of RK leads to a light-dependent degeneration of the retina [32]. Rhodopsin kinase has been reported to be regulated by recoverin, a member of the neuronal calcium sensor (NCS) branch of the EF-hand superfamily [46, 47]. In vitro studies together with electrophysiological studies of recoverin knockout mice suggest that by inhibiting RK at high calcium levels (Fig. 4), recoverin prolongs the lifetime of MII [47], thereby allowing the accelerated inactivation of rhodopsin in response to lowered intracellular calcium under light conditions [48, 49].
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CONE-SPECIFIC KINASE, GRK7 While most work on phosphorylation of photoreceptors was performed in rod cells of rod-dominant mammals, GRK7, the enzyme involved in cone recovery, has been studied with the aid of cone-dominant animals such as ground squirrels and chipmunks, as well as the medaka Oryzias latipes [33, 34]. Interestingly, its expression is species specific: Immunocytochemical analysis has shown that GRK7 is expressed exclusively in pig and dog cones, whereas GRK1 is the only known photoreceptor GRK found in mice and rats [50]. In contrast, GRK7 and GRK1 are coexpressed in cones of humans and monkeys, suggesting coordination between the kinases in primates. Studies with carp cones suggest that their pigments are phosphorylated much more rapidly than rhodopsin is in rods from the same species [51]. Phosphorylation of M opsin by GRK7 was shown to reduce the ability of the photopigment to activate the G protein transducin in vitro using a filter-binding assay [52]. In addition, in retinal homogenates of both rod-dominated (pig) and cone-dominated (13-lined ground squirrel) animals, anti-ground squirrel GRK7 antibodies were shown to block light-dependent phosphorylation of M opsins to varying degrees, suggesting GRK7 is at least partially responsible for phosphorylation of M opsins.
PROTEIN KINASE C Substantial enzymatic activity and immunoreactivity (by immunoblotting, not by immunocytochemistry) of protein kinase C are found in photoreceptor outer segments [53–64], and specific isoforms identified include conventional (Ca2+-, phospholipid-, and diacyl glycerol/phorbol ester-dependent) isoform protein kinase Cα (PKCα) and novel (non-Ca2+-dependent) isoforms ε and θ [63, 65, 66]. There have been a number of reports concerning the identity of substrates for PKC in rod outer segments, but the significance and extent of their phosphorylation by PKC isoforms have remained uncertain in most cases. Rhodopsin was reported to be phosphorylated in its C-terminal tail region by PKC [56, 57, 61, 62, 64, 67, 68]. Indeed, in rod outer segments treated with phorbol esters, rhodopsin is the major phosphoprotein detected [62]. However, studies in RK knockout mice revealed no light-induced phosphorylation of rhodopsin residue Ser338 and Ser334, the major in vitro PKC phosphorylation sites, raising questions about the significance in vivo of PKC phosphorylation of rhodopsin. The photoreceptor G protein, transducin α or Gαt, has been reported to be a PKC substrate [15]. Addition of exogenous PKCβ1 led to Gαt phosphorylation in a manner dependent on the state of association with rhodopsin, guanine nucleotide, and Gβγt [69]. Both the α-catalytic subunit and the inhibitory γ-subunit of the cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) phosphodiesterase, PDE6, have been reported to be phosphorylated in vitro by purified PKC [1, 70, 71]. The physiological significance of this reaction remains unclear, and there do not seem to have been any reports of in situ phosphorylation of this effector enzyme by endogenous PKC. The photoreceptor guanylate cyclase (GC) has been reported to be enhanced by PKC [72], and expression of the rod outer segment-GC1 gene has been reported to be regulated by PKC [73].
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Fig. 5. Schematic diagram of regulation of RGS9-1 activity by protein kinase C α (PKCα) and Ca2+. In the dark with relatively high Ca2+ concentration and PKCα activity, RGS9-1 is phosphorylated. This phosphorylation reduces RGS9-1 GAP (guanosine triphosphatase [GTPase] accelerating protein) activity by inhibiting its interactions with the membrane anchor and GAP activator, R9AP, and thereby allows maximum sensitivity in the dark to allow detection of single photons. In the light, lowering of intracellular [Ca2+] reduces PKC activity so that RGS9-1 becomes dephosphorylated, presumably by protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), allowing rapid shutoff of the cascade. ADP adenosine diphosphate, ATP adenosine triphosphate, GDP guanosine diphosphate, GTP guanosine triphosphate.
The photoreceptor GAP (guanosine triphosphatase [GTPase] accelerating protein) RGS9-1 is phosphorylated by PKCα (unpublished observations by Q.W. and T.G.W.) in a reaction that is controlled by Ca2+ in vitro and by light in vivo [66, 74]. This phosphorylation lowers the affinity of RGS9-1 for its membrane anchor, R9AP, whose binding dramatically increases the activity of RGS9-1 [75, 76]. An interesting anomaly of this reaction is that phorbol esters greatly enhance phosphorylation of rhodopsin in the dark but do not enhance PKC-mediated phosphorylation of RGS9-1 [74]. A model for regulation of RGS9-1 by PKC phosphorylation is proposed in Fig. 5. The physiological importance of these phosphorylation events is still under investigation. Electrophysiological experiments with individual salamander rods showed no effects of phorbol esters or a PKC inhibitor on light responses [77]; likewise, PKC inhibitors were found not to affect light responses in rods of the Tokay gecko [78]. Knockout mice are available for several PKC isoforms, but studies of their light responses have yet to be published.
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CYCLIC ADENOSINE MONOPHOSPHATE-DEPENDENT PROTEIN KINASE, PKA Cyclic nucleotides have long been known to stimulate phosphorylation of multiple proteins in rod outer segments through the action of protein kinase A (PKA) [79]. PKA has been reported to phosphorylate both pigment kinases, GRK1 and GRK7 [80], to regulate guanylate cyclase [81], and to phosphorylate PDE6 [82]. PKA has also been implicated in the activation of kinases that regulate the CNG (cyclic nucleotide-gated) channel [83], described in the section on mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CamKII). In addition, PKA has been implicated in regulation of calcium currents at photoreceptor synapses by dopamine and adenosine receptors [84, 85]. It has been reported that PKA can phosphorylate RGS9-1 [86]; however, only PKC has been implicated clearly in light-dependent RGS9-1 phosphorylation in vivo (see preceding section). One of the major substrates for PKA in photoreceptors is phosducin [87–89]. In photoreceptors, phosducin is found primarily in the inner segment, where PKA maintains it in a phosphorylated state in the dark. In this state, it binds to 14-3-3 proteins in the inner segment [90]. Light leads to lowered activity of PKA toward phosducin, resulting in dephosphorylation, and in this state, phosducin binds tightly to the Gβ1γ1 subunit of Gt [91, 92]; a crystal structure of this complex has been solved [93, 94]. However, the subcellular localization of phosducin residing primarily in the inner segments as well as results from phosducin knockout mice [95–98] suggest that it does not directly regulate phototransduction in the outer segments. Rather, it seems to facilitate translocation of Gβ1γ1 in response to high levels of light. It has also been proposed to be involved in regulation of transcription [99, 100]. CYCLIN-DEPENDENT KINASE The cyclin-dependent kinase CDK5 and its regulatory subunit p35 are present in rod outer segments and can phosphorylate the inhibitory γ-subunit (PDE6γ) of the cGMP phosphodiesterase PDE6 [74, 101, 102]. A study of PDE6γ phosphorylated on Thr22, the site for phosphorylation by CDK5, revealed that the phosphoprotein has greatly diminished affinity for the activated form of the G protein Gαt-GTP and relatively little change in its inhibitory activity or affinity for the catalytic subunits of PDE6. PDE6γ apparently has to dissociate from the catalytic subunits of PDE6 to be phosphorylated efficiently, and it remains to be determined to what extent this occurs in vivo. TYROSINE KINASES Receptors for insulin and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) have been reported to be present in rod outer segments [103–105]. The nonreceptor tyrosine kinases c-Src and p56lck are also present [106, 107], and c-Src was reported to bind to the α-subunit of the G protein (Gαt). Modulation of the photoreceptor cGMP-gated cation channel by IGF-1 and tyrosine phosphorylation/dephosphorylation has been reported [108, 109]. Light activation of rhodopsin has been reported to stimulate tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor β-subunit and activation of phosphoinositide-3 kinase [8, 110, 111]. The precise physiological functions of these tyrosine phosphorylation reactions will
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likely be the subject of further investigations. It has also been reported that fibroblast growth factor (FGF) effects on retinal survival involve direct effects on photoreceptor cells [112], and that the FGF receptor FGFR-1 is expressed in photoreceptors [113]. There have been reports of the neurotrophin receptors of the Trk family being present in photoreceptor cells [114–117], but the role of these receptors, known to be critical for proper development, in adult photoreceptors remains unclear. MITOGEN-ACTIVATED PROTEIN KINASE AND CALMODULIN-DEPENDENT PROTEIN KINASE II The MAPK Erk and CamKII have been reported to regulate cone cGMP-gated channels [118]. Erk, which is maximally active during subjective night, appears to enhance the affinity of the channel for cGMP, whereas CaMKII, which has maximum activity during the subjective day, has the opposite effect. CamKII has also been reported to phosphorylate phosducin (see the section on cAMP-dependent PKA) in the inner segment [90, 119]. PROTEIN PHOSPHATASES The phosphorylation state of any photoreceptor protein is determined by the balance of activities of protein kinases and protein phosphatases. Serine/threonine protein phosphatases 1, 2A, and 2C are all present in purified rod outer segments [120–123]. Protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) is primarily responsible for dephosphorylation of phosphorylated opsin [124–126] and RGS9-1 [127] and has been reported to undergo translocation in response to light [128]. Tyrosine phosphatase SHP (Src-homology 2-domain phosphatase)-1 [129] and SHP-2 [130] are expressed in photoreceptors. SHP-1 deletion in mice caused severe retinal degeneration phenotype at 3 weeks of age [129]. SHP-2 was reported to be associated with Gαt in rod outer segments and to undergo light-activated phosphorylation [130]. Further investigation will be needed to determine the physiological substrates and roles of these tyrosine phosphatases. CONCLUSION The role of phosphorylation in regulating light responses has been studied fairly intensively for over two decades. The rich fund of information derived from these studies, especially in the area of rhodopsin phosphorylation, serves not only to help explain key elements of the recovery phases of light responses, but also to help us understand the roles of phosphorylation and arrestin binding in other G protein-mediated signaling pathways. Nonetheless, many intriguing questions remain. Most of these have to do with the roles of the many kinases other than RK that are found in photoreceptors, as well as questions about phosphatases and what sorts of regulation might control their activities. Important questions remain about rhodopsin phosphorylation as well. These include the kinetics of phosphorylation of specific target residues in MII not in response to oversaturating light intensities, but in the dim flash regime where responses are linear sums of single-photon responses. This range of intensities has so far not been accessible to biochemical techniques used to study phosphorylation kinetics in intact retinas. Additional
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117. Nag, T. C., Wadhwa, S. (1999). Neurotrophin receptors (Trk A, Trk B, and Trk C) in the developing and adult human retina. Brain Res Dev Brain Res 117, 179–189. 118. Ko, G. Y., Ko, M. L., Dryer, S. E. (2001). Circadian regulation of cGMP-gated cationic channels of chick retinal cones. Erk MAP Kinase and Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II. Neuron 29, 255–66. 119. Hauck, S. M., Ekstrom, P. A., Ahuja-Jensen, P., Suppmann, S., Paquet-Durand, F., van Veen, T., Ueffing, M. (2006). Differential modification of phosducin protein in degenerating rd1 retina is associated with constitutively active Ca2+/calmodulin kinase II in rod outer segments. Mol Cell Proteomics 5, 324–336. 120. Fowles, C., Akhtar, M., Cohen, P. (1989). Interplay of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation in vision: protein phosphatases of bovine rod outer segments. Biochemistry 28, 9385–9391. 121. Selke, D., Anton, H., Klumpp, S. (1998). Serine/threonine protein phosphatases type 1, 2A and 2C in vertebrate retinae. Acta Anat (Basel) 162, 151–156. 122. Klumpp, S., Selke, D. (2000). Purification and characterization of protein phosphatase type 2C in photoreceptors. Methods Enzymol 315, 570–578. 123. Klumpp, S., Selke, D., Fischer, D., Baumann, A., Muller, F., Thanos, S. (1998). Protein phosphatase type-2C isozymes present in vertebrate retinae: purification, characterization, and localization in photoreceptors. J Neurosci Res 51, 328–338. 124. Palczewski, K., Hargrave, P. A., McDowell, J. H., Ingebritsen, T. S. (1989). The catalytic subunit of phosphatase 2A dephosphorylates phosphoopsin. Biochemistry 28, 415–419. 125. Palczewski, K., McDowell, J. H., Jakes, S., Ingebritsen, T. S., Hargrave, P. A. (1989). Regulation of rhodopsin dephosphorylation by arrestin. J Biol Chem 264, 15770–15773. 126. King, A. J., Andjelkovic, N., Hemmings, B. A., Akhtar, M. (1994). The phospho-opsin phosphatase from bovine rod outer segments. An insight into the mechanism of stimulation of type-2A protein phosphatase activity by protamine. Eur J Biochem 225, 383–394. 127. Sokal, I., Hu, G., Liang, Y., Mao, M., Wensel, T. G., Palczewski, K. (2003). Identification of protein kinase C isozymes responsible for the phosphorylation of photoreceptor-specific RGS9-1 at Ser475. J Biol Chem 278, 8316–25. 128. Brown, B. M., Carlson, B. L., Zhu, X., Lolley, R. N., Craft, C. M. (2002). Light-driven translocation of the protein phosphatase 2A complex regulates light/dark dephosphorylation of phosducin and rhodopsin. Biochemistry 41, 13526–13538. 129. Lyons, B. L., Smith, R. S., Hurd, R. E., Hawes, N. L., Burzenski, L. M., Nusinowitz, S., Hasham, M. G., Chang, B., Shultz, L. D. (2006). Deficiency of SHP-1 protein-tyrosine phosphatase in “viable motheaten” mice results in retinal degeneration. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 47, 1201–1209. 130. Bell, M. W., Alvarez, K., Ghalayini, A. J. (1999). Association of the tyrosine phosphatase SHP-2 with transducin-alpha and a 97-kDa tyrosine-phosphorylated protein in photoreceptor rod outer segments. J Neurochem 73, 2331–2340. 131. Okada, T., Sugihara, M., Bondar, A. N., Elstner, M., Entel, P., Buss, V. (2004). The retinal conformation and its environment in rhodopsin in light of a new 2.2 A crystal structure. J Mol Biol 342, 571–583. 132. Kisselev, O. G., McDowell, J. H., Hargrave, P. A. (2004). The arrestin-bound conformation and dynamics of the phosphorylated carboxy-terminal region of rhodopsin. FEBS Lett 564, 307–311. 133. Ames, J. B., Levay, K., Wingard, J. N., Lusin, J. D., Slepak, V. Z. (2006). Structural basis for calcium-induced inhibition of rhodopsin kinase by recoverin. J Biol Chem 281, 37237–37245.
7 The cGMP Signaling Pathway in Retinal Photoreceptors and the Central Role of Photoreceptor Phosphodiesterase (PDE6) Rick H. Cote CONTENTS Overview of Cyclic Guanosine Monophosphate Signaling Pathways The Cellular Context of cGMP Signaling in Vertebrate Retinal Photoreceptors Photoreceptor PDE (PDE6) Structure and Function PDE6 Regulation Conclusions References
OVERVIEW OF CYCLIC GUANOSINE MONOPHOSPHATE SIGNALING PATHWAYS All eukaryotic cells utilize cyclic nucleotides—specifically cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) and cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP)—as intracellular messengers in a wide variety of cell signaling pathways. In addition to the visual signaling pathway (the focus of this review), cGMP is involved in numerous other physiological processes, including vascular smooth muscle relaxation, natriuresis, platelet function, neutrophil adhesion, sperm motility, neuronal signaling, and other sensory transduction systems [1]. The metabolism of cGMP is controlled by the synthetic enzymes, guanylate cyclases (GCs), and hydrolytic enzymes, cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDEs). Cytoplasmic levels of cGMP may also be modulated nonenzymatically by sequestration by cGMP-binding proteins [2] or by transport mechanisms that cause cGMP efflux from the cell [3]. Changes in cytoplasmic cGMP concentration affect cGMP signaling pathways by changing the extent of binding to specific cGMP-binding proteins (receptors). Targets of cGMP action include cGMPdependent protein kinases (PKGs), cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) ion channels, and cGMP-binding PDEs, all of which are allosterically regulated by cGMP binding to noncatalytic regulatory sites on these proteins.
From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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Regulation of Intracellular cGMP Levels in Photoreceptor Cells Guanylate cyclase (GC) catalyzes the synthesis of cGMP from guanosine triphosphate (GTP). Vertebrates have two major families of GC, soluble and membrane associated. The two membrane-associated GCs found in photoreceptor cells (GC-2E and GC-2 F; also abbreviated as ROS-GCs or Ret-GCs in the literature) consist of an extracellular domain (of unknown function), a single-pass transmembrane segment, a kinase-homology domain, and a catalytic domain [4, 5]. The photoreceptor GCs are not regulated by binding of ligands to the extracellular domain as is the case for several other membrane-associated GCs [5]. Instead, photoreceptor GCs are regulated in a calcium-dependent manner by three distinct GC-activating proteins (GCAPs; GCAP1, GCAP2, and GCAP3 [4, 6, 7]). The breakdown of cyclic nucleotides in cells is catalyzed by cyclic nucleotide PDEs. In vertebrates, there are 11 families of PDEs that share a conserved catalytic domain but differ in their substrate specificity (cAMP-, cGMP-, or dual-specific), regulatory mechanisms, and pharmacological sensitivity [8]. Rods and cones express a photoreceptor-specific PDE named PDE6 that has a very high catalytic efficiency when activated by light, is regulated by its inhibitory γ-subunit, and shares structural and pharmacological sensitivity with PDE5, a PDE abundant in vascular smooth muscle and other tissues [9]. In addition to metabolic regulation of cGMP by GC and PDE activities, the free cytoplasmic cGMP concentration can also be regulated by cGMP transport out of the cell or by cGMP sequestration (i.e., binding to specific binding sites) within the cell. Transport systems have been identified that selectively pump cGMP out of various cell types [3, 10, 11], but to date evidence for cGMP efflux from photoreceptors is lacking. In contrast, high-affinity cGMP-binding proteins (e.g., PDE6 itself) are present in photoreceptor cells and are likely to contribute substantially to reducing the free cGMP concentration [2]. Sequestration of cGMP is indeed a major factor in determining the cytoplasmic free cGMP concentration of 2–4 µM (inferred from electrophysiological studies; [12, 13]) since the total cGMP concentration in the rod outer segment is tenfold higher [14]. Downstream Targets of cGMP Action in Photoreceptor Cells All of the above-mentioned downstream targets of cGMP are present in photoreceptor cells: the PKG, the CNG ion channels, and the cGMP-binding PDE6. cGMP-Dependent Protein Kinase There is not much known about the abundance of PKG in photoreceptor cells, potential protein substrates for reversible phosphorylation, or the relevance of PKG for the phototransduction pathway. Some evidence indicates that cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) is more prevalent than PKG [15, 16], and other studies do not unequivocally distinguish PKG from PKA [17, 18]. Considering the relatively high cGMP levels in photoreceptor cells, the potential for cGMP to bind to and activate PKA (i.e., “cross-talk”) cannot be ruled out. The observation that several PKG/PKA substrates undergo light-dependent phosphorylation/ dephosphorylation supports the idea that cyclic nucleotide-dependent kinases may be involved in some aspects of visual signaling. For example, light-dependent dephosphorylation of components I and II (in amphibian photoreceptors) and phosducin (in mammalian and fish photoreceptors) is consistent with the idea that the light-induced drop in free cGMP levels results in PKA/PKG inactivation and thereby causes dephosphorylation of
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the above-mentioned phosphoproteins [19–25]. The abilities of these dephosphorylated proteins to preferentially bind to transducin βγ dimers [25–27] and to assist in lightdependent protein translocation within the photoreceptor cell [28] are consistent with a role for PKG/PKA in long-term light adaptation. Cyclic Nucleotide-Gated Ion Channels The CNG ion channels in rod and cone cells belong to a large superfamily of ion channels that share a similar structure, including six transmembrane segments that selfassociate to constitute the pore of the ion channel [29]. The rod and cone CNG channels are heterotetramers (rod, 3 CNGA1 and 1 CNGB1; cone, 2 CNGA3, 2 CNGB3 [30, 31]). Activation (opening) of the CNG ion channel results from a highly cooperative binding of four cyclic nucleotide molecules to the C-terminal cyclic nucleotide-binding domain in the channel [32]. Channel closure in the plasma membrane resulting from the drop in cGMP levels induces hyperpolarization of the cell membrane and the generation of the receptor potential. Rod and cone CNG channels are optimized to instantaneously sense and respond to changes in cGMP concentration induced by activation of the visual excitation pathway. Rapid responsiveness to fluctuations in cGMP levels reflects the relatively low affinity of cGMP binding along with fast dissociation and association rates for the cGMP-binding sites. The cooperativity (Hill coefficient ~3) with which four cGMP molecules bind amplifies small changes in cGMP concentration [33]. An important aspect of the ionic permeability of the CNG channel is its relatively high calcium permeability; this generates a calcium feedback signal (in concert with a Na+/K+-Ca2+ exchanger) when the channels close during visual excitation, thus allowing for calcium-dependent reactions involved in recovery and adaptation to occur [29, 33]. Calcium regulatory proteins (calmodulin in rods, an uncharacterized calcium-binding protein in cones) bind to and regulate the photoreceptor CNG channel by reducing its cGMP sensitivity. Desensitization of CNG channels by reducing cGMP-binding affinity is also reported to be affected by tyrosine or serine/threonine phosphorylation, diacylglycerol or related metabolites, and retinoids [29, 32, 34–36], but the physiological significance of these regulatory mechanisms is uncertain. PDE6 Is a High-Affinity cGMP-Binding Protein In addition to having a catalytic domain responsible for lowering cGMP levels during visual excitation, PDE6 contains a regulatory domain consisting of two tandemly arrayed domains that bind cGMP with high affinity. These cGMP-binding sites serve to sequester a majority of the total cGMP in the photoreceptor cell as well as having regulatory properties, both of which are discussed in detail in this chapter. THE CELLULAR CONTEXT OF cGMP SIGNALING IN VERTEBRATE RETINAL PHOTORECEPTORS Compartmentation of cGMP Signaling in Photoreceptor Outer Segments Vertebrate rod and cone photoreceptor cells are specialized neurons consisting of several functionally and structurally distinct cellular compartments: (1) The phototransducing outer segment portion of the cell contains densely packed membranes optimized for
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photon capture, signal transduction, and the initial membrane hyperpolarization. (2) The nonmotile “connecting cilium” region connects the outer segment to the inner segment and actively regulates the transport of proteins and metabolites between these two compartments. (3) The inner segment is comprised of the metabolic machinery and is itself compartmentalized: Mitochondria are concentrated in the “ellipsoid” region nearest the connecting cilium, whereas organelles dedicated to protein biosynthesis are located between the mitochondria-rich ellipsoid region and the cell nucleus. (4) The synaptic terminals of rods and cones tonically release neurotransmitters in the dark and respond to membrane hyperpolarization by suppressing synaptic vesicle release in the light. The photoreceptor synapse communicates with second-order bipolar and horizontal cells to propagate the photoresponse. (For reviews, see [37, 38].) Physiology of the Photoreceptor Response to Light In the dark, a circulating “dark current” is maintained by entry of sodium and calcium through open CNG ion channels in the outer segment plasma membrane; this is concurrent with the extrusion of sodium by a Na+/K+-ATPase (adenosine triphosphatase) and the efflux of potassium by K+ channels (both localized to the inner segment). A Na+/Ca2+-K+ exchanger (in the outer segment) and other ion channels in the inner segment further regulate ion conduction and transport in photoreceptors. On illumination, this dark current is interrupted, and the change in membrane potential that results from channel closure is passively propagated from the outer segment through the inner segment to the synaptic terminal [39–41]. Remarkably, rod photoreceptors can detect individual photons and can generate discrete, reproducible photoresponses from these single-photon events [42]. In contrast, cone photoreceptors are less light sensitive than rods; their photoresponses are smaller and faster than for rods, but they operate over an enormous range of ambient light intensities. The rising phase of the photoresponse (termed visual excitation) is dominated by the kinetics of activation of the cGMP signaling pathway (discussed in detail in the next section). However, to rapidly respond to changes in light stimuli, the visual excitation process must be rapidly terminated. Photoresponse recovery is tightly coordinated with the components of the cGMP excitation pathway but also depends on another second messenger, calcium, to control the kinetics of the recovery to the dark-adapted state. Furthermore, photoreceptors also undergo “light adaptation” in the presence of background illumination, a process that allows rods and cones to increase the range of light intensities over which visual transduction can operate. On exposure to background illumination, the sensitivity of rods and cones to flash stimulation is decreased, resulting in smaller photoresponses that have faster recovery kinetics. Calcium plays a central role in the underlying mechanisms of light adaptation, acting through calcium regulatory proteins to modulate several steps in the cGMP signaling pathway. (For reviews, see [40, 43–47].) Biochemical Cascade of Visual Excitation The phototransduction cascade is a prototypical heterotrimeric G protein-coupled signaling pathway (Fig. 1). The excitation process is triggered by absorption of a photon by the visual receptor rhodopsin, which activates a photoreceptor-specific G protein, transducin, that then activates the effector enzyme PDE6. The resultant drop in
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Fig. 1. The cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) signaling pathway for visual excitation in vertebrate rod photoreceptors. Top: In dark-adapted rod photoreceptors, cytoplasmic cGMP (small gray circle) and calcium concentrations are high, and some of the cGMP-gated cation channels in the plasma membrane are fully liganded with cGMP and in their open state. This permits entry of Na+ and Ca2+ through the pore. Rhodopsin, transducin, and phosphodiesterase 6 (PDE6) are in their nonactivated states. Bottom: On absorption of a photon by rhodopsin, isomerization of the 11-cis retinal chromophore causes receptor activation (R*). This leads to binding of transducin to R*, guanine nucleotide exchange of guanosine diphosphate (GDP) for guanosine triphosphate (GTP), and formation of the activated transducin α-subunit with bound GTP (Tα*). The Tα* species then binds PDE6 holoenzyme, causing deinhibition by the γ-subunit (Tα*-P*) and a large acceleration of catalysis of cGMP to 5’-GMP at the active site. The light-induced drop in cGMP concentration induces the ligand-gated ion channel to close, causing membrane hyperpolarization. Ongoing extrusion of calcium by the Na+/Ca2+-K+ exchanger in the absence of calcium influx through the channel also causes intracellular calcium concentration to decline (which is vital for the recovery process).
second-messenger concentration (i.e., cGMP) leads to dissociation of cGMP bound to the CNG ion channel, closure of the ion channel, and membrane hyperpolarization. Central Components of the cGMP Signaling Pathway The first step in vertebrate vision is the photoisomerization of the retinal chromophore (11-cis retinal) of the visual pigment on the outer segment membrane (Fig. 1).
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Rhodopsin is a member of the G protein-coupled receptor superfamily, in which 11-cis retinal locks rhodopsin into its inactive conformation in the dark. Photoactivation causes isomerization of 11-cis retinal to all-trans retinal. This causes movement of the transmembrane α-helices that surround the chromophore, producing metarhodopsin II, the activated form of the receptor [48, 49]. Conformational changes in the C-terminal tail and cytoplasmic loops of metarhodopsin II allow rhodopsin to bind with high affinity to the heterotrimeric G protein, transducin [50]. This interaction catalyzes the exchange of bound GDP for GTP on the transducin α-subunit, causing dissociation of the α-subunit (with bound GTP) from the βγ dimer [51]. Activated transducin then binds to its effector in this signaling cascade, PDE6, displacing the inhibitory PDE6 γ-subunit and accelerating the catalysis of cGMP (see the section “Transducin Activation of Rod PDE6 During Visual Excitation” for details). Because of the significant lifetime of metarhodopsin II, 20–100 transducin molecules (and hence PDE6 molecules) can be activated per photoisomerization event [52, 53]; this represents the first stage of amplification of the signaling cascade. A second stage in signal amplification follows stoichiometric activation of PDE6 by transducin: Each activated PDE6 can break down many thousands of cGMP molecules per second (see the section “PDE6 Has Evolved to Meet the Special Demands of the Central Effector of Visual Transduction”). The overall gain of this amplified excitation pathway is well over 100,000 cGMP molecules hydrolyzed per activated rhodopsin [51]. The very rapid drop in cytoplasmic cGMP levels on light activation ensures that cGMP dissociates quickly from binding sites on the CNG ion channel in the plasma membrane. This sequence leading from photoisomerization of visual pigment to channel closure and membrane hyperpolarization constitutes the set of reactions defined as visual excitation. Termination and Adaptation of the Light Response The recovery of the dark-adapted state following illumination occurs in a precisely controlled manner that optimizes both the temporal resolution of visual stimuli as well as the ability of photoreceptors to light adapt over the 1012 range of photic stimuli on earth. Each step in the visual excitation pathway must be deactivated to restore cGMP levels and to return the components of the excitation pathway to their inactive states. The recovery of the photoresponse depends on inactivation of the metarhodopsin II state of rhodopsin as well as deactivation of GTP-bound form of the transducin α-subunit. Because the kinetics of the recovery phase of the light response are highly stereotypical, it has been appreciated for some time that a single deactivation step must be rate limiting [43]. Using a transgenic approach, it has been shown that the rate of GTP hydrolysis by transducin α-subunit represents the rate-limiting step of rod photoresponse recovery [53]. By regulating the guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase) rate of activated transducin, the lifetime of activated PDE6 is thereby precisely controlled (see section “Deactivation of Transducin”). Light adaptation extends the operating range of the photoresponse of rods and cones by dampening the response amplitude in response to an incremental change in light intensity as well as accelerating the kinetics of the photoresponse. Whereas visual excitation requires consideration only of one second messenger (i.e., cGMP), calcium plays a central role in many aspects of photoreceptor adaptation. The cytoplasmic concentration of calcium
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in dark-adapted photoreceptor outer segments (400–600 nM) rapidly decreases on light exposure to 10–50 nM as a consequence of channel closure concomitant with continued extrusion of calcium by the Na+/Ca2+-K+ exchanger. Calcium regulates light adaptation primarily through three mechanisms: regulation of GC activity, regulation of the rate of inactivation of rhodopsin by rhodopsin kinasemediated phosphorylation, and modulation of the affinity cGMP-gated ion channel for cGMP. Each process is regulated by distinct calcium-binding proteins: GC-activating proteins (GCAPs) for GC, recoverin/S-modulin for rhodopsin kinase, and calmodulin for the ion channel. Of these three calcium-dependent control steps, the dominant one for light adaptation is the regulation of GC activity [44–46, 54]. Deactivation of Rhodopsin Metarhodopsin II inactivation involves phosphorylation by a specific G protein-coupled receptor kinase (GRK1 in rods, GRK7 in human cones) with activity that is regulated by the calcium-binding protein recoverin/S-modulin [55–57]. Calcium-recoverin binds to rhodopsin kinase and inhibits its ability to phosphorylate activated rhodopsin, thereby prolonging the activated state of the receptor [58]. Once phosphorylated, arrestin binds to phosphorylated rhodopsin to complete the inactivation process [59]. Pigment regeneration of the photobleached chromophore requires enzymatic and transport reactions, termed the retinoid cycle [60]. Deactivation of Transducin The inactivation of the α-subunit of transducin requires hydrolysis of bound GTP. The intrinsic GTPase rate of transducin is slow but can be accelerated when complexed with the regulator of G protein signaling 9 (RGS9 [61]), the type 5 G-protein β-subunit [62], and the RGS9 anchor protein (R9AP [63]). The PDE6 γ-subunit plays an elegant negative-feedback role by binding to RGS9 and enhancing the affinity of the RGS9 protein complex for α*-GTP (α-subunit with GTP bound) [64–66], thereby accelerating its intrinsically slow GTPase activity. This role of the γ-subunit to bind RGS9 serves to turn off PDE6 activation in a precisely timed manner that is critical to the kinetics of the recovery process. Importantly, this GTPase accelerating role of the γ-subunit does not interfere with the ability of α*-GTP to efficiently activate PDE6 during the initial stage of visual excitation [51]. Deactivation of PDE6 PDE6 inactivation occurs when the PDE6 γ-subunit is released from its binding site on the deactivated α-subunit of transducin and reinhibits the enzyme’s active site. The strength of the interaction of the γ-subunit for transducin versus PDE6 is modulated by the state of occupancy of cGMP at the PDE6 regulatory GAF domains. This feedback regulation mechanism is discussed in detail in the section “Functions of the Regulatory cGMP-Binding GAF Domains of PDE6”. A nonenzymatic mechanism for restoring cGMP levels by utilizing cGMP bound to high-affinity sites on the PDE6 GAF domains [67] is theoretically possible [2] but has not been experimentally supported [68], in large part because the catalytic power of activated PDE6 will hydrolyze cGMP as it dissociates from its binding sites.
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Other mechanisms for inactivating PDE6 independent of the hydrolysis of GTP by transducin α-subunit have been proposed [69–71]. For example, free γ-subunit (i.e., not associated with transducin or PDE6) has been shown to reinhibit transducin-activated PDE6 in vitro even though the transducin α-subunit remains persistently activated [72, 73]. Using a transgenic animal overexpressing the γ-subunit further supports the idea that the free γ-subunit is able to bind to and inhibit transducin-activated PDE6 [71], but the physiological significance of this is unclear since the concentration of γ-subunit in rod outer segments is equal to the concentration of PDE6 catalytic subunits, and all γ-subunit is found membrane associated [73]. Other potential regulatory mechanisms for PDE6 involving novel binding proteins are considered in the section Potential PDE6 Regulatory Binding Proteins. Activation of GC Rapid restoration of cGMP levels following PDE6 deactivation requires calciumdependent activation of photoreceptor GCs by their GCAPs. When the cytoplasmic concentration drops below about 500 nM, calcium dissociates from the GCAPs, relieving inhibition of GC and accelerating cGMP synthesis [4, 6, 7]. The powerful calcium feedback mechanism involving GCAP-GC regulation of cGMP synthesis helps determine the amplitude and temporal characteristics of the photoresponse and regulates the cGMP metabolic flux that is modulated during light adaptation [54]. Regulation of the CNG Ion Channel In rod photoreceptors, calcium/calmodulin binding to the β-subunit of the CNG channel serves to decrease the cGMP sensitivity of the channel [74]. In cone photoreceptors, modulation of cGMP sensitivity by calcium is greater than in rods, but the identity of calcium regulatory protein is not certain [75, 76]. PHOTORECEPTOR PDE (PDE6) STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION The Cyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterase Superfamily The photoreceptor PDE6 enzyme found in retinal rods and cones is a member of the class I PDE superfamily, of which 11 distinct gene families exist in vertebrates (Fig. 2). Class I PDEs all contain the characteristic PDEase I catalytic domain. The 11 PDE families are readily distinguished by comparison of their primary amino acid sequences as well as by their regulatory mechanisms, substrate preference, pharmacological inhibitor specificity, and expression patterns [8]. Three PDE families (PDE5, PDE6, and PDE9) strongly prefer cGMP as the substrate, three are cAMP specific (PDE4, PDE7, PDE8), and the rest do not discriminate between the two substrates. Five PDE families (PDE2, PDE5, PDE6, PDE10, PDE11) contain two tandem GAF domains in their N-terminal regulatory domain, which, in the case of PDE6, bind cGMP with high affinity [77]. Other PDE families are subject to regulation by calcium/calmodulin, phosphorylation, and extrinsic regulatory proteins [8]. The photoreceptor PDE6 is most closely related to PDE5 in its amino acid sequence, substrate preference, and pharmacological profile but differs in its mechanism of regulation [9].
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Fig. 2. The superfamily of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDEs). In humans, there are 21 PDE genes that are grouped into 11 different families, PDE1 though PDE11. Many of the PDE families exist as multiple splice variants (not shown), although this is not the case for PDE6. All class I PDEs share a highly homologous catalytic domain (PDEase I) in the C-terminal region of the linear sequence. The N-terminal half contains regulatory elements and targeting elements (defined in the box). The PDE6 family is unique in having a C-terminal membrane-targeting domain and in being directly regulated by an inhibitory γ-subunit (not shown). Abbreviations: PAS, Per-Arnt-Sim; GAF, see text; Cam, Calmodulin
Subunit Composition of Rod and Cone PDE6 Holoenzyme Although all class I PDEs are believed to exist as a dimer of two catalytic subunits, rod PDE6 is the only one in which the catalytic dimer consists of two nonidentical α (PDE6A) and β (PDE6B) subunits [78–81]. In contrast, cone PDE6 is a homodimeric enzyme composed of α′ (PDE6C) subunits [82, 83]. A second distinctive trait of PDE6 (this one shared by rod and cone isoforms) is the association of high-affinity inhibitory rod or cone γ-subunits to the corresponding catalytic dimer [84, 85]. The rod PDE6 holoenzyme (Fig. 3A) has been conclusively shown to be composed of two γ-subunits bound to the rod αβ-dimer [80, 86], and the cone enzyme is also assumed to be a heterotetramer. Catalytic Subunit The primary sequence of the α, β, and α′ catalytic subunits of PDE6 [87–89] consist of an N-terminal region of unknown function, two regulatory GAF domains (GAFa and GAFb) arranged in tandem, the catalytic domain, and a C-terminal motif that is subject to isoprenylation (Fig. 3B). Regulatory GAF Domain The tandem GAF domains (named for their occurrence in cGMP binding PDEs, certain adenylate cyclases, and the Escherichia coli FhlA protein [77, 90]) serve several
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Fig. 3. Domain organization of the catalytic and inhibitory subunits of phosphodiesterase 6 (PDE6). A The rod PDE6 catalytic dimer (left) consists of nonidentical α- and β-subunits that are farnesylated (α-subunit) or geranylgeranylated (β-subunit). The enzyme-active site is denoted by the notch, while the cGMP-binding site is indicated by a circular pocket. Right: The γ-subunit binds to both the active site (to inhibit catalysis) and to the GAF domains (to stabilize cyclic guanosine monophosphate [cGMP] binding). B The ~100-kDa catalytic subunit of PDE6 consists of two tandem GAF domains, a catalytic domain, and a prenylated C-terminus. C The 10-kDa γ-subunit has several functional domains: a proline-rich (Pro-rich) region and a polycationic region (PC region) that both interact with the cGMP-binding site on PDE6, an α-helical region, and the C-terminal residues (CT), which bind to the active site of PDE6. Activated transducin α-subunit also interacts with the γ-subunit at both its PC region and the α-helical region.
important functions. First, the GAF domains of PDE6 contain nucleotide-binding pockets (distinct from the enzyme’s active sites) that bind cGMP with high affinity [91]. The PDE6 GAF domains also serve a function unique to the PDE6 family, namely, to bind the inhibitory γ-subunit in a cGMP-dependent manner. Finally, the GAF domains of PDE6 are responsible for catalytic subunit dimerization [92, 93]. Although the rod PDE6 holoenzyme (αβγ2) has two GAF domains per catalytic subunit, rod PDE6 binds only two cGMP molecules with high affinity [94–96]. A second class of low-affinity cGMP-binding sites found in rod outer segments [97] might also represent cGMP binding to the remaining PDE6 GAF domains of the catalytic dimer, but this has not been experimentally verified to date. The high-affinity cGMP-binding sites on PDE6 catalytic subunits discriminate cGMP over cAMP by about 106-fold [98, 99]. The cGMP-binding site in PDE6 has been localized to the GAFa domain in rod and cone
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isoforms, and several amino acid residues important for high-affinity interactions with cGMP have been defined [99, 100]. The GAFa domain is also a major binding site for the inhibitory γ-subunit of PDE6, as judged by cross-linking and site-directed mutagenesis work [100–102]. Differences in the binding of the γ-subunit to the α- and β-subunit reveal potential structural differences between α-GAFa and β-GAFa that may account for heterogeneity in cGMP or γ-subunit affinity for the holoenzyme [102]. The proximity of γ-subunit interacting sites with the cGMP-binding pocket in GAFa provides structural support for the positive cooperativity between cGMP and γ-subunit binding (discussed in section “Functions of the Regulatory cGMP-binding GAF domains of PDE6”). The GAFa domains of rod and cone PDE6 catalytic subunits serve as the primary dimerization domain between two individual subunits. This is evident in the structural model of the PDE6 holoenzyme [103]. The N-terminal region of the GAFa was shown by a mutagenesis study to be essential for dimerization of rod PDE6 [92]; these studies also support the view that rod PDE6 exists primarily or exclusively as αβ heterodimers, consistent with earlier biochemical evidence [81]. Catalytic Domain The PDE6 catalytic domain contains the same invariant catalytic site residues that typify all class I PDEs, referred to as PDEase_I in the Conserved Domain Database (CDD) at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI). Multiple-sequence alignment of the catalytic domains of three human rod and cone PDE6 genes and the PDE5 gene reveals 84% amino acid identity between the PDE6A and PDE6B rod subunit isoforms, about 75% amino acid identity between rod and cone PDE6C subunits, and 43% identity between PDE5 and PDE6. Because of the difficulty in expressing functional PDE6 catalytic subunits in heterologous systems [104–108], site-directed mutagenesis of PDE6 has not been feasible. Instead, progress in understanding the structure and function of the PDE6 catalytic domain has relied on constructing chimeric proteins containing both PDE5 and PDE6 sequences in conjunction with structural homology modeling with known catalytic domain crystal structures [105]. This approach has identified some of the important residues responsible for the very high turnover number (kcat) of PDE6 compared to PDE5 [108, 109]. The histidine residues responsible for binding divalent cations in the active site of PDE5 [110, 111] are present in PDE6 and bind zinc with high affinity and magnesium with lower affinity [112]. These divalent cations are not only critical for the catalytic mechanism but also confer structural stability to the enzyme. As mentioned, the nonactivated PDE6 enzyme is inhibited by direct binding of its inhibitory γ-subunit. The γ-subunit exerts its inhibitory action by directly binding to the catalytic pocket, thereby blocking access of cGMP to its binding site [113, 114]. PDE5/6 chimeras have also proved useful in identifying specific γ-interacting amino acid residues (PDE6 α′: M758, Q752, F777, and F781) within the M loop of the catalytic domain structure [108, 109, 115]. C-Terminal Prenylation Although several PDE families contain signaling motifs that target the enzyme to the membrane, PDE6 is the only vertebrate PDE family that is either farnesylated (PDE6A) or geranylgeranylated (PDE6B and, probably, PDE6C) at a C-terminal CAAX (C = cysteine,
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A = aliphatic, X = any amino acid) motif [116, 117]. The prenylated, carboxymethylated C-termini are responsible for anchoring PDE6 to the outer segment disk membrane [118], thereby facilitating two-dimensional collisions with transducin during visual excitation. PDE6 is membrane bound, except when the 17-kDa PrBP/δ protein (originally termed PDEδ) is present to bind to the prenyl groups and solubilize PDE6 from the membrane (see section “Potential PDE6 regulatory binding proteins” for discussion). Disk membrane association of PDE6 can be disrupted in vitro by altering the ionic, nucleotide, divalent cation, or illumination conditions, which is useful for purification of the enzyme [119]. Inhibitory γ-Subunit The γ-subunit of rod and cone PDE6 [120, 121] serves a remarkable number of functions considering its small size (~10 kDa). Most likely, the γ-subunit exists in solution as an unfolded or intrinsically disordered protein due to its minimal secondary structure [122, 123]. This may account for the ability of this small protein to span the distance from the GAFa domain to the active site on the catalytic domain of the catalytic dimer [102]. Important regions of the γ-subunit include the following: 1. A proline-rich region (amino acids [a.a.] 22–28 of the rod sequence) is a potential site of interaction with proteins containing SH3 (src homology3) domains [124] as well as a site for protein phosphorylation by proline-directed kinases [125–127]. 2. The polycationic region (a.a. 29–45) is a major site of interaction with the transducin α-subunit during light activation of PDE6 [128–133], as well as a substrate for phosphorylation by serine/threonine kinases [127, 134, 135] and adenosine diphosphate (ADP) ribosylation at two arginine residues [136, 137]. 3. The combined proline-rich and polycationic regions of the γ-subunit is the strongest site of interaction with the PDE6 catalytic dimer [102, 128, 138–142] and enhances the binding of cGMP to the regulatory GAF domains [142, 143]. 4. The region between the polycationic and α-helical segments of the γ-subunit contains a site of interaction (a.a. 66) with RGS9-1 [66], which serves to accelerate the GTPase activity of activated transducin [61, 64, 66]. 5. An α-helical region of the γ-subunit (a.a. 62–83) is a major site of interaction with activated transducin α-subunit and is primarily responsible for the GTPase accelerating activity of the γ-subunit [66, 144–150]. In addition, amino acids F73, N74, H75, and L78 of the γ-subunit interact with the PDE6 catalytic subunits [102, 150], even though the α-helical region itself does not directly block the active site. It is thus likely that transducin binds to one face of the γ-subunit α-helical region and disrupts contacts between the opposite face of the α-helical domain and the catalytic domain of PDE6. 6. The last five C-terminal residues (a.a. 83–87) directly bind to the active site to cover the catalytic pocket and block cyclic nucleotide entry [113–115, 128, 131, 146]. It must also be emphasized that the γ-subunit interacts differently with the α- and β-subunits of rod PDE6, as judged by both biochemical and structural evidence [73, 96, 102, 142, 151]. Because the GAFa domains of the α- and β-subunits of rod PDE6 are more dissimilar than the GAFb or catalytic domains, it is possible that differences in γ-subunit binding affinity or functional properties may result from differences in interactions of γ with the GAFa domains.
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PDE6 Has Evolved to Meet the Special Demands of the Central Effector of Visual Transduction The exquisite light sensitivity and temporal resolution of the visual signaling pathway in retinal photoreceptors requires precise regulation of PDE6 in rod and cone outer segments. On the one hand, spontaneous activation of PDE6 must be minimized in the dark-adapted state to enhance the absolute light sensitivity and to avoid unnecessary consumption of metabolic energy through a futile cycle of cGMP synthesis and breakdown. On the other hand, visual excitation following photic stimulation must generate a very rapid (millisecond) light response that requires immediate acceleration of cGMP breakdown by activated PDE6. Two features that are unique to the PDE6 family of PDEs—the extrinsic regulation of activity by the inhibitory γ-subunit and the extraordinary catalytic efficiency of the PDE6 active site—explain how this member of the PDE superfamily serves as the central effector of visual transduction. In dark-adapted rod outer segments, electrophysiological measurements of “dark noise” suggest that only 1 of 5,000 PDE6 molecules is spontaneously active at any moment [152]. This observation is consistent with measurements of the amount [73] and binding affinity of the γ-subunit for the PDE6 catalytic dimer [86, 142, 153], which together serve to ensure that nonactivated PDE6 exists as a nonactivated tetramer (αβγ2). Direct measurements of the basal activity of PDE6 in rod outer segment suspensions indicate that only 1 of 2,200 PDE6 molecules is spontaneously active in the darkadapted state [154]. On light activation, displacement of the γ-subunit by activated transducin relieves the inhibitory constraints on the PDE6 holoenzyme and triggers the rapid decline in cGMP levels (discussed in detail in next section). Full removal of the γ-subunit from the catalytic dimer by various means (proteolysis [85]; polycationic proteins [78]; or γ-subunit extraction in a complex with activated transducin [155]) results in a PDE6 catalytic dimer that hydrolyzes cGMP with about 1,000-fold greater catalytic efficiency than the closely related PDE5 enzyme (Table 1). The kcat/KM value of 4 × 108 M−1s−1 for catalysis of cGMP by bovine rod PDE6 [142] or amphibian rod PDE6 [154] approaches the diffusion-controlled limit for a bimolecular collision [156], making activated PDE6 a nearly perfectly designed catalyst for degrading cGMP in photoreceptor outer segments during light stimulation [51]. cAMP is a very poor substrate for PDE6 catalysis; the specificity constants (kcat/KM) for cGMP and cAMP differ by about 100-fold, primarily due to differences in the KM values (Table 1). Wide variations in the literature for the KM for PDE6 [40] are now understood to have resulted from restricted substrate diffusion in those experiments when PDE6 activity was measured in rod outer segment membrane preparations [52, 157]. Table 1.
Catalytic properties of human PDE5 and bovine rod PDE6 catalytic dimer Substrate KM (µM) kcat (s−1) kcat/KM (M−1s−1) Reference 8 Rod PDE6 cGMP 14 5440 3.9 × 10 142 cAMP 910 3060 3.4 × 106 PDE5 cGMP 2.9 2.2 7.6 × 105 194 cAMP 290 1.6 5.5 × 103 cAMP cyclic adenosine monophosphate, cGMP cyclic guanosine monophosphate, PDE phosphodiesterase
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PDE6 REGULATION The extent of PDE6 activation and the lifetime of activated PDE6 following photic stimulation are the rate-limiting steps in the excitation and recovery phases of the phototransduction pathway. While binding of activated transducin (specifically the α-subunit with GTP bound; α*-GTP) to relieve the inhibitory constraint of the γ-subunit is central to the PDE6 activation/inactivation mechanism, other factors (such as allosteric regulation by the GAF domains and binding of other PDE6 regulatory proteins) are likely to modulate the light sensitivity, extent of amplification, and duration of the activated state of PDE6. Transducin Activation of Rod PDE6 During Visual Excitation It is generally agreed that transducin activation of PDE6 results from the binding of the activated transducin α-subunit (α*-GTP) to the nonactivated PDE6 holoenzyme (αβγ2) and the displacement of the γ-subunit from its binding site at the entrance to the PDE6 catalytic site (Fig. 4). However, the detailed mechanism of this process remains surprisingly unclear. The prevailing model of visual excitation (Fig. 4A) asserts that one molecule of α*GTP binds to each PDE6 catalytic subunit, displacing both γ-subunits and enhancing cGMP hydrolysis at each catalytic site [45, 158]. However, evidence for the stoichiometry of αt-GTP binding to PDE6 and the extent to which PDE6 can be activated is not consistent with this model. For example, in those instances when physical removal of the γ-subunit from the PDE6 holoenzyme was directly compared to the maximal extent of transducin activation of PDE6, the hydrolytic activity was up to twofold higher for the PDE6 αβ catalytic dimer (devoid of γ-subunit) compared to the α*-GTP–PDE6 activated complex [73, 159–161]. Furthermore, correlations of α*-GTP binding to PDE6 with activation of cGMP hydrolysis demonstrate that a single α*-GTP was able to maximally activate the PDE6 αβ catalytic dimer [161–163]. These observations are consistent with the idea that α*-GTP relieves inhibition at only one of the two active sites on the PDE6 catalytic dimer (Fig. 4B). Although evidence for a second α*-GTP binding to PDE6 (Fig. 4C) has been reported [164], its affinity is likely much weaker and nonproductive under physiological conditions. A description of the mechanism of PDE6 reinhibition following transducin deactivation was presented in this chapter in the sections on deactivation of transducin and PDE6. Functions of the Regulatory cGMP-Binding GAF Domains of PDE6 Whereas allosteric regulation of catalysis has been demonstrated for the PDE2 and PDE5 cGMP-binding GAF domains [165–169], no evidence for intramolecular allosteric communication between the GAF and catalytic domains has been reported for PDE6 [142, 154, 170]. There are, however, inherent experimental difficulties in quantifying cGMP binding to the GAF domains when cGMP is itself a substrate for catalysis at the active site. Nonetheless, cGMP binding to the PDE6 GAF domains must induce a conformational change in the catalytic subunits since the affinity with which the γ-subunit binds to the catalytic dimer is markedly enhanced when cGMP is bound (Fig. 5). This can be seen as a decrease in the basal activity of PDE6 holoenzyme when cGMP occupies
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Fig. 4. Alternative models for the activation of phosphodiesterase 6 (PDE6) by transducin. In model A, a transducin α*-GTP (α-subunit with GTP bound) binds to each of the PDE6 catalytic subunits to displace its bound γ-subunit, leading to full catalytic activity at both active sites. In model B, a single α*-GTP binds to one of the PDE6 catalytic subunits, activating only one of the two catalytic sites in the catalytic dimer. In model C, two α*-GTP bind to PDE6, but only one of the catalytic sites is activated, the other site remaining inhibited.
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Fig. 5. Positive cooperativity between cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) and γsubunit binding to the rod phosphodiesterase 6 (PDE6) catalytic dimer. The enzyme active sites of PDE6 are denoted by notches, while the cGMP-binding sites are represented by circular pockets. A When γ-subunit (shown with its catalytic-interacting and GAF-interacting subdomains) is mixed with PDE6 catalytic dimer lacking bound cGMP at the GAF domains, the binding affinity of both γ-subunits is equal (dissociation constant, KD = 3 pM). On occupancy of the GAF domains by cGMP (black circles), one γ-subunit-binding site now binds to the catalytic subunit with more than tenfold higher affinity, while the other is unchanged. B Addition of cGMP to the catalytic dimer results in high-affinity (KD = 60 nM) binding to one GAF domain. Only at high cGMP concentrations will the second site become occupied (KD > 1 µM). On addition of stoichiometric amounts of γ-subunit, the cGMP-binding affinity is greatly increased at the low-affinity site and modestly increased at the high-affinity site. (KD values are for bovine rod PDE6 [96, 142].)
the GAF domain [154]. Furthermore, when cGMP is bound to the PDE6 catalytic dimer, the intrinsic γ-subunit binding affinity is enhanced for one, but not both, of its binding sites on the catalytic dimer; the second γ-subunit binding site retains the same affinity for PDE6 regardless of the state of occupancy of the GAF domains by cGMP [142]. When transducin activates the PDE6 holoenzyme, the γ-subunit remains associated with the PDE6 catalytic dimer when cGMP is present but is released in a complex with transducin α-subunit when the GAF domains are unoccupied [170, 171]. This allosteric change in the GAFa domain is reciprocal in that addition of γ-subunit to PDE6 catalytic dimers greatly enhances the binding affinity of cGMP for PDE6 [95, 143]. The two cGMP-binding sites have intrinsically different binding affinities: One GAF domain binds cGMP with high affinity, while the other GAF domain is a low-affinity site in the absence of γ-subunit (Fig. 5B). The cGMP-binding affinity at both sites is increased more than 100-fold when γ-subunit recombines with the catalytic dimer [73, 96, 142]. The reciprocal positive cooperativity between cGMP and γ-subunit binding to PDE6 catalytic dimer is also relevant to transducin-activated PDE6. Not only does displacement of the γ-subunit by α*-GTP relieve inhibition at the active site, cGMP-binding
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affinity to one of the GAF domains is lowered about tenfold. Once cGMP has dissociated from the catalytic subunit, the γ-subunit affinity is concomitantly reduced, causing its dissociation from PDE6, presumably in a complex of with α*-GTP. The second GAF domain retains high affinity for cGMP, and the second γ-subunit remains associated with the PDE6 catalytic dimer [73, 95]. Taken together, the interplay between the γ-subunit and the GAF domains suggests a unique physiological role for the PDE6 GAF domains. In dark-adapted photoreceptors, cytoplasmic free cGMP levels are several micromolar, and the cGMP-binding GAF domains would be occupied with cGMP while two γ-subunits block catalysis at the active sites. On light activation of PDE6, displacement of one γ-subunit by transducin will relieve inhibition at the active site and lower cGMP affinity for one binding site. For transient light activation, cGMP dissociation from the GAFa domains is unlikely because recovery of cGMP levels is fast, thereby promoting tight reassociation of the γ-subunit and the return of PDE6 holoenzyme to its dark-adapted state. For prolonged illumination (i.e., during light adaptation) during which cGMP levels remain low, cGMP dissociation from the GAFa domain might occur, lowering the γ-subunit affinity for its PDE6 catalytic subunit and permitting the γ-subunit (complexed with transducin α-subunit and RGS9) to serve as a GTPase accelerating factor [64]. This would increase the rate of transducin inactivation and help restore PDE6 to its nonactivated state. In this way, the GAFa domains of PDE6 might be sensors of cytoplasmic cGMP and respond to sustained decreases in cGMP levels with a negative-feedback mechanism to help restore the ability to detect light stimuli. An alternative hypothesis that the GAF domains buffer cellular cGMP and release it during photoresponse recovery [67, 97] has not been supported by the kinetics of cGMP binding and dissociation with the GAFa domains [68, 73]. Potential PDE6 Regulatory Binding Proteins Two photoreceptor proteins, a glutamic acid-rich protein 2 (GARP2) and a 17-kDa prenyl-binding protein (PrBP/δ; originally referred to as the PDE “δ-subunit”) have been shown to bind to PDE6 [172, 173], but their roles in regulating PDE6 activity or its subcellular localization are currently unknown. Glutamic Acid-Rich Protein 2 GARP2 is a truncated, alternative splice product of the β-subunit of the rod cGMPgated ion channel (CNGB1). GARP2 has a unique eight amino acid C-terminus (compared to the CNGB1 sequence), a high content of proline and glutamate residues, and a natively unfolded structure [173–176]. GARP2 is specifically expressed in rods but not cones [173] and is concentrated at the rims of the outer segment disk membranes [173, 175]. The GARP2 content in rod outer segments is roughly stoichiometric with the PDE6 content [176, 177], making it an attractive candidate as a PDE6 regulatory protein. The few studies of the ability of GARP2 to regulate PDE6 differ in their conclusions. One study reported that addition of recombinant GARP2 was able to deactivate transducin-activated PDE6, but had no effect on nonactivated PDE6 holoenzyme or the catalytic dimer [173]. In contrast, purified, native GARP2 failed to deactivate transducin-activated PDE6 [177], and it is now believed that this inhibitory action of GARP2 on activated PDE6 can be attributed to the fusion tag present on the recombinant
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GARP2 used in the earlier study [32]. Native GARP2 has been shown to reduce the basal activity of the dark-adapted PDE6 holoenzyme by up to 80% [177]. This result suggests that GARP2 may reinforce the inhibitory action of the γ-subunit on nonactivated PDE6, thereby enhancing the signal-to-noise ratio of rod photoreceptors under very dim (e.g., single-photon) illumination conditions. Other roles for GARP2 have been postulated [173, 176, 178], and it remains to be determined what rod-specific role(s) GARP2 plays in regulating PDE6 or other phototransduction proteins during visual signaling. 17-kDa Prenyl-Binding Protein (PDEδ) The 17-kDa prenyl-binding protein (PrBP/δ) was prematurely identified as the PDE6 δ-subunit because it copurified with a soluble fraction (20–30% of the total) of PDE6 from bovine retinal extracts [172, 179]. Unlike most photoreceptor proteins with tissue distribution that is restricted to the retina, PrBP/δ is ubiquitously expressed [179, 180]. PrBP/δ is capable of interacting with numerous proteins, most—but not all of which—are posttranslationally modified with farnesyl or geranylgeranyl groups (for review, see [181]). The functions of PrBP/δ in photoreceptor cells have been addressed by subcellular localization studies that have variously observed PrBP/δ immunoreactivity in the outer segments, the inner segments, as well as the connecting cilium region between inner and outer segments of both rods and cones [179, 182–184]. Localization of PrBP/δ in the inner segment and the connecting cilium region of the photoreceptor is consistent with a role for PrBP/δ in the transport of prenylated proteins from their site of synthesis in the inner segment to the outer segment. This idea is supported by identification of PrBP/ δ-binding partners that are thought to be involved in vesicular transport [185–187]. Recent work with a transgenic mouse in which the PrBP/δ gene has been deleted shows a reduction in transport of opsin kinase (a prenylated protein) to the outer segments of rods and cones, with corresponding defects in the photoresponse [183]. Biochemical studies have shown that PrBP/δ is a high-affinity PDE6-binding protein, with specific interaction with the farnesylated and geranylgeranylated C-termini of rod PDE6 catalytic subunits. Binding of PrBP/δ with PDE6 releases PDE6 from its disk membrane attachment site [179, 184, 188]. Once solubilized, the ability of activated transducin α-subunit to activate PDE6 is greatly impaired [184, 189]. In addition, PrBP/δ binding to PDE6 reduces cGMP-binding affinity to one of the two GAF domain binding sites [96] and disrupts the high-affinity interaction of PDE6 with GARP2 [177]. These specific effects of PrBP/δ on PDE6 in vitro support a role for PrBP/δ in negativefeedback regulation of PDE6 activation, perhaps during prolonged light adaptation. However, the PrBP/δ content in rod outer segments is only 10% of the PDE6 concentration [184], arguing against PrBP/δ as a bona fide PDE6 regulatory subunit. More work is needed to fully understand the role of PrBP/δ in the phototransduction pathway or in protein transport in photoreceptor cells. CONCLUSIONS Considering the wealth of knowledge about the phototransduction pathway—arguably the most thoroughly characterized of the G protein-coupled signaling pathways—it is humbling to realize that major gaps remain in understanding the complexities of PDE6
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regulation at the center of the cGMP signaling cascade. The detailed sequence of events leading to transducin activation of the PDE6 holoenzyme remains to be determined. The physiological significance of the allosteric communication of the PDE6 GAF domains through the inhibitory γ-subunit remains speculative at present. Some aspects of the complex set of processes known as “light adaptation” are postulated to operate by novel mechanisms [190–192]. Novel PDE6 regulatory proteins are possible candidates to modulate PDE6 activity during light adaptation. Finally, this review focused almost exclusively on visual transduction in rod photoreceptors, in large part because so little is known about the extent to which differences between rod and cone PDE6 regulation may account for some of the physiological differences in rod and cone photoresponses [193]. PDE6 is coming under increasing scrutiny outside of the field of vision research. With the increasing reliance on PDE inhibitors for a growing number of therapeutic applications (e.g., male erectile dysfunction, pulmonary hypertension), potential adverse effects on PDE6 function must be considered. There is also limited evidence to date that PDE6 subunits may be found outside the retina and may be differentially expressed during development. Having a G protein-coupled PDE6 expressed in nonphotoreceptive cells is extremely intriguing and merits further investigation of how PDE6 may participate in regulating cyclic nucleotide levels in other cells and tissues. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Work from my laboratory is supported by the National Eye Institute (EY05798). This is Scientific Contribution 2313 from the New Hampshire Agricultural Experiment Station. REFERENCES 1. Lincoln, T. M. (1994). Cyclic GMP: biochemistry, physiology and pathophysiology. Landes, Austin, TX. 2. Corbin, J. D., Kotera, J., Gopal, V. K., Cote, R. H., Francis, S. H. (2003). Regulation of cyclic nucleotide levels by sequestration. In: Handbook of cell signaling (Bradshaw, R., Dennis, E., eds.), pp. 465–470, Academic Press, San Diego, CA. 3. Sager, G. (2004). Cyclic GMP transporters. Neurochem. Int. 45, 865–873. 4. Pugh, E. N., Jr., Duda, T., Sitaramayya, A., Sharma, R. K. (1997). Photoreceptor guanylate cyclases: a review. Biosci. Rep. 17, 429–473. 5. Kuhn, M. (2003). Structure, regulation, and function of mammalian membrane guanylyl cyclase receptors, with a focus on guanylyl cyclase-A. Circ. Res. 93, 700–709. 6. Olshevskaya, E. V., Ermilov, A. N., Dizhoor, A. M. (2002). Factors that affect regulation of cGMP synthesis in vertebrate photoreceptors and their genetic link to human retinal degeneration. Mol. Cell. Biochem. 230, 139–147. 7. Koch, K. W., Duda, T., Sharma, R. K. (2002). Photoreceptor specific guanylate cyclases in vertebrate phototransduction. Mol. Cell. Biochem. 230, 97–106. 8. Beavo, J. A., Francis, S. H., Houslay, M. D. (2006). Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases in health and disease. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL. 9. Cote, R. H. (2004). Characteristics of photoreceptor PDE (PDE6): similarities and differences to PDE5. Int. J. Impot. Res. 16, S28–S33. 10. Kruh, G. D., Belinsky, M. G. (2003). The MRP family of drug efflux pumps. Oncogene 22, 7537–7552. 11. Chen, Z. S., Guo, Y., Belinsky, M. G., Kotova, E., Kruh, G. D. (2005). Transport of bile acids, sulfated steroids, estradiol 17-β-D-glucuronide, and leukotriene C4 by human multidrug resistance protein 8 (ABCC11). Mol. Pharmacol. 67, 545–557.
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162. Bruckert, F., Catty, P., Deterre, P., Pfister, C. (1994). Activation of phosphodiesterase by transducin in bovine rod outer segments: Characteristics of the successive binding of two transducins. Biochemistry 33, 12625–12634. 163. Yamazaki, M., Li, N., Bondarenko, V. A., Yamazaki, R. K., Baehr, W., Yamazaki, A. (2002). Binding of cGMP to GAF domains in amphibian rod photoreceptor cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE). J. Biol. Chem. 277, 40675–40686. 164. Phillips, W. J., Trukawinski, S., Cerione, R. A. (1989). An antibody-induced enhancement of the transducin-stimulated cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase activity. J. Biol. Chem. 264, 16679–16688. 165. Martins, T. J., Mumby, M. C., Beavo, J. A. (1982). Purification and characterization of a cyclic GMP-stimulated cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase from bovine tissues. J. Biol. Chem. 257, 1973–1979. 166. Yamamoto, T., Manganiello, V. C., Vaughan, M. (1983). Purification and characterization of cyclic GMP-stimulated cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase from calf liver. J. Biol. Chem. 258, 12526–12533. 167. Corbin, J. D., Turko, I. V., Beasley, A., Francis, S. H. (2000). Phosphorylation of phosphodiesterase-5 by cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinase alters its catalytic and allosteric cGMP-binding activities. Eur. J. Biochem. 267, 2760–2767. 168. Okada, D., Asakawa, S. (2002). Allosteric activation of cGMP-specific, cGMP-binding phosphodiesterase (PDE5) by cGMP. Biochem. 41, 9672–9679. 169. Rybalkin, S. D., Rybalkina, I. G., Shimizu-Albergine, M., Tang, X. B., Beavo, J. A. (2003). PDE5 is converted to an activated state upon cGMP binding to the GAF A domain. EMBO J. 22, 469–478. 170. Arshavsky, V. Y., Dumke, C. L., Bownds, M. D. (1992). Noncatalytic cGMP binding sites of amphibian rod cGMP phosphodiesterase control interaction with its inhibitory γsubunits. A putative regulatory mechanism of the rod photoresponse. J. Biol. Chem. 267, 24501–24507. 171. Yamazaki, A., Hayashi, F., Tatsumi, M., Bitensky, M. W., George, J. S. (1990). Interactions between the subunits of transducin and cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase in Rana catesbeiana rod photoreceptors. J. Biol. Chem. 265, 11539–11548. 172. Gillespie, P. G., Prusti, R. K., Apel, E. D., Beavo, J. A. (1989). A soluble form of bovine rod photoreceptor phosphodiesterase has a novel 15 kDa subunit. J. Biol. Chem. 264, 12187– 12193. 173. Korschen, H. G., Beyermann, M., Müller, F., Heck, M., Vantler, M., Koch, K. W., Kellner, R., Wolfrum, U., Bode, C., Hofmann, K. P., Kaupp, U. B. (1999). Interaction of glutamic-acidrich proteins with the cGMP signalling pathway in rod photoreceptors. Nature 400, 761–766. 174. Sugimoto, Y., Yatsunami, K., Tsujimoto, M., Khorana, H. G., Ichikawa, A. (1991). The amino acid sequence of a glutamic acid-rich protein from bovine retina as deduced from the cDNA sequence. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 88, 3116–3119. 175. Colville, C. A., Molday, R. S. (1996). Primary structure and expression of the human βsubunit and related proteins of the rod photoreceptor cGMP-gated channel. J. Biol. Chem. 271, 32968–32974. 176. Batra-Safferling, R., Abarca, H. K., Korschen, H. G., Tziatzios, C., Stoldt, M., Budyak, I., Willbold, D., Schwalbe, H., Klein-Seetharaman, J., Kaupp, U. B. (2006). Glutamic acidrich proteins of rod photoreceptors are natively unfolded. J. Biol. Chem. 281, 1449–1460. 177. Pentia, D. C., Hosier, S., Cote, R. H. (2006). The glutamic acid-rich protein-2 (GARP2) is a high affinity rod photoreceptor phosphodiesterase (PDE6)-binding protein that modulates its catalytic properties. J. Biol. Chem. 281, 5500–5505.
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8 Rhodopsin Structure, Function, and Involvement in Retinitis Pigmentosa Scott Gleim and John Hwa CONTENTS Introduction Historical Perspective Rhodopsin as the Prototypical G Protein-Coupled Receptor Rhodopsin, Localization, and Signaling Dark State and Activation Structural Analysis Retinitis Pigmentosa Implications of Receptor Misfolding Nongenetic Contributions to RP Conclusion References
INTRODUCTION Rhodopsin is the dim-light sensitive photoreceptor, densely packed in the rod cells of the retina. Organisms from bacteria to humans have evolved highly specialized systems for the detection of light, driven by survival-based interests, ranging from energy capture to visual sensing. Phylogenic analysis suggests that photopic vision arose first as cone receptors, which diverged into four groups, with one of these groups further diverging to enable scotopic vision via rhodopsin [1]. Such an evolutionary scheme would suggest that highly sensitive dim-light photoreception developed through optimized specialization, that is, mutations surrounding the chromophore to refine photoactivation in terms of wavelength selectivity and, more importantly, sensitivity. The remarkable sensitivity of rhodopsin, activated by single photons, enables scotopic and peripheral vision. The 200-fs photoisomerization of rhodopsin remains among the fastest and most efficient biological photochemical reactions known. This capture of light energy and the corresponding visual response has mesmerized philosophers and scientists alike. From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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Fig. 1. A timeline for major events in rhodopsin research (1600 to present). Visual reception has a rich history. Investigations into vision are hinted at in writings from ancient Greece and in Egyptian images. A Systematic evaluation of visual system components required a philosophical revolution in scientific methodology. The nature of the eye (Kepler, 1604) and light optics (Newton, 1704) were among the earliest scientific investigations. Discovery of rhodopsin (Boll, 1876, and Kuehne, 1878) and the association of vitamin A deficiency with night blindness (Block, 1917, and Blegvad, 1924) paved the way for (B) the discovery of rhodopsin constituents (Wald, 1935). The following two decades of intense protein chemistry on rhodopsin led to a Nobel Prize for Wald (1967), stimulating new approaches to rhodopsin research and the identification of the opsin gene (Nathans, 1982–1985). These provided a vital tool for (C) detailed structural analyses, with spin-labeled interactions (Farrens, 1996, and Cai, 1997) and disulfide criticality (Karnik, 1988; Hwa, 1997; Hwa 2001) demonstrating important principles in activation and structure. Structural details of rhodopsin became visible by the seminal solution of the rhodopsin crystal structure (Palczewski, 2000). AFM atomic force microscopy, cGMP cyclic guanosine monophosphate, CSNB congenital stationary night blindness, ECM/EMC electron cryomicroscopy, EPR electron paramagnetic resonance, GPCR G protein-coupled receptor, ROS rod outer segment, RP retinitis pigmentosa.
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HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE Systematic investigation into photoreception can be traced back to the years following the scientific revolution (Fig. 1A) when geographer, microscope enthusiast, and pioneer of microbiology Anton van Leeuwenhoek first observed retinal rod and cone cells in 1722, providing the first suggestion that light reception may occur somewhere other than at the lens. Thomas Young, famed for the double-slit experiment leading to the wave theory of light, subsequently proposed that color perception depends on three different color-sensitive nerve fibers, later defined by Hermann von Helmholtz to be blue, green, and red, a theory so advanced it was not proven until a century later. Heinrich Mueller suggested that retina rod and cone cells were involved in photoreception, further stimulating investigations into the retina. Franciscus Donders, around 1857, coined the term retinitis pigmentosa in a letter to Helmholz describing spicules of pigmentation he found throughout a patient’s degenerated retina. The discovery of rhodopsin is owed to the combined efforts of Franz Boll and Willy Kühne through an interesting series of exchanges reviewed elsewhere [2]. Bloch linked night blindness to malnutrition in 1917, from which Blegvad subsequently identified the deficient agent to be vitamin A. Involvement of vitamin A deficiency in night blindness provided supplemental evidence in the seminal identification of the active combination of vitamin A and opsin in 1935 by Wald (Fig. 1B), whose accomplishments have enabled incalculable benefits in vision research [3]. Over the past three decades, astounding progress has been made since the discovery of the opsin gene by Nathans [4]; these include the discovery of naturally occurring mutations leading to retinitis pigmentosa [5], deciphering the signaling pathway through transducin [6–12], determination of critical structural features such as the Schiff’s base counterion [13] and disulfide bond [14, 15], electron cryomicroscopy structure [16, 17], conformational movements required for activation [18, 19], and the crystal structure of rhodopsin [20] (Fig. 1C). Further details of activation are being intensely investigated at the molecular and biophysical levels [8, 21, 22]. Insights into the nature of misfolded rhodopsin [23–29] and dimeric packing of rhodopsin [30–34] have also been major achievements. This exponential rate of discovery will likely unfold many further details on the intriguing structure and function of the opsin protein and disease associations. RHODOPSIN AS THE PROTOTYPICAL G PROTEIN-COUPLED RECEPTOR Rhodopsin receives considerable research interest, particularly in structural and functional studies, owing in part to its reputation as the prototypical member of the seven-transmembrane-spanning, guanine nucleotide-binding protein (G protein)-coupled receptor superfamily, which accounts for approximately 5% of genes in the human genome. The G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are arguably among the most medically important protein families as over 30% of available pharmaceuticals target proteins within this family [35]. Furthermore, rhodopsin remains the only crystallographic structure available to represent the GPCR superfamily. GPCRs are generally responsible for transmitting extracellular information into the cellular environment with ligand stimuli covering the range of biochemical diversity: large macromolecules, peptides, amino acids, nucleic acids, lipids, ions, and even, as with rhodopsin, a single photon of light.
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Much of what is known about rhodopsin, and thus GPCRs in general, is due in large part to studies performed on bovine rhodopsin. The bovine eye provides an ample source from which substantial amounts of this protein can be purified or studied directly. Sequencing of the bovine rhodopsin gene [4] gave an arrangement of five exons, subsequently identified (Fig. 1C) also to represent human rhodopsin gene configuration [36]. The 6.4-kb gene consists of a 96-bp 5' untranslated region; a 1,044-bp coding region; and a surprisingly long, approximately 1,400-bp 3' untranslated region and are divided into five exons by four introns that interrupt the coding region [4]. The human gene (Gene ID 6010) is located on chromosome 3 (3q21–q24). The resulting proteins are 93.4% homologous with completely conserved cytoplasmic loops. RHODOPSIN, LOCALIZATION, AND SIGNALING Expression of rhodopsin is required for normal cell morphology, as the rod outer segment (ROS) does not form in rhodopsin knockout mice (−/−) [37]. Interestingly, ROS formation takes on typical morphology in rhodopsin heterozygotes (+/−) [32], but with about 50–60% of typical ROS volume, decreased rhodopsin concentration, decreased 11-cis retinal concentration, and impaired light sensitivity [32, 37]. Rhodopsin is densely packed (most probably as dimers; [30]) into stacked disks within the ROS, constituting more than 90% of membrane protein in the lipid bilayer. Opsin is synthesized, folded, and transported through a nonmotile ciliary connection [38] between the cell body and the outer segment, where it functions as a G protein-coupled photon receptor. Disks are shed regularly, with the outermost ROS segments endocytosed by retinal pigment epithelia (RPE) and resulting vesicles trafficked to the RPE proteasomal compartment for opsin degradation. Isomerization of the retinal moiety, by light excitation, extends the twisted springlike carbon chain, forcing away nearby residues (Fig. 2). This conformational change exposes the hydrophobic binding site for a heterotrimeric G protein, transducin (Gt), to associate and become catalytically active, exchanging guanosine diphosphate (GDP) for guanosine triphosphate (GTP). In the case of rhodopsin, the GDP/GTP exchange dissociates Gt from opsin to bind phosphodiesterase, removing the inhibitory γ-subunits. This generates active cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP)-phosphodiesterase, which in turn hydrolyses cGMP at a rate of 103 per second, rapidly closing cGMP-gated Na+ channels and hyperpolarizing the rod cell. Hyperpolarization stops neurotransmitter release, predominantly glutamate, to neighboring ganglia. A single GPCR activates multiple G proteins, which in turn activate multiple downstream signaling factors, resulting in a highly amplified signal of at least 10,000 hydrolyzed cGMP molecules per photon under dim-light conditions [39]. The signal is rapidly quenched through rhodopsin kinase (RK) phosphorylation of multiple serine and threonine residues along the C-terminal tail, allowing arrestin to bind and preventing further Gt interactions. These multiple phosphorylation sites appear to be critical to the remarkable reproducibility of the rhodopsin signal [40]. Arrestin binding promotes the hydrolysis and release of all-trans retinal, allowing for association of a new 11-cis retinal molecule, dependent on release of arrestin [41], thereby promoting dephosphorylation by protein phosphatase A (PPA) [42], regenerating a light-sensitive receptor.
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DARK STATE AND ACTIVATION Generally, opsins are large integral membrane proteins of approximately 360 amino acid residues, half comprising the GPCR characteristic seven-membrane-traversing regions (Fig. 3A). Despite countless similarities and conserved regions, rhodopsin is unique among this superfamily in a number of other ways. For instance, rhodopsin uniquely functions as a holoprotein, a working assembly of the precursor opsin apoprotein and a prosthetic inverse agonist, 11-cis retinal. This vitamin A derivative attaches covalently to lysine 296 through Schiff base formation, stabilizing opsin in a completely inactive conformation. This inverse agonist serves as the chromophore, finely tuning the absorption wavelength of the receptor in conjunction with surrounding residues. Such precision is required to prevent visual noise and allow for optimal visual sensitivity. In the absence of the 11-cis retinal, a significant degree of transducin coupling and thus signaling can occur. The spectrophotometric absorption profile of rhodopsin is defined by binding pocket interactions with the chromophore. This fortuitously allows tracking of structural changes by measuring the shift in the local absorption maxima (λmax) of the spectra. Dark-state rhodopsin maintains a characteristic absorption peak (λmax) at 498 nm, in which the bound ligand is maintained in a state reminiscent of a twisted spring. A photon of light energy strikes. On excitation, the positive charge, once localized to the Schiff base, redistributes along the π-electron system [43]. Charge transfer to an alternative counterion accompanies isomerization of the retinal molecule into all-trans retinal, sterically pushing apart transmembrane segments three (TM3) and six (TM6) [18]. Surrounding features of the holoprotein respond to the excitation in rapid succession, through a series of excited states, before final energy decay into a form relaxed enough to release all-trans retinal and activate the waiting effector, Gt. Bathorhodopsin (529 nm) develops equilibrium with a blue-shift intermediate (BSI) state (477 nm), which decays into a counterion transition state, lumirhodopsin (492 nm). Lumirhodopsin represents a transient state in which proton transfer from the E113 dark-state counterion [44] in TM3 across S186 and through an integral water molecule to protonate alternative counterion E181 [45] in the second intradiskal loop results in formation of meta I rhodopsin (478 nm). By the MI intermediate state, the ligand spring has untwisted, isomerized into all-trans retinylidene, still covalently attached to the opsin, and still incapable of activating transducin. Receptor activation, or conversion of meta I into meta II (MII or R*) (380 nm), requires deprotonation of the Schiff base, releasing the isomerized ligand.
Fig. 2. A Cartoon of the Rhodopsin Activation Cycle. A simplified rhodopsin activation scheme highlighting important events in the rhodopsin lifecycle. This schematic shows 11-cisretinal in (A) dark-state rhodopsin, with the protonated Schiff base stabilized by a counter-ion at Glu113. Photon energy catalyzes isomerization of the ligand to (B) all-trans-retinal, followed by counter-ion transfer across Ser186, during (C) lumi-rhodopsin, to Glu181, with a distancing of transmembrane helices 3 and 6 forming (D) active meta-II rhodopsin. Transducin (Gt) activation continues until (E) deactivating phosphorylation of the carboxy-tail, which promotes arrestin association and dissociation of all-trans-retinal. (F) Free opsin combines with new or re-formed 11-cis-retinal to reinitiate the cycling.
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Fig. 3. Structural representations of rhodopsin. (A) The primary sequence of rhodopsin, written as a schematic of the secondary structure, shows the organization of transmembrane helices. Autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa (RP) mutations are shown demonstrating the diverse range of affected residues and their locations. (B) A representation of rhodopsin, based on the 1LH9 2.6-Å crystal structure, highlights important structural features relevant to RP. Specifically, the amino (N-) and carboxy (C-) termini, the disulfide bridge, the retinal-binding site, and the highly conserved glutamate, arginine, tyrosine motif (ERY) activation-related sequence are associated with certain RP mutants.
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Accompanied rigid-body movements of TM3 and TM6 [46] expose a hydrophobic cleft between TM5 and TM6 [47]. Exposure of this hydrophobic site draws a nearby phenylalanine (F64) of the Gtγ, an orientation otherwise unfavored in an aqueous environment, resulting in amphipathic helix formation of the Gtγ-C-terminus, stabilized by activated rhodopsin, allowing allosteric regulation of nucleotide exchange [48].
STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS The current state of structural and functional knowledge regarding rhodopsin has been recently reviewed [49, 50]. Rhodopsin is ellipsoid in shape with dimensions of approximately 75 × 48 × 35 Å. The 348 amino acids of bovine rhodopsin are posttranslationally modified with N-terminus acetylation, N-terminus dual glycosylations (at N2 and N15), an intradiskal disulfide bond (C110–C187), dual palmitoylations at the C-terminus (C322 and C323), and multiple C-terminus light-activated phosphorylations. Electron Cryomicroscopy and Crystal Structure Most structural information on rhodopsin, and thereby on GPCRs, is based on an inactive, inverse-agonist-bound, dark state. This is because the most definitive structural data available are from x-ray crystallography. Electron cryomicroscopy leveraged twodimensional crystal formations to provide the earliest, albeit low-resolution, pictures of rhodopsin structure [16]. Originally solved to 2.8 Å [20], the crystal structure of rhodopsin demonstrated a number of important principles in rhodopsin function, the structure of GPCRs, and general aspects of large integral membrane proteins. Importantly, as mentioned, the helical arrangement was shown to be significantly different from, and more organized than, bacterial rhodopsin (another intensely studied seventransmembrane-spanning protein that serves as a proton pump from halophilic archaebacteria). Identification of proline-induced bending of transmembrane helices (e.g., highly conserved P267) showed significant distortion from an ideal helix, facilitating interhelical interactions and allowing for chromophore accommodation. Of particular interest was identification of a water-mediated interhelical interaction network centered around Asp83 on TM2, connecting this helix to TM3 and TM7 through interactions with Gly120 and Asn302, respectively. Also of mechanistic importance was the structural suggestion that β-ionone movement toward TM3 may result in helical displacement. Additional crystal analyses improved structural detail by adding missing residues (protein databank (http://rscb.org) structure identification numbers (pdf:1HZX), increasing resolution to 2.6 Å (1L9H) [51] (Fig. 3B), further improving resolution to 2.2 Å (1U19) [52], and refining earlier structures in different crystal space groups (1GZM). Increased resolving power provided confirmation of the structural importance of water molecules and their likely participation in spectral tuning and proton transfer [51]. Further details provided definition of the cytoplasmic region and chromophore, demonstrating a 6 s-cis conformation of the ionone ring and an unusual twisted and extended π-system with a delocalized charge–carboxylate interaction [52]. Also clarified was the hydrogen-bonding network connecting E113 to E181 through a required water molecule, a network later confirmed to transmit the counterion shift important in rhodopsin activation [45].
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Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) resolution of rhodopsin domain peptides have also been used to study the structure of rhodopsin [53]. Nuclear magnetic resonance has also extended crystallographic interpretations toward the elucidation of structural changes involved in opsin activation [54, 55]. Solid-state NMR, in particular, providing advantages for dealing with integral membrane proteins, is uniquely adept for following particular interactions, with studies utilizing isotopically labeled retinal providing direct chemical observation of modifications to ligand–protein interactions following light activation [55, 56]. The complete 1H and 13C assignments of the chromophore in the bound state showed interactions between 11-cis retinylidene’s H16/H17 and Phe 208, Phe 212, and H18 with Trp265 [57]. NMR provides considerable advantages in the context of activation as light-activated rhodopsin remains elusive to crystallization, and photoactivated intermediates, likely due to their transient nature, prove similarly difficult to crystallize [58]. The side chain of Glu122 and backbone of His211 were shown to be disrupted in meta II [55]. Cysteine Mutagenesis and Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Site-directed cysteine mutagenesis and sulfhydryl modification chemistry provide remarkable resources for structural studies facilitating spin labeling, disulfide construction [18, 59], and metal-binding site engineering [19]. Paramagnetic spin labeling adds unique topological information, measuring solvent accessibility of the modified residue, overall mobility of particular residues, and even demonstrating residue interactions. A series of spin-labeling studies revealed structural details of cytoplasmic loop 1 connecting helices 1 and 2 [60], loop 2 between helices 3 and 4 [12], loop 3 between helices 5 and 6 [61, 62], loop 4 leading from helix 7 to the palmitoylation site [63], and the C-terminal tail [64]. Together, these results map a range of light-initiated structural changes. Evaluating light-activated changes in mobility of cytoplasmic loop 3, the transducin-interacting domain connecting transmembrane helices 5 and 6, demonstrated a dramatic loss of mobility for residue V227, with a smaller decrease in mobility for K231. The loss of mobility corresponds to formation of tertiary contacts, whereas an increased mobility, as observed with V250, T251, M253, and Q244, indicates that tertiary contacts are lost in conversion to MII. This has considerable mechanistic importance as Q244 has been identified as a required residue for Gt activation [65]. As such, it can be seen that residues in cytoplasmic loop 3 are exposed to allow transducin interaction with nearby residues, forming new contacts to maintain structural integrity of the receptor. Other Approaches Breaking the protein into subsections for structural analysis of the components attempts to alleviate some of these concerns; however, less-direct biophysical measurements of intact protein have allowed structural inferences to fill gaps left by direct measurements. Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, for example, resolved proton movements involved in activation-induced counterion shift [44], and ultraviolet-visible (UV/Vis) spectrophotometry is routinely used to evaluate rhodopsin purity, structural stability, regeneration rate, and activation state [66]. Such techniques prove quite powerful
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at leveraging structural information provided by crystallographic data, particularly when combined with complementary tools such as site-directed mutagenesis and molecular modeling. In fact, molecular modeling has been pivotal in the study of rhodopsin, as it is a critical refining step in processing crystallographic and NMR data, and facilitates mutagenic approaches and biophysical data interpretation. Not surprisingly, as modeling techniques continue to mature, they become utilized as an experimental approach in their own right, with energy-induced decay of the protein structure revealing a core set of stabilizing interactions providing a folding scaffold for the overall rhodopsin structure [67]. Genetic manipulation techniques have proven useful in structural investigations of rhodopsin. From deletion of segments and chimeric recombination of protein to mutagenesis of individual residues and chemical modification of localized functional groups, each distinct application provides creative insight into structural features of this remarkable protein. Supporting a common GPCR activation principal is construction of a chimeric rhodopsin spliced with the cytoplasmic regions of the β-adrenergic receptor, resulting in a light-activated GPCR that elicits a β-adrenergic Gαs stimulation of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) [68]. Investigations into rhodopsin structure and function parallel many major unanswered questions facing general protein biochemistry. Structural motions involved in translating binding of a ligand or allosteric modulator across the membrane bilayer to activate intracellular signals are of general interest, particularly if findings extrapolate to a wider range of GPCRs. More structurally accessible than most GPCRs, rhodopsin continues to provide a uniquely suited prototype for studying general GPCR features. One interesting feature to develop over recent years is the concept of GPCR dimerization, carrying uncertain potential impact [69, 70]. Rhodopsin has demonstrated potential to form dimers, as well as higher-order oligomers, in disk membranes [33], expression systems [71], liposomes [72] and in solubilizing detergents [34]. However, demonstration of native receptor dimerization, along with a functional requirement for dimerization, remains elusive. Perhaps the most compelling evidence in favor of rhodopsin dimer formation was demonstrated using atomic force microscopy [30]. A large battery of additional techniques, including electron microscopy, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) separation, proteolysis, and cross-linking support the idea that rhodopsin is capable of dimer formation in both isolated disk membranes and when solubilized in detergent [33]. Site-directed mutagenesis, combined with fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) and cysteine cross-linking, suggests a hydrophobic interaction between W175 in the second intradiskal loop, and Y206 in TM5 participates in rhodopsin dimer formation [71]. Molecular modeling has provided additional details for the putative interface [31]. Implications of native dimer formation for GPCRs range from transport considerations [73] to activation responses [74]. An interesting approach using solubilized rhodopsin in detergent micelles of increasing size accommodating mixtures of differing oligomeric sizes suggested that larger dimeric organizations might be structurally preferred, reflected by increased receptor stability [34]. Although these organizations may not be required for transducin activation, increasing levels of oligomerization corresponded to dramatically increased rates of Gt activation, without modifying MII decay, consistent with putatively improved Gt binding by dimeric rhodopsin [75].
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RETINITIS PIGMENTOSA Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a collection of inherited neurodegenerative disorders in which rod cell apoptosis spreads throughout the retina, resulting in progressive vision loss and the characteristic pigmented retinal appearance. RP genetics demonstrate extreme heterogeneity in severity, progression rate, and mode of inheritance, covering autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive, X-linked, and sporadic mutations. Over 30 different genes have been identified to produce RP, with additional loci also implicated. Of at least 15 autosomal dominant RP (adRP) inherited disease genes, some have obvious correlations to RP biochemistry, while others have uncertain or indeterminate relationship to the disease. By definition, all RP mutants result in photoreceptor degeneration. Degenerative effects trigger multiple cell-death pathways, including caspase-dependent apoptosis, complement activation, and autophagy [76], with phase profiles reflecting the initial cause of cell death, be it calcium overload, structural defects, or oxidative damage. Uniform retinal degeneration was demonstrated to be independent of cellular genotype in chimeric retinas [77], indicating that transcellular factors or interactions are responsible for the final global retinal degeneration. Rhodopsin mutations account for an estimated 40% of autosomal dominant gain-offunction mutations, with over 100 distinct mutations within the receptor (Fig. 3A). Initial association of RP with single-point mutations in rhodopsin stemmed from identification of the predominant rhodopsin RP mutant, P23H [5]. Clinical visual parameters of P23H RP suggest increased ROS shedding and impaired ROS renewal [78], findings consistent with the notion of misfolded opsin impairing the disk integrity. With an astounding number of different single-point mutations in rhodopsin leading to autosomal dominant RP [79], it becomes useful to categorize the resulting effects when evaluating disease mechanism and therapeutic approaches. Although the final pathology may appear to be similar, rhodopsin mutations are a heterogeneous group at the molecular level, with differing structural perturbations. Potential for pharmacological and molecular therapy may ultimately depend on the location of the mutation and amino acid change. Classification of RP mutants in terms of structural loci and mechanistic impact can be reduced to three critical structural regions [50]. Most severely, modifications in the cytoplasmic tail interfere with rhodopsin trafficking to the ROS. Mutants interfering with the normal disulfide bond formation, between C187 on the second intradiskal loop and C110 at the end of the first intradiskal loop, lead to receptor misfolding. Finally, mutations among the transmembrane- and chromaphore-binding regions can effect protein folding and receptor activation. Associating cytoplasmic, intradiskal, and transmembrane mutations with trafficking, misfolding, and activation defects provides a useful means to discuss major routes of rhodopsin-RP development, but also provides drastic overgeneralization of a highly heterogeneous problem. An extended classification scheme is based on inactivating mutations of GPCRs in general [79]: class I, defective biosynthesis; class II, defective trafficking; class III, defective ligand binding; class IV, defective activation; and class V, unknown defects. Defective biosynthesis predominantly occurs through premature termination, often through frameshift, but may also entail accelerated degradation. Defective surface trafficking, in this scheme, covers the majority of GPCR mutations, where normally produced receptors demonstrate intracellular retention. Receptors with ligand-binding defects,
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despite proper production and surface expression, are incompetent for ligand binding. Activation-defective receptors, it follows, demonstrate proper production, localization, and ligand binding, failing only to carry out the final activation step, resulting in reduced maximal response or sensitivity (manifest as an increased half maximal response, EC50). The final category of unknown defects refers to disease-associated mutants with no apparent mechanistic deficiency, functioning normally in model systems and suggesting a case for which, despite association, the mutant may not be the cause of disease. While categorizing mutation effects may facilitate discussion of general mechanisms, the differences in location and physicochemical properties of replacement residues likely result in a broad range of subtle changes among each major class. Mutation of the arginine in the conserved [E/D]RY sequence associated with G protein signaling results in impaired activation in the melanocortin MC1R receptor (R142H) through G protein decoupling. The corresponding mutation in the vasopressin V2R receptor, R147H, also causes constitutive internalization and desensitization [80], resulting in nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. Similar RP mutants have been found, R135L and R135W, that are unable to activate transducin despite normal folding and ligand binding [81], a phenotype that could fall into the class IV activation-impaired mutant group. However, further research into these mutants has identified the defect to be caused by constitutive phosphorylation and arrestin binding, leading to constitutive internalization [82]. One could also argue that this may fall into the category of defective trafficking. However, the cellular outcome of this defect remains distinctly different from that of traditional mistrafficking. Transmembrane RP Rhodopsin Mutants The transmembrane region of rhodopsin, consisting of half of the protein, is of obvious structural importance. This region also forms the retinal-binding pocket and coordinates G protein activation through conformational movements of the transmembrane (TM) domains. As such, rhodopsin mutations within the transmembrane region can be further subdivided by those in proximity of the retinal β-ionone ring or carbon chain and those found in remaining regions of the transmembrane domains (Fig. 4). Evaluation of RP mutants across the transmembrane domains (G51A,V in TM1, G89D in TM2, L125R,A,F in TM3, A164V in TM4, H211P in TM5, P267L,R in TM6, and T297R in TM7) demonstrated that mutations in each TM segment can lead to abnormal bleaching and MII photointermediates [25], indicators of protein misfolding. These mutations appear to result in nonnative packing of the transmembrane helices, which relay misfolding to the intradiskal domain, where they may cause abnormal disulfide formation. The L125 residue is in TM3, within the ligand-binding pocket, close to the retinal β-ionone ring. A comprehensive list of mutations at this site (G, N, I, H, P, T, D, E, Y, and W) decreased 11-cis retinal binding, causing a red-shift of λmax, increased solvent exposure, and decreased thermostability [24, 83]. These findings support the importance of ligand binding in maintaining the structural integrity of rhodopsin, highlighting an interaction between L125 and the β-ionone ring as critical in maintaining the structure of the chromaphore-binding pocket. Further use of mutagenesis in evaluating the structural role of L125 demonstrated the role of this residue in maintaining additional interhelical interactions [29]. Rescue of the L125R RP mutant through compensatory mutations of W126E,D or E122L eliminated steric hindrance caused by L125R, restoring
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Fig. 4. (continued)
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Fig. 4. Regional clusters of autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa (adRP) rhodopsin mutations. Organization of adRP mutations according to structural features demonstrates clusters in relation to (A) the retinal-binding site, (B) the transmembrane scaffold, (C) the cytoplasmic region, and (D) the intradiskal region.
the TM3–TM5 interaction formed by the salt bridge between E122 and H211, by reconstructing the hydrogen bond between W126 and E122. Similarly, RP mutant A164 in TM4 interfered with residues L119 and I123 in TM3, disrupting the same salt bridge. Congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB; nyctalopia) is a condition characterized by inability to see in conditions of low illumination. The most common cause of nyctalopia
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is rod photoreceptor degeneration from RP, often caused by rhodopsin mutations. Non-RP mutations generating constitutive receptor activation cause CSNB. Rhodopsin is constrained in an inactive conformation through the salt-bridge interaction between lysine-296 and glutamate-113 [84]; mutation of either component can generate constitutive activity, causing CSNB. Interestingly, one of the earliest symptoms of RP is night blindness [85], demonstrating a fascinating relationship between rhodopsin folding and activity. RP mutation K296E, however, has been shown to cause photoreceptor degeneration through a process independent of constitutive activity [86]. Proximity of glycine-90 to this counterion permits G90D interference of the K296-E113 salt bridge by substituting for E113 in salt-bridge formation, leading to constitutive activation and CSNB [87]. The T94I autosomal dominant CSNB mutation is similarly near the G90 region and also results in constitutive transducin activation, most likely through hydrophobic interference or steric hindrance [88]. Cytoplasmic RP Rhodopsin Mutants The cytoplasmic region of rhodopsin extends from the surface of disks into the cellular milieu, where transducin (Gt) binding, and hence signaling, occurs. This intracellular region consists of the first cytoplasmic loop connecting helices 1 and 2, the second cytoplasmic loop connecting helices 3 and 4, the third cytoplasmic loop, and the C-terminal tail. The C-terminus is anchored to the membrane surface by palmitoylation of residues Cys322 and Cys323, creating what is putatively referred to as the fourth cytoplasmic loop [89, 90]. The proximal portion of this loop forms a part of the binding site for the C-terminal section of the transducin α-subunit [91]. RP mutations within the cytoplasmic region of rhodopsin are found throughout the region, with the exception of the third cytoplasmic loop (Fig. 4C). The C-terminus directly interacts with a cargo-binding subunit of dynein, providing transport of rhodopsin to the outer segment [92], an interaction abolished by severe RP mutants P347L, P347S, V345M, and Q344ter. C-terminal tail also contains multiple phosphorylation sites, phosphorylated by RK following transducin activation. Phosphorylation of the C-terminal tail regulates interaction of rhodopsin with arrestin, deactivating the receptor. These multiple phosphorylation sites result in uniquely consistent control of the amplitude and duration of the activated rhodopsin signal [40]. Intradiskal RP Rhodopsin Mutants Structural investigations of the RP mutants and their consequences on the intradiskal region were best highlighted in a series of investigations by Khorana et al. [23, 25, 26, 93–95]. Investigations by this group established a number of techniques critical for furthering rhodopsin research, while demonstrating important general principles of rhodopsin structure and the misfolding properties of numerous RP mutants. Together, their findings suggest that packing of the transmembrane helices, binding of the chromaphore, and intradiskal structural integrity are physically coupled properties critical for proper folding of rhodopsin. Intradiskal RP mutations are numerous and diverse in their impact on misfolding (Fig. 4D). Deletion studies of the intradiskal region provided suggestions for the structural importance of this region [96]. N-terminal deletions resulted in partial chromophore
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regeneration, whereas deletions in the first and second intradiskal loops caused regenerationincompetent misfolding, with segments 171–182 and 189–192 being structurally essential. Single-point mutations utilized to investigate the relative contribution of residues in the deleted segments along the second intradiskal loop showed that most individual changes resembled wild-type regeneration. Deletion of 189–190 resulted in dramatic retention of the mutant protein in the endoplasmic reticulum. This region is now known to contribute to the formation of a structurally critical salt bridge between D190 and R177 [97], linking the ends of the second intradiskal loop. Although interaction of this ion pair has no effect on solvent exposure or signaling, this interaction appears conserved as R or K and E or D pairings in most GPCRs and is critical for stabilization of the dark state of rhodopsin. The stabilizing role of this salt bridge is highlighted by its proximity to the disulfide bond between C110 and C187 in the intradiskal region. Formation of this disulfide bridge is critical to receptor structure and is highly conserved throughout the GPCR superfamily. RP mutants directly modifying one of these cysteines, C110F and C110Y or C187Y, cause abnormal disulfide formation of C185:C187 or C110:C185, respectively [26]. Surprisingly, additional RP mutants (G89D, L125R, A164V, and H211P) influence this structural bridge, through disruption of normal helical packing, promoting formation of the abnormal C185:C187 disulfide bridge [15]. IMPLICATIONS OF RECEPTOR MISFOLDING The dominant impact of misfolded rhodopsin is demonstrated through coexpression of wild-type rhodopsin and a misfolded mutant, for which intracellular retention of the mutant results in a corresponding retention of wild-type receptor, decreasing surface expression and signaling [79]. Numerous structural elements are ultimately responsible for maintenance of the rhodopsin structure, including membrane lipid interactions [98, 99], salt bridges, and both hydrophobic and polar contacts within the transmembrane regions. However, no single interaction has demonstrated as much significance in stabilization of the overall receptor as the conserved disulfide bond located at the intradiskal–transmembrane interface. Evaluating the rate of vision decline among 140 RP patients from 1975 to 2000 showed C-terminal rhodopsin mutations to decline most rapidly [100]. Considering the various classifications of rhodopsin mutations eliciting RP, it seems intuitive that significant variability in disease severity and rate of progression would arise between the various classes. Indeed, adRP mutations in rhodopsin show astounding variability within a given mutation class [85], even when considering only a single-point mutation, such as P23H. The progression model included age, gender, baseline function, and affected region but could only account for 20–34% of the variation. Predominant theories behind individual variability in disease progression focus on complementary genetic and nongenetic contributions. Complementary genetic contributions may include any polygenic interaction affecting retina function, including rhodopsin folding, trafficking, degradation, ion homeostasis, RPE integrity, ROS structure, and vitamin A processing. Detailed analyses involving polygenic interactions in RP are becoming more accessible with advances in techniques to identify single-nucleotide polymorphisms and perform haplotype analysis, with findings anticipated to have considerable impact on disease severity and progression.
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Acknowledging differences between the various forms of RP may lead to interesting implications in the prospect of treatments. Misfolding and aberrant disulfide formation, for example, may be alleviated through traditional pharmacological intervention with retinoid-mimetic folding chaperones. Transgenic mice expressing the misfolding T17M mutation and receiving dietary supplementation with high-dose vitamin A showed significant reduction in degeneration symptoms [101]. No such effect was observed in transgenic mice expressing the trafficking-impaired P347S variant, suggesting that such a therapeutic approach would indeed be specific to misfolding. In vitro, similar receptor rescue improves purification yield of severely misfolded RP mutant A164V using increased concentrations of inverse agonist [66]. The most predominant rhodopsin RP mutation, P23H, is also a misfolding mutation, resulting in intracellular accumulation [102]. Use of retinal-based structural chaperones 9-cis retinal, 11-cis retinal, and 11-cis 7-ring retinal [103] improved the ability of the photoreceptor to reach the plasma membrane [104], although not necessarily resulting in functional protein production [105]. Demethylation at C1 or C5 of the retinal ring produces partial agonist activity, shifting conformational equilibrium from MII to inactive MI by interfering with E134mediated proton transfer [106]. Thus, pharmacotherapy for rhodopsin RP mutations may require a degree of individualization based on specific structural defects imparted by the mutations. Simple in vitro assays may be of potential use in predicting in vivo responsiveness. NONGENETIC CONTRIBUTIONS TO RP Nongenetic contributions are also being elucidated. Suggested factors affecting the clinical course of RP focus primarily on diet, general health, and light exposure. The observation that light exposure exacerbates retinal degeneration in particular RP subtypes provides an interesting and complicating factor in understanding disease progression. One explanation for this phenomenon relates to cellular damage incurred by ultraviolet radiation, potentially damaging the rod cell, the RPE, or other surrounding supportive cell types. An alternative, and potentially additive, hypothesis suggests that ligand, released on photoactivation, becomes unable to stabilize mutant opsin, allowing the receptor to collapse and encouraging the misfolded-degeneration process. The theory of exacerbated misfolding/instability due to loss of ligand is indirectly supported by the only common treatment available for RP patients, vitamin A supplementation. As a required precursor to 11-cis retinal formation, which acts as a structural stabilizing agent for rhodopsin, treatment with vitamin A provides support for mutations affecting protein folding. However, effectiveness is, again, highly variable. One likely explanation for the variability of effectiveness with vitamin A supplementation in RP patients is the diversity of causal defects, as described with rhodopsin mutation classifications, which would be expected to produce various responses. Precisely such a difference in effectiveness was demonstrated through comparison of vitamin A effectiveness in transgenic mice expressing either a trafficking-impaired mutant (P347S) or a foldingimpaired mutant (T17M) [101]. As anticipated, based on the stabilizing effect of ligand binding, vitamin A improved histologic morphology and decreased the rate of decline for the misfolding mutant but not for the trafficking-impaired mutant.
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Circumstantial evidence points to another supplement with potential impact on disease progression. Association of zinc deficiency with a number of clinical manifestations of RP, impaired dark adaptation [107], decreased rhodopsin regeneration [108], and degeneration of ROS [109], has suggested possible involvement of the essential trace metal in both native functional and pathological roles. Treatment of bullfrog eyes with low-level zinc resulted in elevated dark-adapted electroretinogram (ERG) thresholds, increased peak ERG amplitudes, and accelerated rhodopsin regeneration [110]. As a critical component of the retina, zinc concentrations in ROS extracts suggest that it may be fortified in ROS disks [111], and radionuclide 65Zn has shown direct binding to purified rhodopsin [112]. Recent evidence also supports direct association of zinc at a high-affinity coordination site near H211 and E122 [113] as well as concentration-dependent alteration of rhodopsin thermostability [114]. Crystallographic data also suggest the presence of such a site [20], although this is not reflected in some later structures as the resolved metal ions were manually replaced with waters during processing [52]. Although solid-state NMR data suggest a lack of direct binding between H211 and zinc, the observed chemical shifts are consistent with the presence of Zn2+ within that region [115]. Direct interactions between divalent cations and GPCRs are not unprecedented as a diverse list of receptors, including β2-adrenergic [116, 117], dopaminergic [118], melanocortin MC1 and MC4 [119, 120], and olfactory receptors [121], have demonstrated direct and specific interactions with zinc. Evaluation of zinc and other trace metals in the context of RP has remained suggestive, although inconclusive [122–124], likely due to a focus on serum levels and a lack of stratification based on different RP mechanisms. CONCLUSION The development of powerful biochemical and biophysical techniques to study rhodopsin has allowed for considerable advances and understanding of this fascinating photoreceptor protein. The heterogeneous RP mutations have provided additional insights into rhodopsin structure/function. In vitro biochemical and biophysical assays will provide valuable information on potential therapy at the molecular level. Improvements with vitamin A treatment could be predicted through 11-cis retinal regeneration assays, and the effects of trace metals on folding and stability could also be evaluated. Comprehensive biochemical correlation to clinical disease is a necessary direction for future studies. One can envision as new mutations are discovered that such simple characterization of the mutants will determine appropriate therapy and may predict disease progress and prognosis. REFERENCES 1. Okano T, Kojima D, Fukada Y, Shichida Y, Yoshizawa T. Primary structures of chicken cone visual pigments: vertebrate rhodopsins have evolved out of cone visual pigments. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1992;89:5932–5936. 2. Marmor MF, Martin LJ. 100 years of the visual cycle. Survey Ophthalmol 1978;22:279–285. 3. Wald G. Molecular basis of visual excitation. Science 1968;162:230–239. 4. Nathans J, Hogness D. Isolation, sequence analysis, and intron-exon arrangement of the gene encoding bovine rhodopsin. Cell 1983;34:807–814.
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9 Multiple Signaling Pathways Govern Calcium Homeostasis in Photoreceptor Inner Segments Tamas Szikra and David Krizaj CONTENTS Introduction Overview of Ca2+ Regulation in the Inner Segment Voltage-Operated Calcium Channels Play a Central Role in Inner Segment Calcium Regulation Neurotransmission from Rods and Cones to Second-Order Retinal Neurons Photoreceptor Malfunction and Degeneration Development References
INTRODUCTION The great British physiologist Sydney Ringer was the first to suggest that calcium (Ca2+) plays a central role in coordinating function of excitable cells (Carafoli, 2002). We now know that Ca2+ promotes, modulates, and integrates intracellular signals in all eukaryotic cells by taking advantage of an approximately 10,000-fold driving force for Ca2+ entry into the cytosol. In primary sensory neurons such as photoreceptors, Ca2+ regulates both input (sensory transduction) and output (synaptic transmission), participating as well in additional processes crucial to survival, signaling function, and cell death. This includes regulation of cell growth and development, gene expression, synthesis and release of neurotransmitters, cytoskeletal dynamics, and energy metabolism. This review discusses the cellular mechanisms in vertebrate rods and cones by which Ca2+ manages to carry out this monumental task. The anatomy of vertebrate photoreceptors is similar to that of other primary sensory neurons in that the cells are constructed of two separate anatomical compartments that process signal inputs and outputs, respectively (Fig. 1). An outer segment (OS) is exclusively
From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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Fig. 1. A Generic rod photoreceptor. The outer segment (OS) hosts the phototransduction apparatus. The inner segment (IS) downstream from the OS is formed by three anatomically distinct domains: (1) ellipsoid, which contains most of cell’s mitochondria; (2) the cell body, which contains the cell nucleus, nuclear envelope formed by the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) cisternae; and (3) the synaptic terminal, packed with synaptic vesicles and cisternae of smooth ER. B Dissociated salamander rod and C salamander cone photoreceptor. Ca2+ sequestration and release from the mitochondria occur via Ca2+ uniporter channels and Na+/Ca2+ transporters, respectively. PMCA plasma membrane Ca adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase), VGCC voltage-gated channel. Scale bars 5 µm.
dedicated to transducing photon energy into graded changes in the photoreceptor membrane potential. In contrast, photoreceptor regions downstream from the OS are responsible for life support and survival and for synaptic transmission of light-evoked changes in membrane potential to the rest of the visual system. The inner segment (IS) itself is comprised of a number of anatomically discrete domains (the ellipsoid, the myoid, the cell body, and the synaptic terminal), each of which contains distinct sets of intracellular organelles and ion transporters (Fig. 1). The IS and the OS are connected by incessant large-scale movement of proteins and lipids guided by specialized motors and Ca2+ buffers through a thin nonmotile cilium (Besharse et al., 2003; Giessl et al., 2006) as well as by cyclical light-dependent translocation of at least three phototransduction proteins between the OS and the IS (McGinnis et al., 2002; Sokolov et al., 2002; Strissel et al., 2005). While photoreceptors do not possess a bona fide action potential-conducting axon (their individual neurite may better be thought of as an enlargement of the initial segment of the axon of a conventional neuron), each neurite ends in a specialized synaptic terminal (pedicle in cones, spherule
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Fig. 2. A Simultaneous [Ca2+]i measurement from the cell body and outer segment of a salamander rod. The ryanodine receptor agonist caffeine transiently elevated [Ca2+]i in the inner, but not the outer, segment. B Rod light responses to 200-ms, 567-nm flash (upper panel −3.5 log; bottom panel −1.0 log quanta) before and during caffeine exposure. No significant effect of caffeine was observed on either the transient hyperpolarization of the rod or the rod “tail” for brighter flashes; slightly slower rise times were observed for caffeine exposures during dim flashes. IS inner segment, OS outer segment.
in rods; Lasansky, 1973; Haverkamp et al., 2000). Terminals in mammalian species such as mouse and rat possess a single large mitochondrion, whereas those of amphibian and reptilian photoreceptors appear to lack mitochondria (Lasansky, 1973; Choi et al., 2005). The main point of our chapter is to review how the highly compartmentalized anatomy of rod and cone ISs is associated with region-specific regulation of intracellular calcium concentration [Ca2+] and to relate those differences to homeostatic Ca2+ mechanisms particular to each photoreceptor region. In that regard, the OS and IS express different sets of plasma membrane, intracellular store transporters, and ion channels, which in turn impart differential voltage sensitivity, Ca2+ affinities, and transport and modulation properties to each segment (Krizaj and Copenhagen, 2002). An example is illustrated in Fig. 2, which shows that stimulation of ryanodine receptors evokes large-scale Ca2+ release from internal stores in the rod IS but has no effect on [Ca2+]i homeostasis in the OS or the light response of rod photoreceptors. A great deal has been learned from molecular, physiological, and genetic studies of Ca2+ regulation in the OS (Lamb and Pugh, 2006). These studies established that the OS possesses a single Ca2+ entry pathway (the cyclic guanosine monophosphate [cGMP]dependent [cyclic nucleotide-gated, CNG] channel) and one Ca2+ clearance pathway, the Na,K+/Ca2+ exchanger (NKCX) (Korenbrot and Rebrik, 2002; Palczewski et al., 2004; Paillart et al., 2006). While in some retinas OSs are also labeled by antibodies raised against ryanodine, inositol triphosphate (IP3), and sarcoplasmic-endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase (SERCA) channels and transporters (Wang et al., 1999; Krizaj, 2005b; Shoshan-Barmatz et al., 2005), a functional role for specific Ca2+ store transporters in OS Ca2+ regulation still needs to be defined. In contrast to the OS, the IS is characterized by a multitude of Ca2+ influx, clearance, and storage mechanisms, including powerful intracellular organelles such as the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondria.
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OVERVIEW OF CA2+ REGULATION IN THE INNER SEGMENT In sensory neurons, Ca2+ acts globally (across tens of micrometers) as well as locally (within “microdomains”) to coordinate, integrate, and tune sensory transduction, gene expression, and neurotransmission through a wide array of signaling systems with differing Ca2+ affinities (e.g., Roberts, 1994; Neher, 1995; Zufall and Leinders-Zufall, 2000; Nakatani et al., 2002a and 2002b; Berridge et al., 2003). Vertebrate rod and cone photoreceptors exemplify this strategy; most, if not all, key biochemical processes in these cells are modulated by spatial, temporal, and amplitude aspects of changes in [Ca2+]i microdomains (reviewed in Fain et al., 2001; Krizaj and Copenhagen, 2002; Heidelberger et al., 2005). [Ca2+]IS is determined by the interplay between activation of Ca2+ entry and clearance mechanisms in the plasma membrane, ER, and mitochondria that keeps [Ca2+]i in darkness high (at 300–600 nM) and low (30–50 nM) in the light (Krizaj et al., 2003; Szikra and Krizaj, 2006). Figure 3 illustrates the pathways for Ca2+ entry into the IS cytosol: (1) plasma membrane voltage-activated Ca2+ channels (Corey et al., 1984); (2) store-operated transient receptor potential canonical (TRPC) or receptor-operated transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV)-like channels (Zimov and Yazulla, 2004; Szikra et al., 2006); (3) CNG channels (Rieke and Schwartz, 1994); (4) ryanodine and IP3 receptor-operated release channels (Peng et al., 1991; Krizaj et al., 2004); and (5) Ca2+ release from the mitochondria (Krizaj et al., 2003; Szikra and Krizaj 2006).
Fig. 3. Schema of Ca regulation in the inner segment (IS). The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca store represents a central hub for intracellular Ca homeostasis, communicating with both plasma membrane and mitochondria. Black arrows calcium fluxes, gray arrows activation pathways. CNGC cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP)-gated channel, GPCR G proteincoupled receptor, IP3R, triphosphate (IP3) receptor, NCX mitochondrial Na/Ca exchanger, PLC phospholipase C, PMCA plasma membrane Ca ATPase, RyR ryanodine receptor, SERCA, sarcoplasmic-endoplasmic reticulum Ca adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase), SOC store-operated Ca channel, VOCC L-type voltage-operated Ca channel, CICR, Calcium-Induced Calcium release; DAG, diacyl glycerol; Gprot, G protein.
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Fig. 4. Spatiotemporal [Ca2+]i differences in inner segment (IS) subregions in response to depolarization. A Cone photoreceptor stimulated with 64-ms puffs of KCl. Fast kinetics, high amplitude, and spatially localized depolarization-evoked [Ca2+]i are first observed in the synaptic terminal, followed by the rest of the IS. Note the large spontaneous [Ca2+]i increase in the terminal (arrowhead). B Detail of [Ca2+]i elevation in a rod terminal triggered by transient depolarization. High-amplitude hot spot [Ca2+] increases are observed during depolarization (arrowheads).
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The properties of Ca2+ clearance mechanisms in the IS determine the speed with which photoreceptor output responds to light (Duncan et al., 2006). Mechanisms that clear Ca2+ from IS cytosol consist of (1) plasma membrane Ca2+ adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) transporters (PMCAs) (Krizaj et al., 2002; Duncan et al., 2006); (2) SERCA transporters (Krizaj et al., 2003, 2004; Krizaj, 2005b); and (3) mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporters (Krizaj et al., 2003) (Fig. 3). Because both PMCAs and SERCAs are driven by metabolic energy in the form of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), Ca2+ homeostasis in photoreceptor ISs is closely linked to energy metabolism derived from glycolytic and oxidative phosphorylation pathways. Steady-state [Ca2+]i amplitude and spatiotemporal characteristics of Ca2+ signals maintained by primary Ca2+ influx and clearance mechanisms are additionally shaped by (1) Ca2+-mediated Ca2+ channel inactivation (Corey et al., 1984; Rabl and Thoreson, 2002); (2) powerful Ca2+-activated chloride and potassium conductances (Barnes and Hille, 1989; Cia et al., 2005; Xu and Slaughter, 2005); (3) glutamate transporter-mediated chloride conductances (Rabl et al., 2003); (4) Ca2+ buffering proteins such as calcium-binding protein (CaBP), parvalbumin, recoverin, and calbindin (Sokal et al., 2000; Haeseleer et al., 2004); (5) retrograde feedback from horizontal cells (Verweij et al., 1996, 2003; Hirasawa and Kaneko, 2003; Vessey et al., 2005); (6) protons released from synaptic vesicles or via metabolism (Kleinschmidt, 1991); (7) Ca2+/H+ exchange (Krizaj and Copenhagen, 1998); (8) chloride modulation (Thoreson et al., 2003); or (9) surface charge (Piccolino et al., 1999; Cadetti et al., 2004). Ca2+-mediated signaling cascades are either confined to specific domains of the IS or are expressed at different densities across several IS regions. As a result, the amplitude and frequency modulation of light-evoked [Ca2+]i levels is highly region specific, allowing for tuning a wide array of Ca2+ signaling systems that use sensors with differing affinities located in different IS domains. For example, voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (VGCCs) and PMCAs are strongly expressed in the terminal and weakly in the ellipsoid region (Rieke and Schwartz, 1996; Nachman-Clewner et al., 1999; Morgans et al., 1998; Krizaj et al., 2002), resulting in large-amplitude, fast [Ca2+] onset and offset kinetics in the terminal (Fig. 4). Ellipsoid [Ca2+] levels are typically at least threefold lower than in the synaptic terminal due to low density of L-type VGCCs and mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake (Szikra and Krizaj, 2006). Ca2+ imaging studies suggested that there may be significant diffusion between the terminal and the cell body as well as between the cell body and the ellipsoid regions (Krizaj and Copenhagen, 1998; Steele et al., 2005; Szikra and Krizaj, 2006). VOLTAGE-OPERATED CALCIUM CHANNELS PLAY A CENTRAL ROLE IN INNER SEGMENT CALCIUM REGULATION The VGCCs represent the central element of Ca2+ regulation in the IS because they possess biophysical properties conferring susceptibility to voltage, heteromeric G proteins, Ca2+ released from stores, and Ca2+ buffers such as calmodulin. The VGCC is a multisubunit protein complex consisting of the principal α1 subunit (which forms the Ca2+ channel pore and senses the membrane potential) and auxiliary β− and α2δ-subunits. In mammalian rods, the α1-subunit belongs to the Cav1.4 (Cav1.4a1q; α1F) subtype transcribed from the L-type family CACNA1F gene (Bech-Hansen et al., 1998). Currents
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through Cav1.4 channels are detected only when α1F subunits are coexpressed with α2δ1− and β2/β3-subunits, indicating that subunit interactions are critical for normal Ca2+ entry into the rod IS (Koschak et al., 2003; Baumann et al., 2004). Deletion of the β2-subunit (but not other β-subunits) alters the IS expression of α1F, resulting in loss of neurotransmission (Ball and Gregg, 2002; but see McRory et al., 2004). Visual deficits in patients with X-linked congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB2; Strom et al., 1998; BechHansen et al., 1998) are caused by mutations in the CACNA1F gene. The mutations underlying the CSNB2 phenotype encompass at least 75 variations. Of these mutations, 23 result in truncated α1-subunits and loss of function; in another 25 cases, various missense mutations were reported in which there still may be some residual function (Hoda et al., 2006). In some mutations, no change in gating was observed; rather, the expression of Cav1.4 was affected (McRory et al., 2004; Hoda et al., 2006), suggesting deficits in protein misfolding or trafficking. Cav1.4 knockout mice are characterized by decreased depolarization-evoked Ca2+ entry into photoreceptor terminals and failure to establish proper targeting/anchoring of presynaptic ribbon complexes in rods (Mansergh et al., 2005). Surprisingly, however, loss of the α1F-subunit resulted in total suppression of both rod and cone neurotransmission (Mansergh et al., 2005), challenging the belief that Cav1.4 are selectively localized to rods. In a recently described gain-of-function phenotype similar to CSNB2, there may be an increase in Ca2+ entry into rod ISs with similarly deleterious effects on the phenotype (Hemara-Wahanui et al., 2005). A number of functional questions need to be addressed with respect to molecular interactions between IS VGCCs and cytosolic signals, extracellular modulators and the membrane potential. To maintain normal function in tonically depolarized cells such as photoreceptors, it is imperative to tame the positive feedback inherent in VGCC activation. A regenerative cycle between Ca2+ influx and depolarization would impede the light response by breaking the relationship between light stimuli and [Ca2+]i; it also would trigger oscillations of about 3–4 Hz in the membrane potential and potentially overload the IS with Ca2+ (Akopian et al., 1997). Photoreceptor ISs employ several strategies to achieve this aim. First, the physiologically relevant range of the I–V relationship is shifted toward negative potentials, minimizing the contribution of Ca2+ current to the steady-state “dark” membrane potential. Hence, in darkness, Ca2+ influx through VGCCs is small (Heidelberger et al., 2005) and amply compensated by counterion fluxes. The α1F-subunit-containing channels in vivo activate at substantially more negative potentials than the large majority of other “high-voltage-activated” Ca2+ channels (Cox and Dunlap, 1992; but see Awatramani et al., 2005). Mammalian photoreceptor VGCC currents activate at −60 mV (primate: Yagi and MacLeish, 1994; tree shrew: Morgans et al., 1998; pig: Cia et al., 2005). Amphibian VGCC currents are first measurable at about −45 mV (Corey et al., 1984; Barnes and Hille, 1989); however, it remains to be determined whether small depolarizations to −60 mV increase [Ca2+]IS in amphibian photoreceptors without evoking detectable Ca2+ currents (Awatramani et al., 2005; Akopian et al., 1997; Bader et al., 1982). Effective voltages measured in vivo are 10–15 mV more negative than α1F-currents observed in heterologously expressing HEK cells (Baumann et al., 2004; McRory et al., 2004), suggesting that the voltage sensitivity and other gating characteristics of indigenous Ca2+ channels are modulated by cytosolic modulators. One such modulator is CaBP4, which shifts the activation curve of the
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Cav1.4 channel to hyperpolarized potentials (Haeseleer et al., 2004). The significance of this modulation is indicated by the finding that loss of CaBP4 results in a 100-fold reduction of sensitivity of mouse rod and cone neurotransmission without affecting OS Ca2+ dynamics (Haeseleer et al., 2004; Maeda et al., 2005). The I–V relationship of IS VGCCs is also modulated by calmodulin, protons, negative feedback from postsynaptic cells, and metabotropic glutamate modulation (Barnes et al., 1993; Verweij et al., 1996; Hosoi et al., 2005; Higgs and Lukasiewicz, 2002). Second, the membrane potential is stabilized at the threshold of VGCC activation through shunts provided by concomitant activation of powerful Ca2+-activated potassium and chloride conductances (Corey et al., 1984; Maricq and Korenbrot, 1988; Barnes and Hille, 1989; Xu and Slaughter, 2005). The delayed rectifier K+ current (reversal potential ~ −80 mV; Beech and Barnes, 1989) and Cl− (reversal potential near −20 mV; Thoreson et al., 2002) counterion fluxes are instrumental for shunting the membrane potential to prevent Ca2+ spiking (Akopian et al., 1997) and Na+ spiking (Kawai et al., 2005; Ohkuma et al., 2006) in rods and cones. Activation of chloride fluxes may also provide negative feedback from postsynaptic horizontal cells (e.g., Verweij et al., 1996, 2003) and directly modulate VGCCs (Thoreson et al., 2003). Third, given that most L-type channels typically experience strong Ca2+-mediated inactivation, how is it possible for IS VGCCs to reliably transduce voltage changes into [Ca2+]i during prolonged depolarizations? All VGCC α1-subunits possess a conserved IQ motif that binds calmodulin, resulting in Ca2+-dependent inactivation due to Ca2+ entering the cytoplasm via channels themselves (Imredy and Yue, 1992), Ca2+ release from the ER (Adachi-Akahane et al., 1996), or release of Ca2+ from mitochondria (Hernandez-Guijo et al., 2001). Recent molecular and physiological studies found that α1F-subunits are much less susceptible to inactivation than α1-subunits in other types of L channels (Baumann et al., 2004; McRory et al., 2004), possibly because of a gating modulator within the C-terminal tail downstream of the IQ domain that regulates calmodulin binding (A. Singh et al., 2006). This inactivation mechanism is important for normal vision because men carrying the truncated IQ domain develop CSNB2 (A. Singh et al., 2006). Whereas little Ca2+-mediated inactivation is seen in heterologously expressed Cav1.4 (Koschak et al., 2003; Baumann et al., 2004; A. Singh et al., 2006), Ca2+-dependent inactivation is more prominent, if still modest, in intact cells (Corey et al., 1984; Rabl et al., 2003). This suggests that, in vivo, α1F inactivation is modulated by cytosolic components within the IS. Voltage-operated Ca2+ entry into ISs is additionally regulated by kinases and phosphatases (Stella et al., 2001, 2002; Akopian et al., 2000; Zhang et al., 2005), protons (Barnes et al., 1993; Hirasawa and Kaneko, 2003), nitric oxide (NO; Kourennyi et al., 2004) and neuromodulators such as dopamine (D2 and D4 receptors), somatostatin (SSA2 receptors), ATP (P2X7 receptors), adenosine (A2 receptors), GABA (γ-aminobutyric acid), insulin, glutamate transporters, and glutamate itself (mGluR group III receptors) that act through heteromeric Gi, Go, and possibly Gq proteins (Stella et al., 2001, 2002; Thoreson et al., 2002; Akopian et al., 2000; Krizaj and Witkovsky, 1993, Higgs and Lukasiewicz, 2002; Koulen et al., 2005; Hosoi et al., 2005; Tatsukawa et al., 2005; Wersinger et al., 2006). Other potential candidates for VGCC modulation are presynaptic proteins such as bassoon (Khimich et al., 2005; tom Dieck et al., 2005), neurexins that link Ca2+ channels to presynaptic PDZ proteins (Missler et al., 2003) and neuroligins
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and syndecans (Song et al., 1999). Finally, the high density of actin in all domains of the IS (Cristofanilli and Akopian, 2006) together with the susceptibility of retinal actin networks to Ca2+ modulation (Akopian et al., 2006) strongly suggest that Ca2+ signaling in the IS is an integral element of developing, remodeling, and regenerating ISs (e.g., Nachman-Clewner et al., 1999). The fascinating panoply of factors that have an impact on or are impacted by [Ca2+]i regulation is a direct indicator of the central role for this second messenger in IS function. VGCCs that drive Ca2+ entry into the IS are selectively targeted to the synaptic terminal, with lesser expression in the cell body and the ellipsoid, as seen in mammalian (Raviola and Gilula, 1975; Morgans et al., 1998; Cia et al., 2005), reptilian (Schaeffer and Raviola, 1976; Lasater and Witkovsky, 1991; Choi et al., 2005), avian (Firth et al., 2001), and amphibian (Nachman-Clewner et al., 1999; Steele et al., 2005; Szikra and Krizaj, 2006) photoreceptors. The targeting mechanisms are unknown. However, VGCCs themselves are known to have a key role in the formation and function of the synapse. Loss of Cav 1.4 α1- or β2-subunits disrupted targeting of the synaptic ribbon to the active zone, suppressed exocytosis, and caused an absence of dendritic extensions of postsynaptic horizontal and bipolar cells into invaginations within the terminal (Ball and Gregg, 2002; Mansergh et al., 2005). This indicates that Ca2+ channels themselves regulate the assembly and trafficking of the synaptic ribbon to the photoreceptor active zone. Finally, the dendrites of postsynaptic horizontal cells mediate retrograde synaptic interactions that control presynaptic [Ca2+]i (Verweij et al., 1996, 2003). Comparison of Boltzman functions fitted to Ca channel activation curves suggested that protonation of VGCCs exerts control over the gain of synaptic transfer by shifting the Ca current–voltage relationship (Barnes et al., 1993; Barnes, 1994; Hirasawa and Kaneko, 2003). The exquisite multiplicity of Ca2+ regulatory machinery organized around VGCCs shows that signal transmission at rod and cone synapses is highly modulatable. Voltage-operated Ca2+ channels in amphibian and mammalian photoreceptors as well as heterologously expressed Cav1.4 channels are about sixfold potentiated by BayK 8644 and inhibited by dihydropyridine blockers such as nifedipine, isradipine, and nimodipine (Wilkinson and Barnes, 1996; Baumann et al., 2004; Szikra and Krizaj, 2006) and by the phenylkylamine verapamil (Cia et al., 2005). These characteristics confirm that CaV1.4 channels are members of the L-type VGCC family. However, sensitivity for dihydropyridine inhibition is uncharacteristically low (Hart et al., 2003; Cia et al., 2005), and some IS Ca2+ channels are reportedly susceptible to N-type Ca2+ channel antagonists such as ω-conotoxin (Wilkinson and Barnes, 1996; Kourennyi and Barnes, 2000). Unlike most L-type channels, heterologously expressed mammalian Cav1.4 subunits (Baumann et al., 2004) and endogenous mammalian VGCCs (Cia et al., 2005) are blocked by both L- and D-cis diltiazem enantiomers. This observation has potent therapeutic implications as diltiazems protect photoreceptors against Ca2+ overload and degeneration (e.g., Frasson et al., 1999; Takano et al., 2004; Vallazza-Deschamps et al., 2005). Ca2+ Channels in Rods and Cones There is a lot of evidence that rods and cones possess different mechanisms of Ca2+ influx and clearance, differential expression of modulatory receptors. as well as different intracellular cascades involving Ca2+ and other second messengers (Krizaj and Witkovsky,
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Fig. 5. Store-operated Ca2+ channels in photoreceptors. Depletion of Ca2+ stores caused a large decrease in baseline [Ca2+]i, followed by a rebound overshoot, a diagnostic marker for storeoperated Ca2+ channels. The overshoot was blocked by the store-operated channel antagonist SKF 96365.
1993; Stella and Thoreson, 2000; Krizaj, 2000; Kourennyi et al., 2004; Zhang et al., 2005; Hosoi et al., 2005; Duncan et al., 2006). These differences are discussed at greater length in Krizaj and Copenhagen (2002). Three examples of compounds with opposite effects on rod and cone VGCCs involve dopamine (Krizaj and Witkovsky, 1993), adenosine (Stella et al., 2002), NO (Kourennyi et al., 2004), and glutamate (Hosoi et al., 2005). Depolarization-induced increases of calcium concentration in rods and cones are enhanced and inhibited, respectively, by the NO donor S-nitrosocysteine (Kourennyi et al., 2004). In contrast, glutamate acting through mGluR receptors suppresses VGCCs in amphibian cones but not rods (Hosoi et al., 2005). Finally, Ca2+ regulation in rods, but not cones, is characterized by large-scale Ca2+ release from ryanodine-based ER stores (Krizaj et al., 2003; Cadetti et al., 2006) (Fig. 5). Hence, rod and cone signals not only possess different timing and spectral sensitivity of the light response in the OS (that arise from expression of rod-specific and cone-specific phototransduction cascade elements), but also have a series of Ca2+ channels, transporters, and buffering systems in the IS that modulate, modify, and shape the final photoreceptor output, reflected in the rate of exocytosis in the synaptic terminal. NEUROTRANSMISSION FROM RODS AND CONES TO SECOND-ORDER RETINAL NEURONS The IS represents a signaling bottleneck in which Ca2+ channels and transporters compress visual stimuli from the 4–5 log response range generated by the phototransduction cascade in the OS to about 0.5 log dynamic range of presynaptic [Ca2+]IS (Szikra and Krizaj, 2006) and transmitter release (Choi et al., 2005). The compression reflects a cumulative superposition of numerous positive- and negative-feedback loops inherent in biophysical and neuromodulatory properties of channels and transporters. Thus, transmission of graded light-evoked signals across the photoreceptor synapse is controlled and modulated by voltage-activated and Ca2+-activated mechanisms within the IS. The exquisite accuracy of neurotransmission at photoreceptor synapses is preserved by the sensitivity of graded transmitter release to changes in presynaptic [Ca2+]i.
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This release appears to be linearly proportional to [Ca2+]IS over the full range of presynaptic membrane potentials (Rieke and Schwartz, 1996; Witkovsky et al., 1997; Thoreson et al., 2004). The linearity of the relationship between Ca2+ influx and transmitter release in photoreceptors is difficult to understand because Ca2+ action in presynaptic terminals tends to be highly cooperative (Dodge and Rahamimoff, 1967; Goda and Stevens, 1994; Bollmann et al., 2000). It is possible that linearity is caused by linear summation of independent Ca2+ entry sites (e.g., Heidelberger et al., 2005). Alternatively, the linearity may result from linear activation of Ca2+ extrusion mechanisms during the light response because the PMCA pumps that regulate the light response are activated proportionally to [Ca2+]i (Zador and Koch, 1994; Duncan et al., 2006). Finally, the linear operating range of presynaptic [Ca2+]i might be sculpted by release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores (Cadetti et al., 2006) or Ca2+ entry through store-operated Ca2+permeable channels (Szikra et al., 2006). A series of recent findings showed that Ca2+ release from intracellular stores plays a crucial role in rod neurotransmission (Krizaj et al., 1999; Cadetti et al., 2006; Suryanarayanan and Slaughter, 2006). The predominant role of Calcium-Induced Calcium Release (CICR) at rod synapses is unparalleled in the central nervous system. CICR represents an amplification mechanism that boosts exocytosis in the darkness, when photoreceptors are depolarized. Consistent with this, CICR inhibitors most affect glutamate release during stimulation with dim flashes (Suryanarayanan and Slaughter, 2006), and synaptic gain is steepest around the dark membrane potential (see Witkovsky et al., 1997; Belgum and Copenhagen, 1988). The magnitude of Ca2+ release from stores is set by the “basal” cytosolic [Ca2+]i (Krizaj et al., 1999) as Ca2+; entering the IS through VGCCs triggers further release of Ca2+ from the ER by activating ryanodine receptor channels within the ER (Krizaj et al., 2003). Ryanodine receptors belong to the cardiac RyR isoform 2 family (Krizaj et al., 2004). CICR contributes most to synaptic [Ca2+]i during long depolarizations with Ca2+ fluxes that cross the threshold for ryanodine receptor activation. At these potentials, global elevation of [Ca2+]i measured in synaptic terminals (400–2000 nM; Szikra and Krizaj, 2006) triggers exocytosis at rates ranging from about 250 vesicles/s in lizard cones to about 400 vesicles/s in amphibian rods (Rieke and Schwartz, 1996; Schmitz and Witkovsky, 1997; Choi et al., 2005). The capacitance method combined with Ca2+ imaging was used to measure exocytosis directly in isolated photoreceptors. The threshold for exocytosis when [Ca2+]i was measured with high-affinity indicators fura-2, fura-FF, and fluo-3 was under 1 µM (Rieke and Schwartz, 1996; Thoreson et al., 2004). However, fura-2 cannot be used to estimate the actual Ca2+ concentration required for transmitter release as [Ca2+]i close to sites of Ca2+ entry can approach tens to hundreds of micromoles, well above the about 2 µM saturation for fura-2 (Neher, 1995; Sinha et al., 1997; Llinas et al., 1992a,b). Studies using the low-affinity Ca2+ indicator furaptra at ribbon synapses suggested that exocytosis at ribbon synapses has a threshold of about 10 µM (photoreceptors; Kreft et al., 2003) or 50 µM (teleost bipolar cells; Heidelberger et al., 1994), consistent with the idea that vesicle release is determined by local [Ca2+]i microdomains. Similar low- and high-affinity mechanisms were reported in bipolar cells following use of low- and highaffinity indicators, respectively (Heidelberger et al., 1994; von Gersdorff and Matthews, 1996; Zhou et al., 2006).
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Alternatively, exocytosis in photoreceptors may be regulated by high- and low-affinity Ca2+ sensors. Photoreceptor terminals express synaptotagmin I, a relatively low-affinity (Kd 3–30 µM free Ca2+) presynaptic “release sensor” through which primed vesicles within the terminal detect high peaks of localized Ca2+ (Geppert and Sudhof, 1998) (cow: von Kriegstein et al., 1999; salamander: Kreft et al., 2003; mouse: Lazzell et al., 2004). The higher affinity isoform, synaptotagmin III, was recently identified in rat, mouse, and goldfish photoreceptors (Berntson and Morgans, 2003). It is possible that synaptotagmin I drives the fast synchronous component, whereas synaptotagmin III drives the slower, asynchronous component, possibly in cooperation with synaptotagmin XII, a Ca2+independent regulator of release (e.g., Maximov and Sudhof, 2005; Maximov et al., 2007). Finally, a fast exocytotic component could be driven by Ca2+ influx through VGCCs, whereas asynchronous release might be more susceptible to CICR (Suryanarayanan and Slaughter, 2006). Consistent with these ideas, kinetics of exocytosis in rod photoreceptors exhibits fast and slow components, with vesicle fusing to the plasma membrane with rate constants of about 2 and about 127 ms, respectively (Kreft et al., 2003). Blocking CICR blocked the slow, but not fast, component of postsynaptic excitatory postsynaptic current (EPSC) in bipolar cells (Suryanarayanan and Slaughter, 2006). Neuromodulators strongly affect photoreceptor neurotransmission. As noted, presynaptic [Ca2+] signals (and neurotransmitter glutamate release) are modulated by many agents, including dopamine, somatostatin, ATP, adenosine, insulin, NO, and glutamate itself. For example, group II mGluR agonists inhibit glutamate release from salamander rods and cones (Higgs and Lukasiewicz, 2002), whereas group III agonists were effective in mouse rods (Koulen et al., 2005) and newt cones (Hosoi et al., 2005). PHOTORECEPTOR MALFUNCTION AND DEGENERATION By using calcium ions as an intracellular messenger, cells walk a tightrope between life and death. Too much or too little Ca2+ at the wrong time and place might lead to rapid cell death by necrosis or to the induction of the cell death program of apoptosis (Paschen, 2003). Typically, main features of the apoptotic process include activation of the caspase protease superfamily, release of proapoptic factors such as cytochrome c from the ER and mitochondria, and a pathological increase in cytosolic [Ca2+] (Ca2+ overload) that causes membrane blebbing, fragmentation of nucleosomal DNA, mitochondrial malfunction, and cell death (Hajnoczky et al., 2003; Mattson and Chan, 2003). Pathological increases in [Ca2+]i have been implicated in a number of degenerative and agent-evoked photoreceptor diseases, including retinitis pigmentosa (Chang et al., 1993), lead-induced toxicity models (He et al., 2000; Fox et al., 2003), hypoxia (Toescu, 2004), retinal detachment (Khodair et al., 2003; Zhang et al., 2005), and cancer-associated retinopathy (Subramanian and Polans, 2004; Adamus et al., 2006). Ca2+ overload is an early and rapid event in photoreceptor degeneration induced by prolonged exposure to light (Donovan et al., 2001, Fox et al., 2003; Doonan et al., 2005; Wenzel et al., 2005). Increased levels of photoreceptor [Ca2+]i have been measured immediately after toxic light exposure, with the number of rods with elevated [Ca2+]i continuing to increase up to 3 h (Donovan and Cotter, 2002; Donovan et al., 2001). In degenerative diseases, Ca2+ overloads increase gradually as cells enter the apoptotic process during the development
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(Doonan et al., 2005). Impaired calcium regulation in the IS has also been implicated in diseases such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy (Fitzgerald et al., 1994) and CSNB2 (Bech-Hansen et al., 1998; Hemara-Wahanui et al., 2005). Correspondingly, when Ca2+ overload is prevented by a genetic deletion of VGCC subunits (Read et al., 2002) or by using pharmacological antagonists of Ca2+ channels (Edward et al., 1991; Takano et al., 2004), photoreceptor cell death is reduced. Ca2+ overload is pathological for cells because it is typically followed by secondary insults that involve activation of multidestructive pathways such as calcineurin phosphatases, cathepsin, and calpain proteases and inflammation, together with activation of “conventional” apoptotic signals (consisting of Bax/Bid signaling, the caspase system, increased production of reactive oxygen species, and excessive Ca2+ loading of mitochondria; Hajnoczky et al., 2003, 2006; Mattson and Chan, 2003). While the apoptotic process in photoreceptors sometimes appears to be independent of mitochondrial release of cytochrome c or caspase activation observed in inner retinal cells (Cusato et al., 2003; Donovan and Cotter, 2002), this is not always the case. A major cause of blindness in humans is mutations in genes that encode proteins of the phototransduction cascade. Mutations in phosphodiesterase β subunit (PDEβ6), guanylate cyclase (GC), and guanylate cyclase-activating protein (GCAP) (Sokal et al., 2000; Palczewski et al., 2004; L. Jiang et al., 2005) lead to elevated [cGMP]OS and Ca2+ influx through CNG channels (Chang et al., 1993; Farber 1995), which ultimately results in activation of the apoptotic program. Increases in [cGMP] were directly shown to cause Ca2+ overload in the rd1 mouse (a model for autosomal recessive human retinitis pigmentosa) and in degenerating amphibian photoreceptors (Lolley et al., 1977; Lolley, 1994; Vallazza-Deschamps et al., 2005). In mouse photoreceptors, intracellular [Ca2+] levels increased just before cells entered apoptosis at P10 (Doonan et al., 2005). This cytosolic increase was associated with mitochondrial depolarization, suggesting that degenerating photoreceptors experience a concomitant mitochondrial Ca2+ overload (e.g., Fox et al., 2003). Interestingly, some forms of photoreceptor degeneration may be caused by a decrease in [Ca2+]OS (Fain, 2006). Consistent with this, suppression of CNG channels with antisense RNA was reported to cause photoreceptor degeneration (Leconte and Barnstable, 2000). How Ca2+ overload generated by excessive activation of CNG channels in the OS is communicated to apoptotic pathways in the IS is not known. Intracellular stores are the essential loci for induction of apoptosis in eukaryotic cells. Overloading and redistribution of Ca2+ within the ER and mitochondria amplify apoptotic signals, and Ca2+ release from these organelles directly activates transcriptional cascades regulating the apoptotic pathway (Breckenridge et al., 2003; Scorrano et al., 2003). A number of recent studies suggested that intracellular organelles contribute to apoptotic signals in rods and cones. Mitochondria, damaged by heavy metals such as lead, were suggested to kill rods through Ca2+ overload mediated by activation of the permeability transition pore in the inner membrane (He et al., 2003; Fox et al., 2003). Suppression of Ca2+ sequestration into ER kills differentiating photoreceptors (Linden, 1999; Chiarini et al., 2003), presumably due to global suppression of mRNA translation that occurs in cells with depleted Ca2+ stores (Brostrom and Brostrom, 2003). Consistent with this idea, intra-ER Ca2+ buffers such as calnexin enhance cell survival by preventing
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store depletion and cytosolic Ca2+ overload (Rosenbaum et al., 2006). Rod photoreceptor cell death induced by store depletion is suppressed by inhibitors of protein synthesis (Chiarini et al., 2003), further underscoring the importance of ER Ca2+ regulation for photoreceptor survival. Finally, direct links between ER Ca content and the caspase cascade were uncovered by the finding that the proapoptotic effect of store depletion is blocked by the pan-caspase inhibitor z-VAD-fmk (Chiarini et al., 2003). Proapoptotic Ca2+ overload can also occur as a result of Ca2+ entry via store-operated or transient receptor potential (TRP) channels (Toescu, 2004). In invertebrate photoreceptors, pathological Ca2+ entry through TRP channels overloads cells’ mitochondria and triggers cell degeneration and death (Yoon et al., 2000; Minke and Agam, 2003). TRP proteins are prominently expressed in rod and cone photoreceptors (Zimov and Yazulla, 2004; Rohrer and Krizaj, in preparation), suggesting that store-operated Ca2+ entry occurs in these cells (e.g., Fig. 5) (Szikra and Krizaj, 2006; Szikra et al., 2006). There is increasing evidence that Ca2+ overload triggers activation of calpains, a family of ER cysteine proteases with substrates that include cytoskeletal proteins such as fodrin as well as proapoptotic proteins Bax, p35, p53, procaspase 9, procaspase 3, and poly ADP ribose polymerase (PARP) (Nicotera and Orrenius, 1998; Rohrer et al., 2004, Paquet-Durand, Azadi et al., 2006). Calpains appear to be positioned at the epicenter of photoreceptor degeneration. Increases in calpain-mediated proteolysis in rods exposed to light-evoked degeneration protocols were observed within 30 min of light induction and continued to increase up to 24 h after the onset of light (Donovan and Cotter, 2002). Calpain activation was also reported in light-independent rd1 degeneration models (Sharma and Rohrer, 2004), in rd1 retinas (Doonan et al., 2005), and in retinas from RCS (Royal College of Surgeons) rats (another model for inherited retinal degeneration; Azarian and Williams, 1995). Activation of calpain-mediated proteolysis consists of two steps that result in translocation of activated calpain from the ER into cytosol. First, the endogenous inhibitor calpastatin must be separated from the calpain heterodimer, causing its translocation from ER lumen to the cytosolic side of the ER. Second, subsequent Ca2+ binding leads to a conformational change and dissociation of the 28-kDa regulatory subunit from the 80-kDa catalytic subunit (Hood et al., 2004). A publication suggested that increased calpain activation in rd1 retinas (Doonan et al., 2005) is not caused by increased calpain transcription or expression per se but rather by its increased dissociation from calpastatin within ER stores (Pacquet-Durand et al., 2006). It remains to be seen whether calpain inhibitors ameliorate photoreceptor degeneration, as seen in other tissues (Ray et al., 1999; DeBiasi et al., 2001). Perhaps to compensate, long- term increases in expression of genes coding for calcium-binding proteins such as calbindin has been observed in rd1 retinas (Hackam et al., 2004; Rohrer et al., 2004). Pathological increases in [Ca2+]i could trigger apoptosis through activation of conventional apoptotic signals involving caspase cascades. The exact involvement of caspases in photoreceptor degeneration seems to depend on the species and the type of injury/disease. The cytosolic pathway involving caspases 9 and 3 is upregulated in the rd model (Sharma and Rohrer, 2004), lead toxicity (He et al., 2000), tubby mice (Bode and Wolfrum, 2003), and cultured cells expressing properties of cone photoreceptors that were stressed by serum withholding (Doonan et al., 2005) but not in
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light-induced photoreceptor degeneration (Donovan et al., 2001; Donovan and Cotter, 2002). Caspase 1, but not caspase 3, may be activated during ischemia (Katai and Yoshimura, 1999) and light-induced degeneration (Samardzija et al., 2006); loss of caspase 1 correlates with the photoreceptor’s ability to withstand cell death induced by excessive light exposure or ischemic injury (Arai et al., 2006) but does not prevent its rapid death in the rd1 degeneration model (Samardzija et al., 2006). Apoptosis in some photoreceptor death models is blocked by the pan-caspase inhibitor z-VAD-fmk (Chiarini et al., 2003; Doonan et al., 2005; Duenker et al., 2005), whereas in other models caspase inhibitors failed to show significant neuroprotection (Donovan and Cotter, 2002; Yoshizawa et al., 2002; Zeiss et al., 2004; Gomez-Vicente et al., 2005; see also Lohr et al., 2006). Caspases and calpains share many substrates, resulting in cross-activation of their respective signals (Berliocchi et al., 2005). For example, caspases facilitate calpain activity through cleavage of calpastatin (Pörn-Ares et al., 1998). Conversely, calpains directly cleave caspases, activating them as well as proapoptotic Bcl-2 family members that reside in intracellular stores. Such parallel activation of calpains and caspases was detected in cultured cone photoreceptors (Doonan et al., 2005). Finally, apoptotic and nonapoptotic death signals can be intertwined. In addition to activation by Ca2+, caspases can also cause pathological Ca2+ overload by inactivating PMCAs (Leist et al., 1998). Relatively little photoreceptor death is observed in most types of CSNB2, which also is associated with scant vascular and RPE changes (usually seen in degenerative eye diseases) (Bech-Hansen et al., 1998). As opposed to loss of photoreceptor nuclei in rods lacking the β2-subunit (Ball et al., 2002) or in retinitis pigmentosa, there is no retinal degeneration in CSNB2 animal models or human patients. The phenotype in this disease, caused by pathological expression of voltage-activated Ca2+ channels in rod ISs, is thus functional rather than anatomical. While light responses of CSNB2 rods are normal, the significant decreases in the amplitude of b-wave electroretinograms in human CSNB2 patients reveal a defect in neurotransmission between rod photoreceptors and bipolar cells (Miyake et al., 1986; Tremblay et al., 1995; Mansergh et al., 2005). Now, we know this is due to loss or mutation in the CACNA1F gene and its Cav1.4 Ca channel product (Bech-Hansen et al., 1998; see above). Therapeutic Strategies The pharmacological strategies for treating retinal degenerations have mainly been based on attempts to suppress apoptosis mediated by Ca overload or caspases. A number of studies reported successful outcomes. For example, calpain inhibition can attenuate ischemic retinal damage (Sakamoto et al., 2000; Gilgun-Sherki et al., 2002; Osborne et al., 2002). Moreover, light-induced degeneration could be blocked with D-cis diltiazem (Doonan et al., 2003; Frasson et al., 1999; Yamazaki et al., 2002; Takano et al., 2004), whereas D-cis diltiazem enhanced photoreceptor survival in the rd mouse and RCS rat (Frasson et al., 1999; Vallazza-Deschamps et al., 2005; but see Bush et al., 2000; Pawlyk et al., 2002; Pearce-Kelling et al., 2001). Consistent with original results by Frasson et al. (1999), deletion of L-type VGCCs from rd1 photoreceptors slowed the progression of degeneration (Read et al., 2002). In the RCS model, the preservation mediated by the L-type channel antagonist nilvadipine was associated with an upregulation
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of neurotrophic factors such as fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF-2; Sato et al., 2003) and downregulation of caspases 1 and 2 (Yamazaki et al., 2002). L-cis Diltiazem, but not L-type channel blockers verapamil and D-cis diltiazem, was effective in ameliorating heavy-metal toxic effects in rods (Fox et al., 2003). DEVELOPMENT Spontaneous calcium transients are a central feature of the developing retina, and they have well-defined roles in the development of the visual system (Syed et al., 2004; reviewed in Firth et al., 2005; Metea and Newman, 2006). These include gap-junctional Ca2+ wave communication between retinal progenitors (Pearson et al., 2004) involving L-type VGCCs, Ca2+ stores, and store-operated Ca2+-permeable channels (Firth et al., 2005; Sugioka et al., 1999). Ca2+ transients are directly correlated with interkinetic movement of neuroblast nuclei along the radial glia, a movement that is reduced by 81% by BAPTA-AM and by blockers of gap junctions (Pearson et al., 2005). Photoreceptor development is associated with specific Ca2+ signaling pathways (such as PMCAs and SERCAs; Rentería et al., 2005; Krizaj, 2005b) and with specific activation patterns of heterotrimeric G proteins and gap junctions (muscarinic receptors and purinergic P2Y receptors; Pearson et al., 2002). Ca2+ stores play an essential role in development, possibly regulating DNA synthesis transitions between S-, G1, and G2 phases (Sugioka and Yamashita, 2003). It will be interesting to see to what extent Ca2+-mediated photoreceptor degeneration pathways delineated here recapitulate activation of dormant early development pathways. Large-scale apoptosis occurring during normal photoreceptor development (particularly during the onset of cytogenesis and synaptogenesis) and in degenerating rods and cones is associated with large Ca2+ fluxes (Mervin and Stone, 2002). It is possible that developing rods and cones require greater Ca2+ fluxes and higher [Ca2+]i than their mature counterparts to facilitate survival, synapse formation, and other cellular functions (e.g., Rentería et al., 2005; Ghosh and Greenberg, 1995). In conclusion, the diverse and complex repertoire of Ca2+ signals in the IS serves to integrate sensory transduction with essential biological systems needed for cell survival, metabolism, gene expression, translation, and control of apoptosis. This review highlights some of the Ca2+-dependent mechanisms and pathways that are required to sustain photoreceptor and retinal function. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Tamas Szikra is presently at the Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research, Basel, Switzerland. We thank Prof. Paul Witkovsky (New York School of Medicine) for comments on the manuscript. The work was supported by a grant from the Hungarian Eötvös Fellowship and the Knights Templar Foundation (T.S.), by the National Institutes of Health (EY13870), and That Man May See Foundation to D.K. and an unrestricted grant from Research to Prevent Blindness to the University of Utah’s Department of Ophthalmology. Also, Dr. Krizaj is a recipient of a Research to Prevent Blindness James S. Adams Award.
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10 The Transduction Channels of Rod and Cone Photoreceptors Dimitri Tränkner CONTENTS The Transduction Channels of Rod and Cone Photoreceptors The Role of CNG Channels in Photoreceptor Physiology The Molecular Composition of CNG Channels The Basic Activation Properties of CNG Channels Transmembrane Topology and Functional Domains CNG Channels Are Components of Larger Protein Complexes Modulation by Phosphorylation and All-TRANS Retinal Synthesis, Maturation, and Targeting of CNG Channels Visual Dysfunction Caused by Mutant CNG Channel Genes References
THE TRANSDUCTION CHANNELS OF ROD AND CONE PHOTORECEPTORS In contrast to most sensory receptor cells that depolarize in response to a stimulus, vertebrate photoreceptors respond to light with brief hyperpolarization. In darkness, photoreceptors maintain elevated levels of the intracellular messenger guanosine 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) that directly activate their transduction channels, the so-called cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) ion channels. In the dark, active CNG channels conduct a sustained depolarizing inward current carried by sodium (Na+) and calcium (Ca2+) ions. Light triggers a cascade of enzymatic reactions that culminates in the degradation of cGMP, closure of the CNG channels, and photoreceptor hyperpolarization. Besides functioning as cGMP sensors, CNG channels serve a critical role in the light adaptation of photoreceptors. Light adaptation is Ca2+ dependent and therefore responsive to changes in the Ca2+ flux through CNG channels. The pivotal role of CNG channels in photoreceptor physiology is reflected in the fact that the two photoreceptor types, rods and cones, utilize differently tuned CNG channels to meet specific tasks. The following sections provide an overview of the functional aspects and cell biology of CNG channels in photoreceptors in the normal and diseased state. From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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THE ROLE OF CNG CHANNELS IN PHOTORECEPTOR PHYSIOLOGY Visual perception in humans operates over a dynamic range of more than nine orders of magnitude, from the light conditions of an overcast night to bright daylight with glare reflecting from a glacier. This extraordinarily broad range is made possible by two different types of photoreceptors. Rods, with an exquisite sensitivity that adjusts even to the detection of single photons, have evolved for night vision. Cones are less light sensitive but adjust over the range of light intensities found at daylight (more than six orders of magnitude). Moreover, cones are optimized for high temporal stimulus resolution, possessing response times (time to peak ~50 ms) that are about fourfold faster than those of rods (for reviews of photoreceptor physiology, see [1, 2]). Besides day vision, cones underlie other important aspects of vision. In humans, three cone types with different spectral tuning are responsible for color vision, and the retinal spot, built for maximal spatial image resolution, is occupied with cones only. Both rods and cones house the machinery required for photoelectrical transduction in their outer segment, a highly specialized cellular compartment derived from a cilium. The reminder of a stereotypical cilium appears as a narrow, microtubulesupported bridge that separates the outer segment from the main cell body (Fig. 1).
Fig. 1. Schematic of photoreceptor morphology and photoelectrical transduction. Light triggers an enzymatic cascade that leads to the closure of cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channels in the plasma membrane of the photoreceptor outer segment. The CNG channel is associated with an ion exchanger that exports one Ca2+ and one K+ for four imported Na+. In cones, CNG channels are also present in the synaptic terminal. cGMP cyclic 3′,5′-guanosine monophosphate, R rhodopsin, R* light-activated rhodopsin, PDE phosphodiesterase, T transducin.
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Proteins required to maintain structure and function of the outer segment, including CNG channels, are synthesized within the main cell body and, on maturation, are actively transported to their destination. In rods, the outer segment consists of about 1,000 stacked membrane disks that are covered by the plasma membrane. The membrane constituting the disks harbors the proteins involved in photoelectrical transduction, except for the CNG channels. The CNG channels are located in the plasma membrane at high density. In cones, the outer segment is organized differently. Instead of disks, the plasma membrane forms deep invaginations and is the locale of all membrane-bound or integrated proteins involved in photoelectrical transduction. The Activation Phase of the Light Response In the dark, micromolar concentrations of free cGMP keep 1–10% of the CNG channels open in both rods and cones. This open fraction conducts an inward current of about 20 pA that is carried by sodium (Na+) and calcium (Ca2+) ions. This steady inward current (“dark current”) depolarizes photoreceptors to a resting voltage of about −35 mV. In rods, 8–12% of the dark current is carried by Ca2+, while in cones this fraction is 15–25%, twice as high as in rods. The Ca2+ entry is balanced by Ca2+ extrusion through a Na+/K+,Ca2+ exchanger, maintaining a resting Ca2+ concentration of 400–700 nM in both rods and cones. The photoelectrical transduction triggered by light stimulation consists of a complex sequence of biochemical reactions, studied most extensively in rod photoreceptors. On the absorption of a photon, rhodopsin transforms into its active enzymatic form. Active rhodopsin allows the G protein transducin to exchange bound guanosine diphosphate (GDP) for guanosine triphosphate (GTP). GTP-bound transducin activates the effector enzyme phosphodiesterase (PDE), which efficiently hydrolyses cGMP (Fig. 1). The degradation of cGMP and the subsequent closure of CNG channels has two main consequences. First, the photoreceptor hyperpolarizes and releases less of the neurotransmitter glutamate. Second, the interrupted Ca2+ influx into the outer segment leads to a drop in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration due to the continuing export of Ca2+ by the light-insensitive Na+/K+,Ca2+ exchanger. The drop in intracellular Ca2+ is sensed by several Ca2+-binding proteins that accelerate the recovery of the resting state in photoreceptors after light activation and mediate the adaptation of photoreceptors to continuous light exposure (see next section). Photoelectrical transduction in cones is similar to that in rods, and the enzymes involved in light-triggered cGMP degradation display only modest functional differences compared to their rod cousins. Since rods and cones implement functionally similar enzymes in the photoelectrical cascade, which factors are responsible for the differences in light sensitivity, speed, and dynamic response range? It has been suggested that different Ca2+ dynamics in rods and cones partially account for the distinct response properties [2]. Compared with rods, cones display at least a tenfold faster Ca2+ clearance from the outer segment, a lower Ca2+ buffer capacity, and a twofold higher Ca2+ influx through the CNG channels. These differences suggest that the changes in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration are faster and larger in cone outer segments, allowing faster response times and a broader dynamic range of light adaptation.
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Recovery After a Light Stimulus and Adaptation to Continuous Illumination The drop in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration on CNG channel closure is sensed by Ca2+-binding proteins that allow photoreceptors to recover after a light stimulus and to adapt to continuous illumination. Specifically, the protein recoverin is involved in a process that increases the rate of rhodopsin inactivation and guanylate cyclase-activating protein (GCAP) promotes the synthesis of new cGMP. The process of reopening CNG channels and therefore the recovery of the dark current is also Ca2+ dependent. In vitro studies demonstrate that the rod CNG channel is exquisitely sensitive to physiologically relevant levels of Ca2+/calmodulin (e.g., [1, 3]). These data suggest that, in the dark, Ca2+/calmodulin binds to CNG channels and keeps them in a state of low cGMP sensitivity. On the light-triggered drop in intracellular Ca2+, calmodulin dissociates from the CNG channels, thus raising their cGMP sensitivity. As a consequence, less cGMP is required for the channel to reopen. In fact, the cGMP concentration required for half-maximal activation [EC50(cGMP)] of rod channels changes with calmodulin up to twofold from high to low intracellular Ca2+. In contrast, cone CNG channels either respond weakly or are insensitive to modulation by Ca2+/calmodulin. It is possible that another unidentified Ca2+-binding protein modulates the cGMP sensitivity of cone CNG channels over an even broader range [4]. For example, in electropermeabilized cones from the striped bass, the average EC50(cGMP) of CNG channels increases about fourfold from low to high intracellular Ca2+ concentrations. In summary, the Ca2+ permeation and the regulation of activity by intracellular Ca2+ are profoundly different for CNG channels from rods and cones, supporting the notion that the CNG channel is a pivotal determinant of the dynamics of Ca2+ homeostasis in photoreceptors. CNG Channels in the Synaptic Transmission of Cone Photoreceptors In cones, CNG channels are present not only in the outer segment but also in the synaptic terminal, where they might serve an additional function absent in rods. At the photoreceptor dark resting potential of −35 mV, a voltage-activated Ca2+ channel in the synaptic terminal of rods and cones permits continuous Ca2+ entry that sustains a tonic release of glutamate [5]. The Ca2+ channel is characterized by an activation threshold of about −45 mV. When the graded light response reaches −45 mV, the Ca2+ channels close, and in rods, synaptic transmission ceases. In contrast to rods, cones continue synaptic transmission as the light-induced voltage response grows to −70 mV. The discovery of CNG channel clusters in the synaptic terminal of cones offers an explanation for the extended operating range of synaptic transmission [5, 6]. If the clusters are located near release sites, the CNG channels could underlie Ca2+-dependent release of glutamate. In fact, experimental maneuvers that activate CNG channels also trigger exocytotic events and the release of glutamate from the cone terminal. The cGMP required to activate the synaptic CNG channels might be produced by a nitric oxide (NO)-stimulated soluble guanylate cyclase (GC) [7]. Consistent with this model, a NO synthase is present in cone photoreceptors, completing the set of enzymes required for the activation of synaptic CNG channels [7].
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Despite the experimental evidence, a rigorous test of the involvement of CNG channels in synaptic transmission is missing. Such a test will be technically challenging since it requires the selective ablation of synaptic CNG channels. THE MOLECULAR COMPOSITION OF CNG CHANNELS Scientists successfully purified a protein from bovine retina that functionally reconstituted CNG channel activity in artificial liposomes [8]. Partial amino acid sequences derived from the purified protein led to the discovery and functional in vitro expression of the first CNG channel gene in 1989 [9]. The CNG channel protein displays sequence similarity to voltage-gated K+, Na+, and Ca2+ channels, and it was categorized into the same gene superfamily [10]. It contains six transmembrane segments (S1–S6) and a pore-forming stretch of about 20 amino acids (“p region”) that is located between transmembrane segments 5 and 6. The C-terminal region harbors a binding domain for nucleoside 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphates (cNMPs). On heterologous expression, the CNG channel protein displays several of the key properties of the native rod CNG channel but differs in the gating kinetics and the sensitivity to L-cis-diltiazem, a substance that efficiently blocks native channels. The simplest explanation for these functional differences is that the native channel comprises several distinct subunits. In fact, speculation about additional subunits was already stimulated by the presence of a second, larger protein (240 kDa in sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS]-polyacrylamide gels) in the purified channel preparation (e.g., [11]). Subsequent studies finally identified the 240-kDa protein as a second subunit of rod CNG channels. Coexpression of both channel proteins, later termed CNGA1 (the first subunit) and CNGB1 (the second subunit), recapitulated the properties of native rod CNG channels [12, 13]. CNGB1 exhibits a bipartite structure with a membraneintegrated part that is homologous to CNGA1 (“β′ part”) and a large cytoplasmic N-terminal domain homologous to glutamic acid-rich proteins (GARPs) expressed in rod photoreceptors. The gene encoding the A subunit of cone photoreceptors (CNGA3a) was identified using a cloning strategy that exploited the sequence similarity to the gene encoding CNGA1 [14]. The cone B subunit (CNGB3) was identified by two different approaches. Just before the release of the full sequence of the human genome in 2001, the missing gene was identified in a human expressed sequence tag (EST) database due to its similarity to other CNG channel subunits [15]. At the same time, a genomic region containing CNGB3 was found to be responsible for inherited color blindness among inhabitants of Pingelap, an isolated atoll in the west Pacific [16, 17]. Unlike the counterpart in rod photoreceptors, CNGB3 does not display a bipartite structure and comprises only the membrane-spanning core segment common to all CNG channel subunits. While CNGA1 or CNGA3 form functional channels in heterologous expression systems if expressed alone, CNGB1 or CNGB3 fail to form functional homomeric channels. a
The human genome is comprised of six different CNG channel genes: CNGA1–4, CNGB1, and CNGB3. CNGA2, CNGA4, and CNGB1 encode for the CNG channel in olfactory receptor neurons. CNGB2 has not been assigned.
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Due to this observation, CNGA1 and CNGA3 are often referred to as principal subunits and CNGB1 and CNGB3 as modulatory subunits. How CNGA and CNGB subunits assemble was first understood for the rod CNG channel. The rod CNG channel is a tetramer composed of three CNGA1 subunits and one CNGB1 subunit [18–20]. In contrast, CNG channels in cones adopt a more symmetrical arrangement with two copies of each subunit type, CNGA3 and CNGB3 [21]. It is likely that the four CNG channel subunits arrange such that the p region of each subunit is oriented toward the center of the complex, each contributing to a central membrane-spanning pore. Such an arrangement has been demonstrated for voltagegated K+ channels using x-ray crystallography and is consistent with low-resolution cryoelectron microscopic images of native rod CNG channels [22, 23]. THE BASIC ACTIVATION PROPERTIES OF CNG CHANNELS The CNG channels of rods and cones respond to both cAMP and cGMP but display higher sensitivity to cGMP [13, 24–26] (Fig. 2A). Moreover, cAMP is only a partial agonist for photoreceptor CNG channels, with saturating cAMP concentrations
Fig. 2. Ligand selectivity of rod and cone cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channels. A Heterologously expressed bovine rod (black line) and human cone (gray line) CNG channels are activated by micromolar cyclic 3′,5′-guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) concentrations. In contrast, even millimolar cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) concentrations activate only a fraction of the maximal cGMP-induced current through both rod and cone CNG channels (data were obtained at a membrane voltage of +80 mV [13, 26]). B Molecular modeling predicts ten interactions between the ligand-binding site of CNG channels and cGMP. C The ligand-binding site of CNG channel subunits is predicted to fold into three α-helices and eight β-strands. Shown is the amino acid sequence of the ligand-binding site in bovine CNGA1. Boxed residues are predicted to interact with cGMP.
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activating only between 10% and 35% of the maximal currents induced by cGMP. Unlike ligand-gated neurotransmitter receptors, CNG channels do not desensitize in the continuous presence of ligand. This feature allows CNG channel activity to faithfully track the cGMP concentration in photoreceptors. Closer inspection of the dose-response relation suggests that CNG channels bind multiple cGMP molecules in a cooperative manner. Specifically, double-logarithmic plots of the activation (log I/Imax vs. log [cGMP]) display a limiting slope of up to about 3.5. This suggests that channel opening requires the binding of 3–4 cGMP molecules [27]. The highly cooperative activation maximizes the sensitivity of CNG channels, and therefore the sensitivity of the photoreceptor dark current, to small changes in the free cGMP concentration. TRANSMEMBRANE TOPOLOGY AND FUNCTIONAL DOMAINS The transmembrane topology of CNG channel A subunits is derived from immunogold labeling and electron microscopy of rod photoreceptors [28, 29], and it is supported by the results of a gene fusion approach using enzyme reporters [30]. According to these studies, both the N- and the C-terminus of A subunits are cytoplasmic, and the segment connecting S5 to the p region is extracellular. Based on sequence similarities, it is assumed that CNG channel A and B subunits adopt a similar transmembrane topology. Several key properties of CNG channels are attributed to specific domains of the channel proteins. These domains deserve a closer look. The Cyclic-Nucleotide-Binding Domain The C-terminal cytoplasmic region of all CNG channel subunits harbors a cNMPbinding site comprised of 80–100 amino acid residues. The three-dimensional structure of the catabolite activator protein (CAP) of Escherichia coli has been used for molecular modeling of the cNMP-binding site in CNG channels (for a detailed discussion, see [31]). The cAMP-binding site of CAP is comprised of three α-helices (A, B, and C) and eight β-strands (β1–β8). The β-strands form a flattened β-roll consisting of two antiparallel β-sheets, each with four strands. The A helix connects to the β-roll, followed by the B and C helix. The ribose and cyclic phosphate interact exclusively with the β-roll, while the purine ring interacts with residues in the β-roll and the C helix. The molecular modeling of the cNMP-binding site in CNG channels predicts ten different interactions between cGMP and the binding pocket of CNGA1 or CNGA3, accomplished by eight different amino acids (Fig. 2B,C). It is thought that interactions with the common ribofuranose moiety are similar for all nucleotides, whereas different interactions with different purine rings control ligand selectivity. In particular, the residues T560 and D604 (in bovine CNGA1) are postulated to be key residues for ligand discrimination. Residue T560, located in β7, is expected to form a hydrogen bond with the amino group of cGMP, probably mediated by a water molecule. In contrast, no interaction is expected to occur between T560 and the purine moiety of cAMP, thus lowering the affinity for cAMP. Consistent with this prediction, the substitution of threonine for alanine dramatically decreases the cGMP sensitivity but has little effect on the cAMP sensitivity. The carboxylate side chain of D604, located in the C helix, presumably shares a single hydrogen bond with either N1 or the amino group in cGMP, while repulsive
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forces are expected with the free electron pair at N1 of cAMP. In agreement with this prediction, the ability of cAMP to activate CNGA1 is enhanced if D604 is replaced with a neutral amino acid (D604Q or D604M), at low pH when D604 is protonated, or when the channel includes CNGB1, which carries a neutral asparagine at the position equivalent to D604. According to the model, T560 and D604 are unlikely to interact simultaneously with the purine ring of cGMP since the two interactions require different conformations of the cyclic nucleotide [32]. It is been speculated that cGMP initially binds in the syn conformation to interact with T560; a switch to the anti conformation then allows the interaction with D604. Moreover, it is also thought that the interaction with D604 initiates a movement of the C helix toward the β-barrel, which is essential for channel gating [33]. The Amino Terminal Domain and Modulation by Calmodulin Deletion studies demonstrated that an unconventional calmodulin-binding site in the N-terminal domain of the β′ part of CNGB1 is essential for the Ca2+/calmodulin sensitivity of rod CNG channels [3, 34]. The detailed mechanism of how binding of Ca2+/calmodulin to this site decreases ligand sensitivity remains unknown. Nevertheless, it appears that disruption of an interaction between CNGB1 and the C-terminal region of CNGA1 is a critical element [34]. Both subunits of cone CNG channels contain conserved calmodulinbinding motifs in their N-termini, and CNGB3 contains an additional calmodulin-binding motif in the C-terminal region (e.g., [35]). Heteromeric cone CNG channels remain sensitive to modulation by Ca2+/calmodulin when either one or the other of the two binding motifs in CNGB3 is deleted but lose sensitivity on deletion of both motifs. The P Region The p region of CNG channels shows high similarity to the p region of voltage-gated K -selective channels, although CNG channels discriminate poorly between monovalent cations [36, 37]. Therefore, not surprisingly, the sequence similarity between the p regions in both channel types ends at the selectivity filter. The crystal structure of KcsA, a bacterial K+-selective channel, provided detailed insight into how selectivity is achieved. In KcsA, the p region consists of an α-helix of about 15 amino acids, followed by a loop of 6 amino acids that forms the selectivity filter in the narrowest part of the pore [22]. It is thought that the gross structure of the pore is conserved in CNG channels, but the structural detail around the selectivity filter is expected to be different. While the selectivity filter in K+ channels comprises only neutral amino acids, CNGA1 and CNGA3 carry one negatively charged glutamate residue in the pore loop. Apparently, pairs of pore glutamates from different subunits interact by sharing a single proton rather than repel each other [38]. Insight into the physiological role of the pore glutamates comes from studies of Ca2+ permeation. Increasing extracellular Ca2+ concentrations progressively impedes the current of monovalent ions through CNG channels (Fig. 3A). At physiological Ca2+ concentrations, CNG channel currents are reduced to a few percent of the maximal value found under Ca2+-free conditions. For example, the single-channel conductance of rod CNG channels drops from about 25 pS in a Ca2+-free saline to less than 1 pS in the presence of 1 mM extracellular Ca2+ [39, 40]. +
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Fig. 3. Blockage of cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channels by extracellular calcium. A Increasing the extracellular Ca2+ concentration successively impedes currents through homomeric CNGA1 (black dashed line) and CNGA3 (gray dashed line) channels as well as currents through heteromeric rod (CNGA1/CNGB1; black solid line) and cone (CNGA3/CNGB3; gray solid line) channels. Data were obtained on heterologous expression of CNG channel subunits at a membrane voltage of −60 mV [13, 26]. B Each subunit in rod (left) and cone (right) CNG channels contains an α-helix followed by a loop in the pore-forming region. The pore loop in CNG channel A subunits contains a glutamate that participates in the formation of the ion-binding site within the pore (E). B subunits carry a glycine (G) instead of glutamate in the pore loop.
The effect of Ca2+, and the similar effect of Mg2+, on CNG channel currents can be explained by a model in which permeating monovalent and divalent ions compete for a common cation-binding site within the channel pore. Since divalent ions are bound more strongly by the binding site, they occlude the permeation pathway for monovalent ions. The fact the Ca2+ blockage can be described by a simple binding isotherm demonstrates the presence of a single Ca2+-binding site within the pore [41]. The Ca2+-binding site is apparently formed by the pore glutamates of CNGA1 and CNGA3 since the replacement of glutamate by the neutral residue glutamine dramatically reduces the Ca2+ blockage [42]. Homomeric channels composed only of CNGA1 generally display a higher sensitivity for Ca2+ blockage than those composed only of CNGA3. An extensive mutagenesis study showed that all aspects of Ca2+ blockage can be transferred from one channel to another by swapping the p region and the two adjacent transmembrane segments (S5–p region–S6) of the channel-forming subunits. Therefore, the S5–p region–S6 segment is considered the basic pore module that governs both blockage and ion permeation in CNG channels [41]. CNGB1 and CNGB3 do not carry a negatively charged pore loop glutamate but instead have a neutral glycine. Thus, native rod channels have a total of three pore glutamates, and native cone channels presumably a total of two pore glutamates (Fig. 3B). The fact that the pore affinity for Ca2+ is reduced in channels with incorporated B subunits is likely to be due to the reduction in the pore’s charge density [31]. The high affinity of the CNG channel pore for Ca2+ has two important consequences for the physiology of photoreceptors. First, it ensures that the pore of CNG channels is preferentially occupied with Ca2+ rather than monovalent ions. This allows a relative Ca2+ flux of 10–25%, even though Ca2+ constitutes less than 2% of the extracellular cations. Second, Ca2+ blockage
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reduces the contribution of each single channel to the total dark current, making it less sensitive to single-channel current fluctuations and thereby increasing the signal-tonoise ratio of photoreceptor currents. This aspect is of special importance for rod photoreceptors since they act as high-sensitivity photon detectors. Interestingly, amino acid substitutions in or near the pore glutamate not only change the permeation properties but also the gating behavior of CNG channels (e.g., [26]). This observation indicates that conformational rearrangements of the pore around the selectivity filter are also involved in channel gating. The GARP Domain of CNGB1 CNGB1 is unique among CNG channel subunits because it contains a large N-terminal cytoplasmic domain that is almost identical to two soluble rod-specific GARPs. The GARPs are alternatively spliced forms of a single gene different from that encoding CNGB1. The most conserved structural elements in GARPs, four short proline-rich repeats of about 15 amino acids in their N-terminus, were used as bait to test for interactions of CNGB1 with other rod proteins using peptide affinity chromatography [43]. This study found that the proline-rich repeats from GARPs interact with PDE, GC, and the retina-specific ATP-binding cassette receptor (ABCR) transporter. The ABCR transporter is also known as the rim protein as it is distributed along the rim region of rod discs. The interaction between GARPs and ABCR and GC has been called into question by the results of a second approach to identify GARP-interacting proteins [44]. In immunoprecipitation experiments, neither ABCR nor GC was pulled down with GARP-specific antibodies, even when GARP-binding partners were covalently attached using cross-linking reagents. Instead, peripherin, another protein located at the disk rim, was shown to interact with the shorter GARP splice variant and the GARP domain of CNGB1 (Fig. 4). The hydrodynamic properties of GARPs and little secondary and tertiary structure are consistent with an elongated, unfolded GARP domain of CNGB1 that is able to span the 10-nm gap between the rod plasma membrane and the disk rim [45]. The interaction between CNGB1 and proteins at the disk rim would align the CNG channels in stacked circles along the outer segment. Indeed, a nonuniform distribution of CNG channels in the outer segment of rod photoreceptors has been reported [46]. This suggests that the interaction between CNGB1 and disk rim proteins supports the flat appearance and the arrangement of membrane disks in the outer segment; however, mice lacking CNGB1 form rods of normal morphology [47]. Due to the high density of glutamate residues in the GARP domain of CNGB1 (137 of 571 residues in bovine CNGB1), this domain functions as a low-affinity Ca2+ buffer. It has been speculated that the GARP domain of CNGB1 guides Ca2+ ions from the intracellular CNG channel pore to the disk surface, the locale of the Ca2+-binding proteins that regulate the sensitivity and the kinetics of the photoresponse [45]. CNG CHANNELS ARE COMPONENTS OF LARGER PROTEIN COMPLEXES The interaction of peripherin and the GARP domain of CNGB1 argue against a model in which CNG channels diffuse freely and are isolated in the photoreceptor membrane. In fact, further biochemical and pharmacological data suggest that CNG channels of
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Fig. 4. Rod cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channels interact with peripherin, a Na+/K+,Ca2+ exchanger, and a protein tyrosine kinase (PTK). See text for details. ABCR ATP-binding cassette.
photoreceptors are components of even larger protein complexes. In both rods and cones, CNG channels are intimately associated with the Na+/K+,Ca2+ exchanger via their A subunits [44, 48]. The juxtaposition of the channel and the exchanger suggests that Ca2+ dynamics inside the cell are localized to microdomains in the vicinity of the channel (Fig. 4). An unexpected finding suggests that CNG channels in photoreceptors are also associated with a protein tyrosine kinase (PTK). Genistein, an inhibitor of PTKs, reversibly slows the gating kinetics and reduces the maximal current responses of native CNG channels in the absence of ATP (i.e., independent of phosphorylation) [49]. The effect of genistein on CNG channels is ameliorated by other PTK inhibitors that do not otherwise affect CNG channels. In conclusion of this finding, it was suggested that genistein binds to the PTK rather than the CNG channel. It is thought that PTK undergoes conformational changes on binding of genistein that are transferred to the tightly associated CNG channel, thereby modifying channel function. At this time, however, a physical association between PTKs and CNG channels has not been demonstrated. MODULATION BY PHOSPHORYLATION AND ALL-TRANS RETINAL The cGMP sensitivity of photoreceptor CNG channels is modulated by tyrosine and serine/threonine phosphorylation. The effects of tyrosine phosphorylation on rod CNG channels have been extensively studied in vitro [24, 49]. Heteromeric CNGA1/CNGB1 channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes show a roughly twofold increase in cGMP sensitivity developing over time after patch excision. This increase was attributed to the spontaneous dephosphorylation of single tyrosine residues in the cNMP-binding site of both CNGA1 and CNGB1 by protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs). A signaling pathway that may regulate tyrosine phosphorylation of rod CNG channels in vivo involves insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) [49]. IGF-1 is released from the pigment epithelium and increases the cGMP sensitivity of CNG channels in rod photoreceptors. IGF-1 is thought to exert the effect on CNG channels through the regulation of a PTP.
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Besides tyrosine phosphorylation, also serine/threonine phosphorylation has been implicated in the regulation of the ligand sensitivity of retinal CNG channels. Repeated dose-response measurements with CNG channels in excised patches from rod outer segments revealed a slow increase in cGMP sensitivity over time, characterized by an up to tenfold decrease in the EC50 (cGMP) [50]. The enhancement of ligand sensitivity was slowed by ATP or inhibitors of serine/threonine phosphatases and accelerated by purified type I phosphatase. Similarly, a threefold decrease in cGMP sensitivity was observed for heterologously expressed CNGA3 channels on exposure to phorbol esters, substances that stimulate protein kinase C (PKC) [51]. This effect is due to the phosphorylation of two serine residues, also located in the cNMP-binding site. The cGMP sensitivity of cone CNG channels, at least in chicken, is under the control of a circadian rhythm [52]. During the subjective night, the sensitivity is approximately twofold higher than during the subjective day. This circadian modulation is apparently driven by rhythms in the activities of the extracellular receptor kinase (ERK) form of mitogen-activated protein kinase and the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII), but the detailed mechanism underlying this control is unknown. Besides phosphorylation, rod CNG channels are also inhibited by the phospholipid Phosphoinositol diphosphate (PIP2) and all-trans retinal, the photoisomerized pigment released from rhodopsin after light activation [53]. All-trans retinal directly inhibits the homomeric CNGA1 and heteromeric CNGA1/CNGB1 channels at nanomolar concentrations, probably due to a decrease in the open probability. The effects observed in a heterologous expression system might also apply to native rod CNG channels, when bright illumination is expected to lead to elevated concentrations of photoisomerized pigment in the outer segment. SYNTHESIS, MATURATION, AND TARGETING OF CNG CHANNELS The predominant form of CNGA1 in bovine rod outer segments has an apparent molecular mass of 63 kDa, which is significantly less then the molecular mass predicted from the full-length complementary DNA or the apparent molecular mass of heterologously expressed CNGA1 (78 kDa). This discrepancy in size is due to a photoreceptor-specific proteolytic process by which the 92 N-terminal amino acids of CNGA1 are removed [28]. Similar processing of the rod A subunits seems to be common across species, and at least the chicken cone A subunit also undergoes posttranslational cleavage [14, 54]. Another posttranslational modification of CNGA1 and CNGA3 is the glycosylation of an asparagine residue in the extracellular loop between S5 and the p region [29, 55]. In contrast to the CNG channel A subunits, CNGB1 and CNGB3 are unglycosylated. Currently, the functions of proteolytic cleavage and glycosylation are unknown since neither affects channel activity. The posttranslational modification might be required for channel targeting or for the interaction of CNG channels with other photoreceptor proteins. For proper targeting, CNG channels need to be translocated from their site of synthesis in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) within the main cell body to the plasma membrane of the outer segment. Impaired plasma membrane targeting in heterologous expression systems has been reported for a variety of mutant CNGA1 and CNGA3 subunits found in patients with either rod or cone dysfunction, respectively. Most of these mutants fold improperly and thus fail to leave the ER [55–57].
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In a naturally occurring CNGA1 mutant with an amino acid substitution and truncation C-terminal to the cNMP-binding site (R654D-stop in human CNGA1), a more specific mechanism of ER retention seems to apply. Two studies investigated the mechanism of ER retention for this mutant, but with conflicting results. One study found that the mutation generates an ER retention signal itself, while another study provided evidence that the mutated CNGA1 is unable to mask an ER retention signal in CNGB1 [58, 59]. At present it is unclear how the conflicting results can be reconciled. A glimpse of how CNG channels are transported into the outer segment was obtained in a study using subunits of the olfactory CNG channels (CNGA2 and CNGB1b, a splice variant of CNGB1 that lacks the GARP domain) expressed in a ciliated cell line [60]. In this study, the ciliary transport of CNGA2 is dependent on CNGB1b and, more specifically, on a short sequence of four amino acids within this subunit (RVxP, with x representing a variable amino acid). A similar mechanism might apply to rod CNG channels and could explain why rods from mice lacking CNGB1 have decreased levels of CNGA1 in the outer segment [47]. VISUAL DYSFUNCTION CAUSED BY MUTANT CNG CHANNEL GENES Mutations in the genes for CNG channels of photoreceptors are associated with the hereditary visual diseases retinitis pigmentosa (RP), achromatopsia, and cone dystrophy [16, 17, 57, 61–68] (see also Appendix). Retinitis pigmentosa is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of diseases characterized by night blindness, a progressive loss of the peripheral visual field, and eventual loss of central vision, resulting in blindness. These symptoms reflect early dysfunction and degeneration of rod photoreceptors, followed by a slower degeneration of cone photoreceptors that proceeds from the periphery to the center of the visual field. Mutations in the CNGA1 or CNGB1 gene only account for a few percent of autosomal recessive RP. Achromatopsia is a recessive, nonprogressive disease resulting from the dysfunction of cone photoreceptors. Symptoms include absence of color vision, light sensitivity (photophobia), and poor visual acuity. Of all cases of achromatopsia, 20–30% are caused by CNGA3 mutations and 40–50% by mutations in CNGB3 [69]. Moreover, in some instances, mutations in CNGA3 or CNGB3 result in cone dystrophy, a disease related to achromatopsia but characterized by the progressive loss of cone function and sometimes the progressive loss of rod function. The vast number of deleterious single amino acid substitutions in CNGA3 (Fig. 5) indicates that there is little tolerance for sequence variations in CNG channel A subunits with respect to photoreceptor function. Mutations do not, however, necessarily lead to nonfunctional CNG channels. Some mutant channel proteins, in particular those exclusively found in patients with residual photoreceptor function (Fig. 5, underlined mutations), are expected to form channels, although with functional alterations. A mild form of achromatopsia with considerably preserved cone function is caused by the heterozygous mutations T224R and T369S in CNGA3 (A3T224R and A3T369S) [26]. The patients are able to discriminate saturated but not desaturated colors. Psychophysical and electroretinographical analyses showed that the cone system is characterized by lower light sensitivity and perturbed signal transfer from cones to postsynaptic neurons. Patch-clamp analysis of heterologously expressed subunits revealed that only A3T369S
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Fig. 5. Mutations in cone photoreceptor B subunit (CNGA3) are associated with cone dysfunction. See text for details. Underlined amino acid substitutions are found in patients with residual cone function. cNMP nucleoside 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate, Fs frame shift mutation, del deletion.
produces functional channels, although with grossly altered permeation of monovalent and divalent ions, gating, and ligand sensitivity. Coexpression of wild-type CNGB3 with A3T369S restored most of the native properties, except for the altered Ca2+ permeation. The properties of A3T369S/CNGB3 channels suggest that the mild form of achromatopsia results from relatively subtle changes in ion flux through the cone CNG channel. Another channel defect appears to be common in patients with cone dysfunction. Several missense mutations associated with cone dystrophy (A3N471S, A3R563H, B3R403Q) or complete achromatopsia (B3F525N, B3D633G, and the Pingelap mutation B3S435F) have been reported to produce channels with moderately increased cGMP sensitivity [25, 66, 70, 71]. These findings are surprising given the severe cone defects in the patients but might reflect the fact that the functional integrity of photoreceptors relies on a precisely tuned transduction machinery. How a similar functional defect in different mutant channels can produce different clinical phenotypes remains unresolved. Intriguingly, the absence or malfunction of CNG channels often leads to photoreceptor loss and even retinal degeneration. Our understanding of the trigger, the detailed mechanisms underlying retinal degeneration, and in particular the role of CNG channels in these processes is incomplete. We have to assume that the survival of photoreceptors critically depends on the structural and functional integrity of their enzymatic machinery. The discovery of efficient CNG channel blockers (e.g., [72]) opens an avenue for the treatment of retinal diseases caused by abnormally high CNG channel activity.
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36. Menini, A. (1990). Currents carried by monovalent cations through cyclic GMP-activated channels in excised patches from salamander rods. J Physiol 424, 167–185. 37. Picones, A., Korenbrot, J. I. (1992). Permeation and interaction of monovalent cations with the cGMP-gated channel of cone photoreceptors. J Gen Physiol 100, 647–673. 38. Morrill, J. A., MacKinnon, R. (1999). Isolation of a single carboxyl-carboxylate proton binding site in the pore of a cyclic nucleotide-gated channel. J Gen Physiol 114, 71–83. 39. Bodoia, R. D., Detwiler, P. B. (1985). Patch-clamp recordings of the light-sensitive dark noise in retinal rods from the lizard and frog. J Physiol 367, 183–216. 40. Haynes, L. W., Kay, A. R., Yau, K. W. (1986). Single cyclic GMP-activated channel activity in excised patches of rod outer segment membrane. Nature 321, 66–70. 41. Seifert, R., Eismann, E., Ludwig, J., Baumann, A., Kaupp, U. B. (1999). Molecular determinants of a Ca2+-binding site in the pore of cyclic nucleotide-gated channels: S5/S6 segments control affinity of intrapore glutamates. EMBO J 18, 119–130. 42. Eismann, E., Muller, F., Heinemann, S. H., Kaupp, U. B. (1994). A single negative charge within the pore region of a cGMP-gated channel controls rectification, Ca2+ blockage, and ionic selectivity. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 91, 1109–1113. 43. Korschen, H. G., Beyermann, M., Muller, F., Heck, M., Vantler, M., Koch, K. W., Kellner, R., Wolfrum, U., Bode, C., Hofmann, K. P., Kaupp, U. B. (1999). Interaction of glutamicacid-rich proteins with the cGMP signalling pathway in rod photoreceptors. Nature 400, 761–766. 44. Poetsch, A., Molday, L. L., Molday, R. S. (2001). The cGMP-gated channel and related glutamic acid-rich proteins interact with peripherin-2 at the rim region of rod photoreceptor disc membranes. J Biol Chem 276, 48009–40016. 45. Batra-Safferling, R., Abarca-Heidemann, K., Korschen, H. G., Tziatzios, C., Stoldt, M., Budyak, I., Willbold, D., Schwalbe, H., Klein-Seetharaman, J., Kaupp, U. B. (2006). Glutamic acid-rich proteins of rod photoreceptors are natively unfolded. J Biol Chem 281, 1449– 1460. 46. Karpen, J. W., Loney, D. A., Baylor, D. A. (1992). Cyclic GMP-activated channels of salamander retinal rods: spatial distribution and variation of responsiveness. J Physiol 448, 257–274. 47. Huttl, S., Michalakis, S., Seeliger, M., Luo, D. G., Acar, N., Geiger, H., Hudl, K., Mader, R., Haverkamp, S., Moser, M., Pfeifer, A., Gerstner, A., Yau, K. W., Biel, M. (2005). Impaired channel targeting and retinal degeneration in mice lacking the cyclic nucleotide-gated channel subunit CNGB1. J Neurosci 25, 130–138. 48. Kang, K., Bauer, P. J., Kinjo, T. G., Szerencsei, R. T., Bonigk, W., Winkfein, R. J., Schnetkamp, P. P. (2003). Assembly of retinal rod or cone Na(+)/Ca(2+)-K(+) exchanger oligomers with cGMP-gated channel subunits as probed with heterologously expressed cDNAs. Biochemistry 42, 4593–4600. 49. Molokanova, E., Kramer, R. H. (2001). Mechanism of inhibition of cyclic nucleotide-gated channel by protein tyrosine kinase probed with genistein. J Gen Physiol 117, 219–234. 50. Gordon, S. E., Brautigan, D. L., Zimmerman, A. L. (1992). Protein phosphatases modulate the apparent agonist affinity of the light-regulated ion channel in retinal rods. Neuron 9, 739–748. 51. Muller, F., Vantler, M., Weitz, D., Eismann, E., Zoche, M., Koch, K. W., Kaupp, U. B. (2001). Ligand sensitivity of the 2 subunit from the bovine cone cGMP-gated channel is modulated by protein kinase C but not by calmodulin. J Physiol 532, 399–409. 52. Ko, G. Y., Ko, M. L., Dryer, S. E. (2001). Circadian regulation of cGMP-gated cationic channels of chick retinal cones. Erk MAP Kinase and Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II. Neuron 29, 255–266.
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53. McCabe, S. L., Pelosi, D. M., Tetreault, M., Miri, A., Nguitragool, W., Kovithvathanaphong, P., Mahajan, R., Zimmerman, A. L. (2004). All-trans-retinal is a closed-state inhibitor of rod cyclic nucleotide-gated ion channels. J Gen Physiol 123, 521–531. 54. Molday, R. S., Reid, D. M., Connell, G., Molday, L. L. (1992). Molecular properties of the cGMP-gated cation channel of rod photoreceptor cells as probed with monoclonal antibodies. In: Signal transduction in photoreceptor cells (Hargrave, P. A., Hofmann, K. P., Kaupp, U. B., eds.), pp. 180. Springer-Verlag, Berlin. 55. Faillace, M. P., Bernabeu, R. O., Korenbrot, J. I. (2004). Cellular processing of cone photoreceptor cyclic GMP-gated ion channels: a role for the S4 structural motif. J Biol Chem 279, 22643–22653. 56. Patel, K. A., Bartoli, K. M., Fandino, R. A., Ngatchou, A. N., Woch, G., Carey, J., Tanaka, J. C. (2005). Transmembrane S1 mutations in CNGA3 from achromatopsia 2 patients cause loss of function and impaired cellular trafficking of the cone CNG channel. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 46, 2282–2290. 57. Dryja, T. P., Finn, J. T., Peng, Y. W., McGee, T. L., Berson, E. L., Yau, K. W. (1995). Mutations in the gene encoding the alpha subunit of the rod cGMP-gated channel in autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 92, 10177–10181. 58. Mallouk, N., Ildefonse, M., Pages, F., Ragno, M., Bennett, N. (2002). Basis for intracellular retention of a human mutant of the retinal rod channel alpha subunit. J Membr Biol 185, 129–136. 59. Trudeau, M. C., Zagotta, W. N. (2002). An intersubunit interaction regulates trafficking of rod cyclic nucleotide-gated channels and is disrupted in an inherited form of blindness. Neuron 34, 197–207. 60. Jenkins, P. M., Hurd, T. W., Zhang, L., McEwen, D. P., Brown, R. L., Margolis, B., Verhey, K. J., Martens, J. R. (2006). Ciliary targeting of olfactory CNG channels requires the CNGB1b subunit and the kinesin-2 motor protein, KIF17. Curr Biol 16, 1211–1216. 61. Paloma, E., Martinez-Mir, A., Garcia-Sandoval, B., Ayuso, C., Vilageliu, L., GonzalezDuarte, R., Balcells, S. (2002). Novel homozygous mutation in the alpha subunit of the rod cGMP gated channel (CNGA1) in two Spanish sibs affected with autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa. J Med Genet 39, E66. 62. Bareil, C., Hamel, C. P., Delague, V., Arnaud, B., Demaille, J., Claustres, M. (2001). Segregation of a mutation in CNGB1 encoding the beta-subunit of the rod cGMP-gated channel in a family with autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa. Hum Genet 108, 328–334. 63. Wissinger, B., Gamer, D., Jagle, H., Giorda, R., Marx, T., Mayer, S., Tippmann, S., Broghammer, M., Jurklies, B., Rosenberg, T., Jacobson, S. G., Sener, E. C., Tatlipinar, S., Hoyng, C. B., Castellan, C., Bitoun, P., Andreasson, S., Rudolph, G., Kellner, U., Lorenz, B., Wolff, G., Verellen-Dumoulin, C., Schwartz, M., Cremers, F. P., Apfelstedt-Sylla, E., Zrenner, E., Salati, R., Sharpe, L. T., Kohl, S. (2001). CNGA3 mutations in hereditary cone photoreceptor disorders. Am J Hum Genet 69, 722–737. 64. Johnson, S., Michaelides, M., Aligianis, I. A., Ainsworth, J. R., Mollon, J. D., Maher, E. R., Moore, A. T., Hunt, D. M. (2004). Achromatopsia caused by novel mutations in both CNGA3 and CNGB3. J Med Genet 41, e20. 65. Rojas, C. V., Maria, L. S., Santos, J. L., Cortes, F., Alliende, M. A. (2002). A frameshift insertion in the cone cyclic nucleotide gated cation channel causes complete achromatopsia in a consanguineous family from a rural isolate. Eur J Hum Genet 10, 638–642. 66. Okada, A., Ueyama, H., Toyoda, F., Oda, S., Ding, W. G., Tanabe, S., Yamade, S., Matsuura, H., Ohkubo, I., Kani, K. (2004). Functional role of hCngb3 in regulation of human cone cng channel: effect of rod monochromacy-associated mutations in hCNGB3 on channel function. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 45, 2324–2332.
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67. Nishiguchi, K. M., Sandberg, M. A., Gorji, N., Berson, E. L., Dryja, T. P. (2005). Cone cGMP-gated channel mutations and clinical findings in patients with achromatopsia, macular degeneration, and other hereditary cone diseases. Hum Mutat 25, 248–258. 68. Goto-Omoto, S., Hayashi, T., Gekka, T., Kubo, A., Takeuchi, T., Kitahara, K. (2006). Compound heterozygous CNGA3 mutations (R436W, L633P) in a Japanese patient with congenital achromatopsia. Vis Neurosci 23, 395–402. 69. Kohl, S., Varsanyi, B., Antunes, G. A., Baumann, B., Hoyng, C. B., Jagle, H., Rosenberg, T., Kellner, U., Lorenz, B., Salati, R., Jurklies, B., Farkas, A., Andreasson, S., Weleber, R. G., Jacobson, S. G., Rudolph, G., Castellan, C., Dollfus, H., Legius, E., Anastasi, M., Bitoun, P., Lev, D., Sieving, P. A., Munier, F. L., Zrenner, E., Sharpe, L. T., Cremers, F. P., Wissinger, B. (2005). CNGB3 mutations account for 50% of all cases with autosomal recessive achromatopsia. Eur J Hum Genet 13, 302–308. 70. Bright, S. R., Brown, T. E., Varnum, M. D. (2005). Disease-associated mutations in CNGB3 produce gain of function alterations in cone cyclic nucleotide-gated channels. Mol Vis 11, 1141–1150. 71. Liu, C., Varnum, M. D. (2005). Functional consequences of progressive cone dystrophyassociated mutations in the human cone photoreceptor cyclic nucleotide-gated channel CNGA3 subunit. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 289, C187–C198. 72. Brown, R. L., Haley, T. L., West, K. A., Crabb, J. W. (1999). Pseudechetoxin: a peptide blocker of cyclic nucleotide-gated ion channels. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96, 754–759.
APPENDIX Visual Dysfunction Caused by Mutant CNG Channel Genes Mutations in cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channel genes can cause the malfunction and degeneration of photoreceptors and, concomitantly, partial or complete blindness. Mutations in the genes encoding the CNG channel subunits of rod photoreceptors— CNGA1 and CNGB1—account for a few percent of recessive retinitis pigmentosa (RP) [1–3]. RP is characterized by night blindness, a progressive loss of the peripheral visual field, and eventual loss of central vision, resulting in blindness. These symptoms reflect early dysfunction and degeneration of rod photoreceptors, followed by a slower degeneration of cone photoreceptors that proceeds from the periphery to the center of the visual field (for review, see [4, 5]). Mutations in the genes for the CNG channel subunits of cones— CNGA3 and CNGB3—can cause achromatopsia. Achromatopsia is a recessive, nonprogressive disease resulting from the dysfunction of cone photoreceptors. Symptoms include absence of color vision, light sensitivity (photophobia), and poor visual acuity. The prevalence of achromatopsia has been estimated as 1:30,000 (for review, see [6, 7]), with approximately 20–30% of all cases caused by mutations in CNGA3 and 40–50% caused by mutations in CNGB3 [8]. In some instances, mutations in CNGA3 or CNGB3 result in cone dystrophy, a disease similar to achromatopsia but characterized by the progressive loss of cone function and sometimes progressive loss of rod function [9]. The steps that lead to rod or cone degeneration and, in particular, the role of CNG channel subunits in this process are not well understood. The recent success, however, in the identification of CNG channel mutants involved in visual diseases and the study of their defects by heterologous expression have provided insight into the molecular basis of photoreceptor dysfunction. The results of molecular genetic analyses of patients with
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Fig. A1. Mutations in cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channel subunits associated with photo receptor dysfunction. See text for details. Underlined amino acid substitutions are found in patients with residual cone function. cNMP nucleoside 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate, del deletion, Fs frame shift mutation, GARP glutamic acid-rich protein.
RP, achromatopsia, and cone dystrophy, as well as the in vitro experiments with the respective mutant CNG channel subunits are discussed next. Mutations in CNGA1 and CNGB1 Associated with Retinitis Pigmentosa Currently, six different mutant CNGA1 alleles have been identified in RP patients [1, 2] (Fig. A1). Three of these mutant alleles carry stop codons that terminate translation within the cytoplasmic N-terminus of CNGA1 (R28stop, E76stop, and K139stop). Another mutant CNGA1 allele is deleted in most of the protein-coding region and does not encode functional channels (not shown in figure). The remaining two mutant alleles encode either a single amino acid substitution (S316F) or an amino acid substitution and a truncation C-terminal to the cNMP-binding site (R654D-stop). Dryja and collaborators expressed CNGA1S316F and CNGA1R654D-stop in human embryonic kidney cells and found that these mutants form few functional homomeric channels [1]; cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP)-dependent currents carried by single or few CNG channels were detected only in 3 of 85 (CNGA1S316F) or 1 of 83 membrane patches (CNGA1R654D-stop). Similar results were obtained with the bovine CNGA1R654D-stop homolog (CNGA1R656D-stop) expressed in Xenopus oocytes by Mallouk and collaborators [10]. Coexpression of CNGA1R656D-stop with CNGB1 did not rescue impaired channel
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trafficking. Surprisingly, neither truncation of the C-terminus (R656stop) nor the substitution R656D alone impaired surface expression. Apparently, the C-terminal five amino acids of CNGA1R656D-stop (KLKQD) generate a novel signal that causes retention in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Indeed, substitution of the C-terminal five amino acids of wild-type CNGA1 for KLKQD produces a mutant with impaired surface expression. Furthermore, Mallouk and coworkers provided evidence that the C-terminal sequence of CNGA1R656D-stop serves as a specific retention signal. Replacement of two key residues, leucine (L) or aspartate (D), in the C-terminal sequence KLKQD of CNGA1R656D-stop restored normal surface expression. This strong influence of single residues at the very C-terminus argues against the possibility that the mutations in CNGA1R656D-stop just cause improper protein folding. In contrast to the results reported by Dryja and Mallouk and their collaborators, Trudeau and Zagotta observed normal surface expression and channel formation of the human CNGA1 mutant CNGA1R654D-stop in Xenopus oocytes [11]. Impaired trafficking to the membrane occurs only when CNGA1R654D-stop is coexpressed with CNGB1. Using a biochemical pull-down assay, Trudeau and Zagotta demonstrated stable binding of a peptide representing the C-terminus of CNGA1 (amino acids 609–693) to a peptide that represents the region between the glutamic acid-rich protein (GARP) domain and the first transmembrane segment of CNGB1 (amino acids 677–764). Removing the C-terminal portion from the CNGA1 peptide, which corresponds to amino acids 657–693 in wild-type CNGA1, abolished this binding. Trudeau and Zagotta concluded from their results that the C-terminal amino acids 657–693 of CNGA1—which are deleted in R654D-stop—mask an ER retention signal within the amino acids 677–764 of CNGB1. In coexpression experiments with CNGB1 deletion mutants, this retention signal was confined to a segment of ten amino acids that precedes the first transmembrane segment of CNGB1 (YQFPQSIDPL). At present, it is not clear how the contradictory observations reported by Dryja and Mallouk and their collaborators on the one hand and by Trudeau and Zagotta on the other hand can be reconciled. Only a single mutation in the CNGB1 gene has yet been associated with RP [3]. The mutation results in the substitution of a highly conserved glycine for valine (G993V). This glycine is thought to reside in a turn between two β strands (β2 and β3) that contribute to a β-roll inside which the ligand binds [12]. The substitution of valine for glycine at this site might impair the relative orientation of the two β strands and result in a nonfunctional cNMP-binding site. Mutations in CNGA3 and CNGB3 Associated with Cone Dysfunction Genetic screens identified 57 mutant CNGA3 alleles that are associated with achromatopsia or cone dystrophy [9, 13–16]. The majority of these alleles (45) cause single amino acid substitutions, indicating that there is little tolerance for sequence variations in CNGA3 with respect to cone function. A genomic region that includes the CNGB3 gene was identified as a locus for achromatopsia in people from Pingelap, an atoll of Micronesia [17, 18]. About 5% of the Pingelap population is affected by achromatopsia, also known as Pingelapese blindness (OMIM 262300). This story gained notoriety as the subject of Oliver Sacks’ book, The Island of the Colorblind [19]. The prevalence of the disease traces back to 1775, when a typhoon decimated the population of Pingelap,
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Fig. A2. Achromatopsia affects color vision and visual acuity. A sunset as it might be seen by a person with normal color vision (A), by two sisters who confuse desaturated colors due to an incomplete form of achromatopsia (B), or by a person with complete achromatopsia (C).
leaving only a handful of survivors who repopulated the island. Genetic analysis identified a missense mutation in the CNGB3 gene (S435F) as the genetic basis of Pingelapese achromatopsia [20, 21]. Other than the Pingelap mutation, 15 additional mutant CNGB3 alleles have been associated with cone dysfunction [13, 15, 20–22]. Eight of these mutant alleles encode CNGB3 subunits lacking the cNMP-binding site due to stop-codon or frame-shift mutations. The remaining mutated CNGB3 alleles encode missense mutations in the p region or the cNMP-binding site, and one allele harbors a splice-site mutation in intron 13 (not shown in figure). Complete achromats are likely to carry mutant CNGA3 or CNGB3 alleles encoding nonfunctional channel proteins. Indeed, several mutant CNGA3 subunits associated with complete achromatopsia fold improperly and fail to reach the plasma membrane in heterologous expression systems [23, 24]. The fact that CNGA3 forms homomeric channels in heterologous expression systems raises the possibility that patients carrying CNGB3 null alleles do have cone CNG channels composed of CNGA3 only. In rod photoreceptors, however, the B subunit is essential for proper targeting of CNG channels to the outer segment [25]. Similarly, the lack of CNGB3 might cause low levels of CNGA3 in cone outer segments and thereby prevent cone function. In this respect, it would be informative to examine cone photoreceptors in dogs with naturally occurring mutations in CNGB3 [26]. In contrast to complete achromats, incomplete achromats are expected to carry at least one CNGA3 and one CNGB3 allele that allow some degree of cone function. Similarly, patients with cone dystrophy are likely to carry mutants that permit cone function until the cells degenerate. Alleles found exclusively in incomplete achromats or patients with cone dystrophy are underlined in Fig. A1. The in vitro characterization of CNGA3 or CNGB3 mutants encoded by these alleles might help scientists understand why the maintenance and degree of cone function varies among patients with impaired cone function. We analyzed the molecular basis of an incomplete form of achromatopsia, with considerable cone function, present in two sisters who both express the mutants CNGA3T224R and CNGA3T369S [27]. The sisters are able to discriminate saturated but not desaturated colors. Figure A2 gives an example of how the sisters would view colorful scenery. Detailed clinical characterization of the sisters, including psychophysical and electroretinographical analyses, showed that their cone system is characterized by
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lower light sensitivity and perturbed signal transfer from cones to postsynaptic neurons. Patch-clamp analysis of heterologously expressed mutant subunits revealed that only CNGA3T369S contributes to functional channels, although with altered ion permeation, gating, ligand sensitivity, and a weaker blockage by extracellular Ca2+ ions. Coexpression of wild-type CNGB3 with CNGA3T369S restored most of the native CNG channel properties except for the weaker Ca2+ blockage. The properties of CNGA3T369S/CNGB3 suggest that the mild form of achromatopsia in the sisters results from relatively subtle changes in ion flux through the cone CNG channel. Another channel defect appears to be common in patients with cone dystrophy. The CNGA3 mutations CNGA3N471S, CNGA3R563H, or the CNGB3 mutation CNGB3R403Q produce channels with slightly increased (less than twofold) cGMP sensitivity [28, 29]. This suggests that cone photoreceptors can cope with some increased CNG channel activity. This compensatory ability appears to be exhausted in the cones of Pingelap islanders. The Pingelap mutation CNGB3S435F produces channels with a roughly twofold increase in GMP sensitivity, invariantly leading to complete achromatopsia [22, 30]. Similarly, the mutations CNGB3D633G and CNGB3F525N, both associated with complete achromatopsia, confer an increase in cGMP sensitivity to CNG channels of two- and threefold, respectively [22, 29]. In conclusion, the degree of deviation from normal CNG channel function correlates with the degree of cone malfunction. Hence, we have to assume that photoreceptor function and survival critically depend on the correct tuning of CNG channel activation and permeability. With regard to future cures of photoreceptor dysfunction, the discovery of efficient CNG channel blockers (e.g., [31]) is particularly exciting. Substances that specifically block CNG channel currents might be used for the treatment of retinal diseases caused by abnormally high CNG channel activity. REFERENCES 1. Dryja, T. P., Finn, J. T., Peng, Y. W., McGee, T. L., Berson, E. L., Yau, K. W. (1995). Mutations in the gene encoding the alpha subunit of the rod cGMP-gated channel in autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 92, 10177–10181. 2. Paloma, E., Martinez-Mir, A., Garcia-Sandoval, B., Ayuso, C., Vilageliu, L., GonzalezDuarte, R., Balcells, S. (2002). Novel homozygous mutation in the alpha subunit of the rod cGMP gated channel (CNGA1) in two Spanish sibs affected with autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa. J Med Genet 39, E66. 3. Bareil, C., Hamel, C. P., Delague, V., Arnaud, B., Demaille, J., Claustres, M. (2001). Segregation of a mutation in CNGB1 encoding the beta-subunit of the rod cGMP-gated channel in a family with autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa. Hum Genet 108, 328–334. 4. Pierce, E. A. (2001). Pathways to photoreceptor cell death in inherited retinal degenerations. Bioessays 23, 605–618. 5. Rattner, A., Sun, H., Nathans, J. (1999). Molecular genetics of human retinal disease. Annu Rev Genet 33, 89–131. 6. Sharpe, L. T., Nordby, K. (1990). Total Colorblindness: An Introduction. In: Night vision: basic clinical and applied aspects (Hess, R. F., Sharpe, L. T., Nordby, K., eds.), pp. 253. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. 7. Sharpe, L. T., Stockman, A., Jägle, H., Nathans, J. (1999). Opsin genes, cone photopigments, color vision and colorblindness. In: Color vision: from genes to perception (Gegenfurtner, K. R., Sharpe, L. T., eds.), p. 3. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.
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8. Kohl, S., Varsanyi, B., Antunes, G. A., Baumann, B., Hoyng, C. B., Jagle, H., Rosenberg, T., Kellner, U., Lorenz, B., Salati, R., Jurklies, B., Farkas, A., Andreasson, S., Weleber, R. G., Jacobson, S. G., Rudolph, G., Castellan, C., Dollfus, H., Legius, E., Anastasi, M., Bitoun, P., Lev, D., Sieving, P. A., Munier, F. L., Zrenner, E., Sharpe, L. T., Cremers, F. P., Wissinger, B. (2005). CNGB3 mutations account for 50% of all cases with autosomal recessive achromatopsia. Eur J Hum Genet 13, 302–308. 9. Wissinger, B., Gamer, D., Jagle, H., Giorda, R., Marx, T., Mayer, S., Tippmann, S., Broghammer, M., Jurklies, B., Rosenberg, T., Jacobson, S. G., Sener, E. C., Tatlipinar, S., Hoyng, C. B., Castellan, C., Bitoun, P., Andreasson, S., Rudolph, G., Kellner, U., Lorenz, B., Wolff, G., Verellen-Dumoulin, C., Schwartz, M., Cremers, F. P., Apfelstedt-Sylla, E., Zrenner, E., Salati, R., Sharpe, L. T., Kohl, S. (2001). CNGA3 mutations in hereditary cone photoreceptor disorders. Am J Hum Genet 69, 722–737. 10. Mallouk, N., Ildefonse, M., Pages, F., Ragno, M., Bennett, N. (2002). Basis for intracellular retention of a human mutant of the retinal rod channel alpha subunit. J Membr Biol 185, 129–136. 11. Trudeau, M. C., Zagotta, W. N. (2002). An intersubunit interaction regulates trafficking of rod cyclic nucleotide-gated channels and is disrupted in an inherited form of blindness. Neuron 34, 197–207. 12. Zagotta, W. N., Olivier, N. B., Black, K. D., Young, E. C., Olson, R., Gouaux, E. (2003). Structural basis for modulation and agonist specificity of HCN pacemaker channels. Nature 425, 200–205. 13. Johnson, S., Michaelides, M., Aligianis, I. A., Ainsworth, J. R., Mollon, J. D., Maher, E. R., Moore, A. T., Hunt, D. M. (2004). Achromatopsia caused by novel mutations in both CNGA3 and CNGB3. J Med Genet 41, e20. 14. Rojas, C. V., Maria, L. S., Santos, J. L., Cortes, F., Alliende, M. A. (2002). A frameshift insertion in the cone cyclic nucleotide gated cation channel causes complete achromatopsia in a consanguineous family from a rural isolate. Eur J Hum Genet 10, 638–642. 15. Nishiguchi, K. M., Sandberg, M. A., Gorji, N., Berson, E. L., Dryja, T. P. (2005). Cone cGMP-gated channel mutations and clinical findings in patients with achromatopsia, macular degeneration, and other hereditary cone diseases. Hum Mutat 25, 248–258. 16. Goto-Omoto, S., Hayashi, T., Gekka, T., Kubo, A., Takeuchi, T., Kitahara, K. (2006). Compound heterozygous CNGA3 mutations (R436W, L633P) in a Japanese patient with congenital achromatopsia. Vis Neurosci 23, 395–402. 17. Winick, J. D., Blundell, M. L., Galke, B. L., Salam, A. A., Leal, S. M., Karayiorgou, M. (1999). Homozygosity mapping of the Achromatopsia locus in the Pingelapese. Am J Hum Genet 64, 1679–1685. 18. Milunsky, A., Huang, X. L., Milunsky, J., DeStefano, A., Baldwin, C. T. (1999). A locus for autosomal recessive achromatopsia on human chromosome 8q. Clin Genet 56, 82–85. 19. Sacks, O. W. (1997). The island of the colorblind and Cycad Island. Knopf, New York. 20. Kohl, S., Baumann, B., Broghammer, M., Jagle, H., Sieving, P., Kellner, U., Spegal, R., Anastasi, M., Zrenner, E., Sharpe, L. T., Wissinger, B. (2000). Mutations in the CNGB3 gene encoding the beta-subunit of the cone photoreceptor cGMP-gated channel are responsible for achromatopsia (ACHM3) linked to chromosome 8q21. Hum Mol Genet 9, 2107–2116. 21. Sundin, O. H., Yang, J. M., Li, Y., Zhu, D., Hurd, J. N., Mitchell, T. N., Silva, E. D., Maumenee, I. H. (2000). Genetic basis of total colourblindness among the Pingelapese islanders. Nat Genet 25, 289–293. 22. Okada, A., Ueyama, H., Toyoda, F., Oda, S., Ding, W. G., Tanabe, S., Yamade, S., Matsuura, H., Ohkubo, I., Kani, K. (2004). Functional role of hCngb3 in regulation of human cone cng channel: effect of rod monochromacy-associated mutations in hCNGB3 on channel function. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 45, 2324–2332.
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23. Faillace, M. P., Bernabeu, R. O., Korenbrot, J. I. (2004). Cellular processing of cone photo receptor cyclic GMP-gated ion channels: a role for the S4 structural motif. J Biol Chem 279, 22643–22653. 24. Patel, K. A., Bartoli, K. M., Fandino, R. A., Ngatchou, A. N., Woch, G., Carey, J., Tanaka, J. C. (2005). Transmembrane S1 mutations in CNGA3 from achromatopsia 2 patients cause loss of function and impaired cellular trafficking of the cone CNG channel. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 46, 2282–2290. 25. Huttl, S., Michalakis, S., Seeliger, M., Luo, D. G., Acar, N., Geiger, H., Hudl, K., Mader, R., Haverkamp, S., Moser, M., Pfeifer, A., Gerstner, A., Yau, K. W., Biel, M. (2005). Impaired channel targeting and retinal degeneration in mice lacking the cyclic nucleotide-gated channel subunit CNGB1. J Neurosci 25, 130–138. 26. Sidjanin, D. J., Lowe, J. K., McElwee, J. L., Milne, B. S., Phippen, T. M., Sargan, D. R., Aguirre, G. D., Acland, G. M., Ostrander, E. A. (2002). Canine CNGB3 mutations establish cone degeneration as orthologous to the human achromatopsia locus ACHM3. Hum Mol Genet 11, 1823–1833. 27. Trankner, D., Jagle, H., Kohl, S., Apfelstedt-Sylla, E., Sharpe, L. T., Kaupp, U. B., Zrenner, E., Seifert, R., Wissinger, B. (2004). Molecular basis of an inherited form of incomplete achromatopsia. J Neurosci 24, 138–147. 28. Liu, C., Varnum, M. D. (2005). Functional consequences of progressive cone dystrophyassociated mutations in the human cone photoreceptor cyclic nucleotide-gated channel CNGA3 subunit. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 289, C187–C198. 29. Bright, S. R., Brown, T. E., Varnum, M. D. (2005). Disease-associated mutations in CNGB3 produce gain of function alterations in cone cyclic nucleotide-gated channels. Mol Vis 11, 1141–1150. 30. Peng, C., Rich, E. D., Varnum, M. D. (2003). Achromatopsia-associated mutation in the human cone photoreceptor cyclic nucleotide-gated channel CNGB3 subunit alters the ligand sensitivity and pore properties of heteromeric channels. J Biol Chem 278, 34533–34540. 31. Brown, R. L., Haley, T. L., West, K. A., Crabb, J. W. (1999). Pseudechetoxin: a peptide blocker of cyclic nucleotide-gated ion channels. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96, 754–759.
11 Rhodopsins in Drosophila Color Vision David Jukam, Preet Lidder, and Claude Desplan CONTENTS Introduction Anatomy and Molecular Aspects of Color-Sensitive Opsins in the DROSOPHILA Eye Development and Patterning of Rhodopsins for DROSOPHILA Color Vision Comparison Between Mammalian and DROSOPHILA Color Vision Rhodopsins Conclusion References
INTRODUCTION Color vision relies on an organism’s ability to detect color contrasts independently of intensity. This requires a sensory system that can detect and discriminate between different wavelengths of light. The opsin visual pigments collect light and initiate the conversion of photon energy into an electric signal sent by photoreceptor neurons to the brain, where this information is integrated into a perception. Opsins are photosensitive, seven-transmembrane G protein-coupled receptors of the same protein superfamily as many neurotransmitter, hormone, and sensory receptors that respond to molecular ligands [1, 2]. Different opsins exhibit different spectral sensitivities, and each is maximally sensitive to a particular wavelength of light, depending on its protein structure. Opsins are covalently linked to a retinal chromophore via a protonated Schiff base bond to a lysine residue in the seventh transmembrane domain of the protein [3, 4]. When light hits the opsin–chromophore complex (called rhodopsin), the 11-cis retinal chromophore isomerizes to all-trans retinal, leading to the activation of a G protein and downstream effectors. For example, in Drosophila melanogaster, a Gqα protein mediates the light-dependent activation of phospholipase C and opening of Transient Receptor Potential-Like (TRP/ TRPL) channels, resulting in the depolarization of the cell membrane [5–10]. Vertebrate and invertebrate rhodopsins act on different signal transduction cascades: Light depolarizes photoreceptors in insects and hyperpolarizes photoreceptors in vertebrates, but the
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end result of an activated rhodopsin is the same—a neural signal from the photoreceptor axon (invertebrates) or downstream neurons (retinal ganglion cells in vertebrates). The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster is an excellent model for studying color vision because it has a sophisticated “hardware” to detect colors (including four different color-sensitive opsins) and can functionally and behaviorally respond to colors [11, 12, S. Yamaguchi and C. Desplan, unpublished results]. Although distantly related, flies and vertebrate opsins share the same biophysical properties, and Drosophila’s genetic malleability has supported fundamental discoveries in eye development, photoreceptor differentiation, visual transduction, and visual information processing. ANATOMY AND MOLECULAR ASPECTS OF COLOR-SENSITIVE OPSINS IN THE DROSOPHILA EYE Structure of the Drosophila Eye: Ommatidia, Photoreceptors, and Rhodopsins The Drosophila eye is organized into a latticed array of about 800 unit eyes, or ommatidia. Each ommatidium contains about 21 cells: 8 photoreceptors, 4 cone cells, a bristle cell, and about 8 accessory cells that help form the lens and pigment cells that shield photoreceptors (PRs) from light coming from other ommatidia [13]. The photoreceptors collect light in large, apical extensions of the membrane called rhabdomeres that contain densely packed rhodopsin molecules. The detection of light by rhodopsin in a photoreceptor initiates the signal phototransduction cascade that converts photon energy into an electrical impulse sent to higher-order neurons for visual information processing. According to their morphology, axonal projections, and opsin expression, the eight adult photoreceptors can be grouped into two main functional categories (Fig. 1): 1. The “outer” photoreceptors R1–R6 are specialized in dim-light vision and motion detection. Outer photoreceptors capture photons with high efficiency due to their broad-spectrum rhodopsin Rh1 as well as the large diameter and length of their
Fig. 1. Organization of the Drosophila eye. A Whole-eye view of a retina. Note the precise lattice of ommatidia. B Electron micrograph of a cross section through an ommatidium. The outer photoreceptors (R1–R6) are arranged in a chiral trapezoid, the center of which is occupied by the inner photoreceptors (R7 and R8), with R7 positioned on top of R8. C Longitudinal view of a single ommatidium. Light enters through the lens, at the top, and passes through the eight photoreceptor rhabdomeres.
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rhabdomeres, which extend from the basal to the apical side of the retina [14]. R1–R6 axons project to and terminate in the first optic ganglion, the lamina. They can be considered functionally analogous to vertebrate rods. These six outer photoreceptors are organized in a chiral trapezoid, which has a center that is occupied by the two “inner” photoreceptors, R7 and R8. 2. The “inner” photoreceptors R7 and R8 form the color detection system in the fly retina. The rhabdomeres of inner photoreceptors are in the same optical path, one beneath the other. R7 is located apically, closer to the lens, and expresses ultraviolet (UV)-sensitive Rh3 or Rh4. R8 is directly underneath R7 and expresses either blue-sensitive Rh5 or green-sensitive Rh6. R7 and R8 have thinner and shorter rhabdomeres than R1–R6, and their axons terminate in the second optic ganglion, the medulla [15]. Inner photoreceptors are similar to vertebrate cones in their role for color vision [16]. An additional layer of organization is imposed on the inner photoreceptors through the specific pairing of rhodopsins expressed in R7 and R8 (Fig. 2). R7 cells that express UV-sensitive Rh3 are always found in ommatidia with R8 cells that express the bluesensitive Rh5 [17, 18]. This Rh3/Rh5 rhodopsin expression in R7 and R8 photoreceptors defines the “pale” (p) ommatidial subtype. Conversely,R7 cells expressing a different UV-sensitive Rh4 are always found together with an R8 that expresses the green-sensitive Rh6, defining the “yellow” (y) ommatidial subtype [19, 20]. These two ommatidial subtypes are interspersed randomly within the fly retina [21], with 30% of the pale subtype and the remaining 70% of the yellow subtype. It is believed that the differences in rhodopsin between each subtype play a crucial role for the fly’s ability to discriminate between colors, with the p ommatidia discriminating among shorter wavelengths (UV to blue), and the y ommatidia discriminating longer wavelengths extending to the green. Thus, comparisons between wavelengths detected by R7 and R8 from the same ommatidium and comparisons among neighboring p and y R7/R8 subtypes are likely the first two steps in color vision processing. A third class of photoreceptors is located in the dorsal-most row of ommatidia (dorsal rim area, DRA) near the head cuticle. In these ommatidia, R7 and R8 both express Rh3 [22], which makes them inappropriate for color vision. Instead, the DRA inner photoreceptors detect the vector of oscillation plane of polarized light for spatial navigation [23, 24]. A fourth class of ommatidia, which does not exist in Drosophila, is found in the male Musca domestica in a large region of the eye where R7 expresses a Rh1-like molecule and projects to the lamina part of the optic lobe, thus leading to ommatidia that have seven motion detection photoreceptors instead of six and no color vision in this part of the retina [20]. This was entitled the “love spot” because it is used by males to track females during in-flight mating behavior. Because the DRA and Musca love spot are not involved in color vision, they are not discussed further. Molecular Genetics and Evolution of Rh5 and Rh6 The cloning of the gene encoding Rh5 [17, 18] provided the first opportunity to examine R8 opsin expression and to investigate color sensitivity in Drosophila. Introduction of either Rh5 or Rh6 into mutant strains that lack Rh1 expression is capable of restoring light response, indicating that these genes encode functional rhodopsins [25]. Flies expressing Rh5
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Fig. 2. Retinal mosaic in Drosophila. A Two main ommatidial subtypes can be distinguished: “pale” (p) and “yellow” (y). The model for p/y specification includes two steps: First, R7 cells choose between p and y fates by the stochastic expression of a transcription factor. Consequently, R7 cells impose their subset choice onto the underlying R8 cells (instruction). B Dorsal rim area ommatidia are always found in one or two rows at the dorsal periphery of the adult retina, whereas p (Rh3, Rh5) and y (Rh4, Rh6) ommatidia are distributed randomly through the retina in a 30:70 ratio. eq equator.
show peak sensitivity to wavelengths of 437 nm, corresponding to blue light, whereas Rh6 flies have a prominent peak at 508 nm, or green light (Table 1 [25]). The Rh5 protein shares several structural features with other insect opsins, such as the seven-transmembrane domains, an N-glycosylation site required for protein maturation [26], two cysteine residues that form a disulfide bond, and serine and threonine phosphorylation sites in the cytoplasmic C-terminal domain. In addition, Rh5 contains a tyrosine that is thought to serve as a counterion for the protonated Schiff base in the retinal chromophore and may affect light sensitivity.
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The gene encoding Rh6 was cloned using a Calliphora complementary DNA with significant homology to previously characterized fly rhodopsins [19]. Rh6, like Rh5, shares features consistent with the hallmarks of known rhodopsin molecules. The chromophore linkage sites, an N-glycosylation site, and cysteine residues to form a disulfide bridge are all present in Rh6, which also contains conserved proline residues in the transmembrane domain and the cytoplasmic domains responsible for G protein binding. Rh5 belongs to the blue family of invertebrate opsins and shares the highest amino acid similarity (59%) with locust S. gregaria lo2 opsin [18], also a blue opsin. Rh6 is a green opsin that is distant from the UV opsins. Other flies, such as Musca and the blowfly (Calliphora), which have a similar retinal organization as Drosophila, also have Rh5 and Rh6 orthologs [27]. Calliphora also has two R8 photoreceptor subtypes, pR8 and yR8, that are reported to have slightly different morphologies, a situation undetected in Drosophila melanogaster [28]. Drosophila Rh5 and Rh6 share higher amino acid identity with their Calliphora, honeybee, and mosquito orthologs than with other Drosophila rhodopsins, suggesting that rh5 and rh6 genes were both present in a common ancestor rather than having evolved independently in each fly lineage [27]. However, Rh5 is slightly more distant from the UV class—it shares 32% similarity with Rh3 and 33% with Rh4—than is Rh6, with 41% homology with Rh3 and 44% with Rh4 [17]. Together, this and other sequence evidence such as intron-exon structure, imply that Rh3/Rh4, Rh5, and Rh6 are ancestral rhodopsins, while a recent event in higher flies (after the mosquito lineage evolved) led to the duplication into the current Rh3 and Rh4. On the other hand, Rh5 is more divergent than Rh6 from Drosophila Rh1 (31%) and Rh2 (31%), which are themselves divergent members of the green class of invertebrate opsins (Fig. 3). Rh1 and Rh2 appear unique to the higher dipteran lineage and are replaced by several green-type opsins in bees and butterflies. They may have evolved from an ancestral Rh6-like green opsin and have evolved to acquire a very broad spectrum of absorption through the acquisition of a second retinal chromosphore that absorbs blue light and transfers it to the retinal inside the rhodopsin pocket [23]. Their evolution is likely linked to the appearance of an “open rhabdome” in these flies: The separation between the rhabdomeres of the different photoreceptors allowed for the utilization of a very broad-spectrum opsin such as Rh1.
DEVELOPMENT AND PATTERNING OF RHODOPSINS FOR DROSOPHILA COLOR VISION Mutually Exclusive Rhodopsin Expression Only after the Drosophila color-sensitive opsin genes had been cloned and protein localization determined could their genes and promoters be manipulated using the powerful genetic tools available in Drosophila. This allowed for the discovery of new genetic pathways and mechanisms that coordinate the complex expression pattern of rhodopsins in the fly retina. The “one-receptor molecule per neuron” rule in sensory systems ensures that the system can discriminate among sensory inputs by allowing each neuron to act as a
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Fig. 3. Phylogenetic relationship among color-sensitive rhodopsins. The phylogenetic tree displays the broad evolutionary relationship among opsin sequences. Vertebrate and invertebrate color-sensitive opsins likely evolved from a single common ancestor and later events created the subfamilies of green-, red-, blue-, and ultraviolet (UV)-sensitive opsins. GF = goldfish; Rh rhodopsin; ZF = zebrafish.
specialized unit of perception [29–33]. In the fly retina, photoreceptors also express “one rhodopsin per photoreceptor” to compare responses to different light wavelengths and create color contrast. In the Drosophila eye, the decision to express one of four rhodopsin molecules in inner photoreceptors, Rh3 or Rh4 in R7 and Rh5 or Rh6 in R8, establishes the basis for the retinal mosaic of photoreceptor subtypes and hence the basis for color vision [34]. It should be noted that coexpression of different opsins exists in bees and butterflies, although its significance is not clear and might correspond to the lack of the broad-spectrum Rh1 in these species. Even in mice, green and blue opsins are often found in the same cones, perhaps reflecting the fact that mice are nocturnal animals and practically color-blind. Although the distribution of p and y ommatidia is random, the 70:30 y:p ratio is constant from retina to retina across a large number of flies that diverged over 120 million years ago and rarely deviates more than 5% in either direction (35, 36, D. Vasiliauskas and C. Desplan, personal communication). This implies that photoreceptor subtype specification and color-sensitive rhodopsin expression are tightly regulated during development.
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The known mechanism for how photoreceptor subtypes are specified is, so far, one of the most detailed descriptions of how neurons express sensory receptors in a mutually exclusive manner. Next, we discuss recent results to illustrate the use of seemingly baroque and diverse mechanisms to control neuronal fate specification, rhodopsin expression, and retinal patterning, all resulting in one receptor per neuron. Transcription Factors Specify Outer from Inner Photoreceptors and Distinguish R7 from R8 The first step leading to mutually exclusive rhodopsin expression is the specification of a photoreceptor as belonging to the inner versus outer class. Eye development starts at the morphogenetic furrow, a wave of determination that moves across the developing eye imaginal disk during the third-instar larva life and leaves in its wake regularly spaced clusters of eight photoreceptors that will become each ommatidium. R8 is the first photoreceptor to be recruited, and it will recruit neighboring cells to become pairs of photoreceptors (R2/R5, R3/R4, and R1/R6) through sequential induction by the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor pathway. R7 is the last cell to be recruited, by a process that requires a dedicated signaling pathway, the Sevenless receptor tyrosine kinase and its ligand Boss [13]. It takes at least 4 days after R8 is first determined for R8 to complete its pale or yellow subtype specification, then differentiate and express Rh5 or Rh6. Which events in photoreceptor determination occur between the larval stage and the terminal differentiation in late pupal life, when all photoreceptors and subtypes are present? Cell–cell signaling and cell-specific transcription factors initially determine the identity of photoreceptors as outer or inner [37, 38]. The spalt gene complex (sal) directs R7 and R8 toward an inner photoreceptor state away from an outer photoreceptor “default” state. In sal mutants, all photoreceptors develop as “outer,” and all express Rh1. Once R7 and R8 are specified as generic inner photoreceptors, they continue toward more restricted fates. Further distinctions between R7 and R8 are achieved by the R7-specific expression of the transcription factor prospero, which is required to establish R7 fate and to repress R8 features (in particular Rh5 and Rh6 expression). A parallel role is ascribed to the zinc finger protein Senseless in R8 [39, 40]. The analysis of R7- and R8-specific rhodopsin promoters provides initial insight into mutually exclusive rhodopsin expression. Transgenic analysis shows that minimal promoters, often less than 300 bp in length, are sufficient to recapitulate Rh3, Rh4, Rh5, and Rh6 expression in vivo [39, 41, 42]. Although in Old World monkeys the exclusion mechanism between the M (green) and L (red) opsins is due to the regulation by a locus control region (LCR) distally located upstream of both genes, a similar mechanism can be ruled out in Drosophila because the four color rhodopsin genes in flies are not clustered and can be on distinct chromosomes [43–45]. Furthermore, even rhodopsin promoter transgenes are regulated appropriately and are expressed in the same exclusive subset as the endogenous gene with activity that they report, indicating trans-regulatory mechanisms. All four rhodopsin promoters contain a common rhodopsin conserved sequence 1 (RCSI)/palindromic 3 (P3) site near the TATA box; this site has been shown to provide general eye or photoreceptor-specific expression [46]. The site is recognized
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by the homeodomain of Pax-6, the “master control gene for eye development.” This function as a regulator of photoreceptor determination likely represents the ancestral role of Pax-6. Upstream from the RCSI/P3 site are rhodopsin-specific sequence elements common to the rhodopsins expressed in each photoreceptor (R7 vs. R8) or in each subtype (y or p). These appear to confer R7, R8, as well as subtype specific regulation. For instance, a conserved 11-bp element, seq56, found in both the rh5 and rh6 promoters is recognized by the R7-specific transcription factor Prospero. Binding by Prospero protein to seq56 in R7 prevents the expression of these R8 rhodopsins in R7 [39]. Indeed, when prospero or when the binding sites are mutated, Rh5 and Rh6 are expressed inappropriately in R7. Thus, Prospero restricts R8 rhodopsins to their proper cell type, R8. Another highly conserved site is found in the promoter of pR7 and pR8 rhodopsins, rh3 and rh5, respectively, which are always found in the same ommatidium. The homeodomain transcription factor Orthodenticle (Otd) binds to these sites, which are required for the p subtype: Rh3 and Rh5 are no longer expressed in otd eye mutants [42]. However, otd has only a permissive function as it is expressed in all photoreceptors, and its overexpression leads to no effect on rhodopsin transcription; other transcription factors must be required to control the pale R7/R8 subtype. Furthermore, the y pair, Rh4 and Rh6, is not expanded in otd mutants that lack the pR7 and pR8. Therefore, while the analysis of the promoters of Drosophila rhodopsins demonstrated that their mutually exclusive and subtype-specific rhodopsin regulation was transcriptional in nature (as opposed to posttranscriptional regulation at the messenger RNA or protein-trafficking level), genetics was used to unravel the mechanism of rhodopsin exclusion in Drosophila color vision. A Stochastic Decision Induces Rhodopsins in R7 Photoreceptor The specification to either the p or y ommatidial subtype is a two-step process that begins in R7 (Fig. 2). The instructive event that determines the 30:70 ratio of rhodopsins results from the stochastic expression of spineless (ss), which encodes yet another transcription factor, this time from the PAS-bHLH (per-arnt-sim, basic helix-loop-helix) family [46]. Only 70% of R7 cells express ss, and Rh4 is later induced in these same cells when they differentiate. The underlying R8 cells then turn on Rh6, which appears to be the default R8 opsin [47]. In those R7 that do not express ss, Rh3 is later induced as the R7 default state. However, these Rh3-expressing cells then instruct their R8 neighbor to express RH5 (see Fig. 4). It appears that the presence of ss causes Rh4 expression and prevents R7 from sending a signal to R8, whereas the absence of ss allows the R7-to-R8 signal to occur. Thus, ss is necessary and sufficient for the yR7 (Rh4, Rh6) subtype fate. The stochastic expression of spineless in a subset of R7 photoreceptors is the primary event that leads to the creation of the retinal mosaic of rhodopsin expression used for color vision. A Bistable Feedback Loop Specifies R8 Photoreceptor Subtype and Expression of Rh5 and Rh6 Strict pairing of rhodopsins in p and y R7/R8 subtypes could result from either a genetic program intrinsic to a particular ommatidium or from signaling events between
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Fig. 4. Mutually exclusive expression of color-sensing rhodopsins in R8. Schematic model for how the double-negative feedback loop directs rhodopsin expression in R8 photoreceptor. When R8 receives the signal from Rh3 expressing R7, the growth gene melted is expressed and suppresses warts, allowing for expressing of Rh5. If the signal is not received in R8, the tumor suppressor warts is expressed, which represses melted and promotes expression of Rh6. Thick black lines represent occurring genetic actions; thin gray lines represent genetic actions not occurring [48, 52]. Rh rhodopsin, ss spineless.
R7 and R8 that coordinate subtype specification. When R7 cells are genetically removed in sevenless mutant flies, all R8 express Rh6 [17, 18], suggesting that an R7 cell is required for Rh5 but not for Rh6 expression in R8. An R7-to-R8 signal model was thus proposed to explain the coordination between the rhodopsins in R7 and R8. How does R8 interpret the R7 signal and select its subtype as defined by expression of Rh5 or Rh6? While the identity of this signal remains elusive, genetic experiments have implicated the tumor suppressor warts/D-lats and a growth regulator melted in the postmitotic specification of R8 subtype fate [48] (Fig. 4). Warts is a serine/threonine kinase and the Drosophila homolog of the human large tumor suppressor (LATS) tumor suppressor genes that function to coordinately regulate proliferation and apoptosis in developing tissues [49, 50]. Warts misexpression in all photoreceptors induces the expression of Rh6 in all and only R8 cells. Conversely, warts loss of function leads to expression of Rh5 in all R8 [48]. This strongly suggests that warts is necessary and sufficient for the yR8 fate and for Rh6 expression. Whereas warts limits growth, melted is involved in fat metabolism as a positive regulator of the insulin/TOR (target of rapamycin) signaling pathway [51]. In R8, it opposes warts function to control Rh5 expression. Misexpression of melted and melted mutant
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flies have the opposite phenotypes of warts: All melted mutant R8 express Rh6, and overexpression of melted leads to expression of Rh5 in all R8 [48]. So, melted is both necessary and sufficient for pR8 fate and Rh5 expression. This suggests that warts and melted control each subtype through their mutual transcriptional regulation; indeed, they are expressed in mutually exclusive subsets of R8 cells that correspond to the y and p subtypes, respectively [48]. Wherever melted is expressed in R8, rh5 is induced; similarly, warts is coexpressed with Rh6. Therefore, warts and melted repress each other in a transcriptionally bistable negative-feedback loop that ensures that R8 cells only make one choice of expressing Rh5 or Rh6. This bistable loop interprets the R7 signal and instructs R8 to make a robust and unambiguous subtype choice [52] (Fig. 4). It should be noted that, although all other regulatory factors mentioned so far were transcription factors, Warts and Melted are cytoplasmic signaling proteins (Ser/Thr kinase and PH (pleckstrin homology domain) domain proteins, respectively). This reflects their involvement in interpreting the signal from R7 to decide between two alternate fates from an otherwise equipotent precursor cell. It remains that transcriptional effectors are required within the loop to control the expression of warts and melted. The involvement of such growth regulators in photoreceptor differentiation is an excellent example of how a signal transduction cassette can be reused during development for an entirely different purpose: Long after the photoreceptors have exited the cell cycle, the warts tumor suppressor pathway is no longer required and is now available to regulate this totally different process of cell specification. It should be noted that the other transcription factors described—Spalt, Prospero, Senseless, Orthodenticle, and Spineless—all have very crucial and totally different functions earlier in development. Some of them even act earlier in photoreceptor specification, before these genes are reused for specifying photoreceptor subtypes. COMPARISON BETWEEN MAMMALIAN AND DROSOPHILA COLOR VISION RHODOPSINS What can we learn about color vision from integrating data on mammalian and Drosophila rhodopsins? The vertebrate and invertebrate visual systems for color vision are different and have likely evolved independently, even though they are both based on very old photoreceptor molecules, the rhodopsins, which can even be found in bacteria. However, given the about 950 million years of evolution that separate Drosophila and mammals, the basic principles of function, organization, and development are remarkably similar [53]. Human Color-Sensitive Opsins Humans have three cone cell populations that detect short (S, blue-sensitive), medium (M, green-sensitive), and long (L, red-sensitive) wavelengths by expressing differentially sensitive opsins [43, 54]. Only one rhodopsin is usually expressed per cone type, although as in rabbit or mice, some coexpression is observed [55]. Dim-light vision and motion detection use the broadly tuned rod rhodopsin, which is evolutionarily a green opsin, likely because this represents the middle of the visible spectrum of light.
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This rhodopsin is specific to rods, which represent the majority of the human retina, and comprise almost the entire retina in nocturnal animals. Drosophila outer photoreceptors, like rods, also comprise the majority of photoreceptors as motion is critical for all of the fly visual functions. Outer photoreceptors also express a broad-spectrum rhodopsin (Rh1) that is related to green invertebrate opsins. Vertebrate and invertebrate opsins only share one very distant common ancestor of unknown spectral sensitivity, and it is likely that green opsins have evolved independently in the two branches. Although human cones are concentrated in the fovea (other animals do not exhibit this foveal specialization), the fly color receptors are distributed throughout the retina. However, in both cases, S, M, or L cone and fly color photoreceptors are distributed in a random manner [56]. This is in contrast to the fish retina, which contains four types of color photoreceptors that are precisely ordered, likely because they live in a blurry environment where repetitive patterns are unlikely to interfere with perception by regular arrays. Vertebrate retinal progenitors are multipotent and undergo successive phases of competence during which they successfully give rise to retinal ganglion cells, then cones and the neurons and glial cells that form the first layer of neural processing in the retina. Rods are produced throughout most of these phases. This depends on the expression of transcription factors that successively specify each type of retinal cell fates. The integration of these intrinsic transcription factor decisions ensures that each cell type is properly specified. Many human retinopathies that result in altered opsin expression are associated with mutations in transcription factors that regulate the specification of rod- and cone-specific genetic programs—Pax-6, Crx, Nrl, Nr2e3, and Trβ2—which are discussed below. Photoreceptor and Rhodopsin Specification in Flies and Mammals: Parallel Themes As in flies, the identification of factors controlling retinal development have come both from dissecting the promoter of the final differentiation products, the rhodopsin (e.g., nrl and crx), and from the genetic analysis of patients or mice with retinopathy (crx, nr2E3, tr2Beta). This resulted in the identification of two factors—Pax-6 and Crx—that have revealed similarities between vertebrate and Drosophila retina development that would not have been predicted from the independent evolution of the two visual systems. Pax-6, the master control gene for eye development in flies, is also a critical eye determination gene in vertebrates. Pax-6 mutations in mammals result in an early block in eye development and diseases such as aniridia. The common use of Pax-6 in fly and vertebrate development was explained by the ancestral role of Pax-6 in regulating photoreceptor determination, which led to its recruitment into controlling most steps in retinal (and lens) development. A second parallel between flies and mammals exists between Crx and Drosophila Otd, although the similarities are more difficult to explain. Crx is an Otd/Otx homeodomain transcription factor that plays a major role in controlling most opsins in vertebrates. Crx overexpression in mice produces more rod-like photoreceptors, while reducing Crx function disrupts photoreceptor morphogenesis [57]. Mutations in Crx occur in several inherited human retinopathies, including Leber’s congenital amaurosis and cone-rod dystrophy 2 [58]. Thus, Crx helps regulate photoreceptor differentiation and opsin expression. A functional analogy can be made with its ortholog in flies, Otd, which controls not only rh3 and rh5 but is also required
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for the proper repression of rh6 in outer photoreceptors and for rhabdomere morphogenesis [42]. Therefore, in both mammals and flies, an Otd/Otx family transcription factor appears to repress the expression of color-sensitive opsins in dim-light and motion detection photoreceptors. The recruitment of Otd for this function might relate to its role is early specification of anterior segments, which include the eye in vertebrates and the ocular segments in flies. Photoreceptor and Rhodopsin Specification in Flies and Mammals: Different Mechanisms A second transcription factor that controls the distinction between rods and cones is the bZIP (basic leucine zipper domain) protein NRL (neural retina leucine zipper). NRL positively regulates rod specification, in part by negatively regulating the transcription of cone genes in rods [59]. When NRL is removed in nrl−/− mice, the number of colorsensing cones (S cones) increases, while rod function is completely lost. This occurs because presumptive rods transform into “rod-cone” intermediates that exhibit hybrid rod-cone morphology but function as S cones because they express S-cone opsins [59]. Missense mutations in the NRL gene are associated with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa, which further confirms a role for NRL in human photoreceptor development [60]. The nuclear hormone receptor Nr2E3 has also been implicated in the transcriptional regulation of photoreceptor subtype-specific genes. In a mouse model for retinal degeneration (rd7 mouse), more S cones are again present, while the number of rods is substantially decreased [60]. Nr2e3 may act in presumptive rod photoreceptors already expressing NRL to both activate a subset of rod specific genes and repress cone genes, including color-sensitive S-opsin [61]. A fourth gene that regulates mammalian rhodopsin expression is the thyroid hormone receptor TRβ2. It acts not by directly regulating the rod-cone decision but by controlling cone subtypes (Ng). TRβ2 mouse knockouts and cell culture showed that TRβ2 activates M-opsin and inhibits S-opsin, likely by reading a gradient of thyroid hormone during development [62, 63]. There are no known orthologs of NRL or TRβ2 in flies, and the only Drosophila ortholog of Nr2e3 has not been examined for eye function. Reciprocally, the two genes warts and melted play a critical role in the fly retina for specification of color photoreceptor subtypes, but it is unknown if their mammalian orthologs are involved in rhodopsin expression or if their mutations can cause human retinal pathologies. It is tempting to make a broad analogy between the role of NRL or NR2E3 with that of Drosophila prospero, which keeps particular color-sensitive rhodopsins repressed while simultaneously directing other aspects of photoreceptor morphogenesis [39]. Yet, the way these mammalian genes specify photoreceptors and regulate rhodopsin expression ultimately reflects the large mechanistic differences expected from two independently evolved eye systems. CONCLUSION Much has been learned about the molecular mechanisms that underlie Drosophila color vision, especially regarding molecular properties and developmental patterning
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of Rh5 and Rh6. In addition to increasing our understanding of the molecular basis of color vision, these insights allow one to manipulate the expression of all Drosophila rhodopsins and genetically encode neural activity reporters or inactivate individual neurons in the fly brain. When combined, these experimental technologies provide powerful tools for research into exciting, but unknown, areas such as color-dependent behaviors, how inputs are computed to form color perceptions, and the neural circuits responsible for color processing. REFERENCES 1. Sakmar, T. P., Menon, S. T., Marin, E. P., Awad, E. S. (2002). Rhodopsin: insights from recent structural studies. Annu Rev Biophys Biomol Struct 31, 443–484. 2. Terakita, A. (2005). The opsins. Genome Biol 6, 213. 3. Bownds, D. (1967). Site of attachment of retinal in rhodopsin. Nature 216, 1178–1181. 4. Wang, J. K., McDowell, J. H., Hargrave, P. A. (1980). Site of attachment of 11-cis-retinal in bovine rhodopsin. Biochemistry 19, 5111–5117. 5. Fain, G. L., Lisman, J. E. (1981). Membrane conductances of photoreceptors. Prog Biophys Mol Biol 37, 91–147. 6. Scott, K., Becker, A., Sun, Y., Hardy, R., Zuker, C. (1995). Gq alpha protein function in vivo: genetic dissection of its role in photoreceptor cell physiology. Neuron 15, 919–927. 7. Montell, C. (1999). Visual transduction in Drosophila. Annu Rev Cell Dev Biol 15, 231–268. 8. O’Tousa, J. E., Baehr, W., Martin, R. L., Hirsh, J., Pak, W. L., Applebury, M. L. (1985). The Drosophila ninaE gene encodes an opsin. Cell 40, 839–850. 9. Pak, W. L., Leung, H. T. (2003). Genetic approaches to visual transduction in Drosophila melanogaster. Receptors Channels 9, 149–167. 10. Yarfitz, S., Hurley, J. B. (1994). Transduction mechanisms of vertebrate and invertebrate photoreceptors. J Biol Chem 269, 14329–14332. 11. Tang, S., Guo, A. (2001). Choice behavior of Drosophila facing contradictory visual cues. Science 294, 1543–1547. 12. Quinn, W. G., Harris, W. A., Benzer, S. (1974). Conditioned behavior in Drosophila melanogaster. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 71, 708–712. 13. Wolff, T., Ready, D. F. (1991). The beginning of pattern formation in the Drosophila compound eye: the morphogenetic furrow and the second mitotic wave. Development 113, 841–850. 14. Zuker, C. S., Cowman, A. F., Rubin, G. M. (1985). Isolation and structure of a rhodopsin gene from D. melanogaster. Cell 40, 851–858. 15. Morante, J., Desplan, C. (2004). Building a projection map for photoreceptor neurons in the Drosophila optic lobes. Semin Cell Dev Biol 15, 137–143. 16. Kirschfeld, K., Franceschini, N. (1968). [Optical characteristics of ommatidia in the complex eye of Musca]. Kybernetik 5, 47–52. 17. Chou, W. H., Hall, K. J., Wilson, D. B., Wideman, C. L., Townson, S. M., Chadwell, L. V., Britt, S. G. (1996). Identification of a novel Drosophila opsin reveals specific patterning of the R7 and R8 photoreceptor cells. Neuron 17, 1101–1115. 18. Papatsenko, D., Sheng, G., Desplan, C. (1997). A new rhodopsin in R8 photoreceptors of Drosophila: evidence for coordinate expression with Rh3 in R7 cells. Development 124, 1665–1673. 19. Huber, A., Schulz, S., Bentrop, J., Groell, C., Wolfrum, U., Paulsen, R. (1997). Molecular cloning of Drosophila Rh6 rhodopsin: the visual pigment of a subset of R8 photoreceptor cells. FEBS Lett 406, 6–10.
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41. Fortini, M. E., Rubin, G. M. (1990). Analysis of cis-acting requirements of the Rh3 and Rh4 genes reveals a bipartite organization to rhodopsin promoters in Drosophila melanogaster. Genes Dev 4, 444–463. 42. Tahayato, A., Sonneville, R., Pichaud, F., Wernet, M. F., Papatsenko, D., Beaufils, P., Cook, T., Desplan, C. (2003). Otd/Crx, a dual regulator for the specification of ommatidia subtypes in the Drosophila retina. Dev Cell 5, 391–402. 43. Nathans, J., Merbs, S. L., Sung, C. H., Weitz, C. J., Wang, Y. (1992). Molecular genetics of human visual pigments. Annu Rev Genet 26, 403–424. 44. Smallwood, P. M., Wang, Y., Nathans, J. (2002). Role of a locus control region in the mutually exclusive expression of human red and green cone pigment genes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 99, 1008–1011. 45. Nathans, J. (1999). The evolution and physiology of human color vision: insights from molecular genetic studies of visual pigments. Neuron 24, 299–312. 46. Sheng, G., Thouvenot, E., Schmucker, D., Wilson, D. S., Desplan, C. (1997). Direct regulation of rhodopsin 1 by Pax-6/eyeless in Drosophila: evidence for a conserved function in photoreceptors. Genes Dev 11, 1122–1131. 47. Wernet, M. F., Mazzoni, E. O., Celik, A., Duncan, D. M., Duncan, I., Desplan, C. (2006). Stochastic spineless expression creates the retinal mosaic for colour vision. Nature 440, 174–180. 48. Mikeladze-Dvali, T., Wernet, M. F., Pistillo, D., Mazzoni, E. O., Teleman, A. A., Chen, Y. W., Cohen, S., Desplan, C. (2005). The growth regulators warts/lats and melted interact in a bistable loop to specify opposite fates in Drosophila R8 photoreceptors. Cell 122, 775–787. 49. Justice, R. W., Zilian, O., Woods, D. F., Noll, M., Bryant, P. J. (1995). The Drosophila tumor suppressor gene warts encodes a homolog of human myotonic dystrophy kinase and is required for the control of cell shape and proliferation. Genes Dev 9, 534–546. 50. Xu, T., Wang, W., Zhang, S., Stewart, R. A., Yu, W. (1995). Identifying tumor suppressors in genetic mosaics: the Drosophila lats gene encodes a putative protein kinase. Development 121, 1053–1063. 51. Teleman, A. A., Chen, Y. W., Cohen, S. M. (2005). Drosophila Melted modulates FOXO and TOR activity. Dev Cell 9, 271–281. 52. Mikeladze-Dvali, T., Desplan, C., Pistillo, D. (2005). Flipping coins in the fly retina. Curr Top Dev Biol 69, 1–15. 53. Hedges, S. B. (2002). The origin and evolution of model organisms. Nat Rev Genet 3, 838–849. 54. Nathans, J., Thomas, D., Hogness, D. S. (1986). Molecular genetics of human color vision: the genes encoding blue, green, and red pigments. Science 232, 193–202. 55. Applebury, M. L. (1980). The primary processes of vision: a view from the experimental side. Photochem Photobiol 32, 425–431. 56. Roorda, A., Williams, D. R. (1999). The arrangement of the three cone classes in the living human eye. Nature 397, 520–522. 57. Furukawa, T., Morrow, E. M., Li, T., Davis, F. C., Cepko, C. L. (1999). Retinopathy and attenuated circadian entrainment in Crx-deficient mice. Nat Genet 23, 466–470. 58. Morrow, E. M., Furukawa, T., Raviola, E., Cepko, C. L. (2005). Synaptogenesis and outer segment formation are perturbed in the neural retina of Crx mutant mice. BMC Neurosci 6, 5. 59. Mears, A. J., Kondo, M., Swain, P. K., Takada, Y., Bush, R. A., Saunders, T. L., Sieving, P. A., Swaroop, A. (2001). Nrl is required for rod photoreceptor development. Nat Genet 29, 447–452. 60. Corbo, J. C., Cepko, C. L. (2005). A hybrid photoreceptor expressing both rod and cone genes in a mouse model of enhanced S-cone syndrome. PLoS Genet 1, e11.
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12 INAD Signaling Complex of Drosophila Photoreceptors Armin Huber and Nina E. Meyer CONTENTS Introduction Comparison of Vertebrate and DROSOPHILA Phototransduction Cascades Identification of the INAD Signaling Complex Structure of the INAD Signaling Complex and Binding Specificity Anchoring of the INAD Signaling Complex to the Microvillar Membrane Function of the INAD Signaling Complex Information Transfer from Rhodopsin to the Signaling Complex BY the Visual G Protein Signaling Complexes in Vertebrate Photoreceptor Cells References
INTRODUCTION Phototransduction cascades convert the absorption of a photon into an electrical response of the photoreceptor cells by utilizing G protein-coupled signaling pathways (for reviews, see [1–5]). These pathways have been studied in great detail in photoreceptors of vertebrate and invertebrate model organisms such as bovine, mouse, toad, or Drosophila and squid. The work on these systems has provided much of the knowledge that we currently have about G protein-coupled signal transduction in general, and without doubt it will advance our understanding of these pathways in the future. To fulfill their function as highly efficient and fast light detectors, photoreceptors have optimized their signal transduction cascades toward high sensitivity and speed. Vertebrate as well as invertebrate photoreceptors are able to detect the absorption of a single photon [6, 7]. This requires an extremely high signal-to-noise ratio that can only be ensured when cross-talk from other signaling pathways is avoided and spontaneous activation of the phototransduction cascade is kept at a minimum. One strategy to avoid
From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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cross-talk is to physically separate the phototransduction cascade from other signaling pathways. In vertebrate photoreceptors, this is achieved by sequestering the phototransduction proteins into a specialized cellular compartment, the outer segment of rod or cone photoreceptors, that serves only for the detection of light and is connected to the rest of the cell by a small ciliary stalk. In Drosophila photoreceptors, proteins involved in light detection are also confined to a separate cell compartment, the rhabdomere formed by a densely packed stack of microvilli along one side of the cell. In addition to being confined to the rhabdomere, phototransduction proteins of Drosophila photoreceptors are organized into supramolecular complexes by the scaffolding protein INAD (inactivation no afterpotential D). The identification of the INAD signaling complex in these photoreceptor cells has led to a reevaluation of the principles by which Drosophila phototransduction is activated and regulated. With respect to signaling specificity, it has been suggested that the organization of the phototransduction cascade into signaling complexes avoids cross talk with other signaling cascades [8]. The concept of signaling complexes, in which signaling proteins are permanently linked together, differs fundamentally from a model in which signaling proteins diffuse freely in the photoreceptive membrane and interact with each other by random collisions. The model of freely diffusing signaling components has been established for vertebrate rod photoreceptor cells. In this sensory system, the high concentration of phototransduction proteins in the disk membrane may allow the cascade to operate at sufficient speed and specificity without forming signaling complexes, although some components of this signaling cascade appear to be linked together as well (see “Signalling complexes in vertebrate photoreceptor cells”). The compound eyes of fast-flying insects like Drosophila show a much higher temporal resolution than vertebrate eyes, and their photoreceptors have evolved the fastest G protein-coupled signaling cascades known to date. In Drosophila photoreceptors, the receptor potential can be generated within 20 ms after light stimulation [9]. This is about 10 times faster than in mammalian photoreceptors and about 100 times faster than in toad photoreceptors [3]. Arguably, the assembly of phototransduction proteins into signaling complexes may contribute to the high signaling speed of the cascade by eliminating delays due to the time required for protein diffusion. In this contribution, we first highlight common and discriminative features of the vertebrate and Drosophila phototransduction cascade. We then focus on the INAD signaling complex of Drosophila photoreceptors and finally discuss the assembly of signaling proteins in vertebrate photoreceptors. For a more comprehensive coverage of these topics, refer to excellent reviews on invertebrate photoreception in general [3, 4, 10–15] or on the INAD signaling complex in particular [8, 16–20]. COMPARISON OF VERTEBRATE AND DROSOPHILA PHOTOTRANSDUCTION CASCADES Photoreception in vertebrates and in Drosophila shows common features as well as significant differences. In both visual systems, light is absorbed by the seventransmembrane-receptor rhodopsin, which is present at high concentration in the disk membranes of rod photoreceptor cells or in the microvillar membranes of rhabdomeral photoreceptor cells. The high density of rhodopsin in the light-absorbing compartments
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ensures a high probability of catching a photon and hence a high sensitivity of the photoreceptors. Vertebrate and invertebrate rhodopsins display low but significant sequence identity, for example, 22% amino acid identity between the major Drosophila rhodopsin Rh1 and bovine rhodopsin [21, 22]. It is now generally accepted that all animal rhodopsins evolved from a common ancestor [23]. Conserved amino acids in vertebrate and invertebrate rhodopsins include a lysine in the seventh transmembrane segment that constitutes the chromophore-binding site, serine and threonine residues near the C-terminus that are targets for light-dependent rhodopsin phosphorylation, and consensus sites for N-linked glycosylation near the N-terminus of the protein. Although molecular details in rhodopsin activation and inactivation are markedly different between vertebrates and invertebrates [24, 25], the rhodopsin activation mechanism initiated by conversion of an 11-cis retinal chromophore into its all-trans form follows similar principles as does rhodopsin inactivation by binding of arrestin proteins to the active conformation of the receptor. To transmit the light signal from rhodopsin to photoreceptor ion channels, vertebrates and invertebrates make use of different kinds of G protein-coupled cascades (Fig. 1). Vertebrate rhodopsins activate the visual G protein transducin, which couples to a phosphodiesterase (Fig. 1A). Activation of the phosphodiesterase results in breakdown of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP), which is synthesized by a guanylate cyclase and, in the dark, keeps a fraction of cGMP-gated ion channels in an open state. Thus, light activation of most vertebrate photoreceptors leads to the closure of cGMP-gated ion channels, which results in a hyperpolarization of the cells. In Drosophila, as in most invertebrates, the activated rhodopsin molecule transmits the signal to a heterotrimeric Gq protein consisting of Gαq, Gβe, and Gγe (Fig. 1B). As a result of G protein activation, Gαq couples to the effector enzyme phospholipase Cβ (PLCβ). Activated PLCβ hydrolyzes the membrane phospholipid phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) to form the second messengers diacylglycerol (DAG) and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3). The phototransduction cascade terminates in the opening of cation channels composed of ion channel subunits of the TRP protein family, TRP, TRPL, and possibly TRPγ, which results in the depolarization of the photoreceptor cell membrane. Although the gating mechanism of these TRP channels has not yet been entirely clarified, several lines of evidence suggest that the DAG branch, rather than the IP3 branch of the phosphoinositol signaling pathway activates the ion channels [26]. In both vertebrate and invertebrate photoreceptors, the absorption of a single photon results in the generation of a distinct electrophysiological response of the receptor, a so-called quantum bump. Quantum bumps correspond to the coordinated closure or opening of a defined number of ion channels. The macroscopic response to a stronger light stimulus (i.e., the receptor potential) is achieved by summation of the quantum bumps obtained from more or less simultaneous absorption of many photons. IDENTIFICATION OF THE INAD SIGNALING COMPLEX In the 1970s, Bill Pak and coworkers isolated a number of Drosophila phototransduction mutants that were identified by their altered electrophysiological characteristics in electroretinogram recordings [27, 28]. This approach eventually led to the identification of major players in Drosophila phototransduction such as rhodopsin Rh1 [21, 22] or the
Fig. 1. Comparison of vertebrate and Drosophila phototransduction cascades. A In vertebrate photoreceptors, the G protein transducin couples to a phosphodiesterase (PDE). The active PDE degrades cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP), which is synthesized by a guanylate cyclase (GC) from guanosine triphosphate (GTP). In the dark, the cGMP-gated channels are kept open by cGMP. Light activation of these photoreceptors leads to the closure of the cGMPgated cation channels and thus to a hyperpolarization of the cell membrane. B In Drosophila photoreceptors, the Gq protein activates a phospholipase Cβ (PLCβ), which then hydrolyzes the membrane phospholipid phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) and generates the two second messengers diacylglycerol (DAG) and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3). The phototransduction cascade terminates in the opening of at least two cation channels, TRP (transient receptor potential) and TRPL (TRP-like), which leads to a depolarization of the cell membrane. TRP and TRPL channels may be gated by DAG or by polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), which could be released from DAG by a DAG lipase. The scaffolding protein INAD (inactivation no afterpotential D) organizes phototransduction proteins into a supramolecular complex. The unconventional myosin NINAC (neither inactivation no afterpotential C) may couple this supramolecular complex to the actin cytoskeleton. An eye-specific protein kinase C (ePKC), which is also part of this complex, appears to be involved in response inactivation and light adaptation. Rh rhodopsin, SMC submicrovillar cisternae.
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central effector enzyme PLCβ [29]. Another mutant isolated in this genetic screen was termed inactivation no afterpotential D (inaD). The electroretinogram of this mutant showed inactivation by a strong light stimulus but lacked the afterpotential, a prolonged depolarization after termination of the light stimulus that is observed in wild-type photoreceptors when more than 20% of rhodopsin molecules are activated. The corresponding inaD gene was isolated by a subtractive hybridization screen for eye-enriched complementary DNAs, one of which rescued the inaD phenotype in transgenic Drosophila [30]. The inaD gene encodes a protein of 674 residues with homology to PDZ domain-containing proteins. PDZ domains have been named after the postsynaptic density protein PSD95, Drosophila disks large (Dlg), and the tight-junction protein ZO-1, in which this domain was first identified. Although initially only two PDZ domains were identified in INAD, Tsunoda et al. [31] realized that INAD is a pure scaffolding protein that is composed almost exclusively of five PDZ domains. As a first interaction partner of INAD, one of the two principle light-activated ion channels, TRP, was identified [32]. The binding of TRP to INAD is abolished in the original inaDP215 mutant by a point mutation (M442K) in the third PDZ domain. The existence of a signaling complex in fly photoreceptors was first proposed when coimmunoprecipitation studies with proteins of purified photoreceptor membranes from larger flies revealed that INAD, TRP, PLCβ, and an eye-specific protein kinase C (ePKC) are tethered together [33, 34]. The assembly of these phototransduction proteins was also shown for Drosophila photoreceptors, and a requirement of INAD for the rhabdomeral localization of TRP was demonstrated [35]. The concept of organizing major components of the fly visual transduction cascade into a signaling complex was further established and extended by Tsunoda et al. [31], who demonstrated that INAD functions as a scaffold to which the phototransduction proteins are bound. In a newly generated INAD-null mutant, in which the photoresponse was almost abolished, the signaling complexes were completely lost, and TRP, PLCβ, and ePKC were mislocalized. Besides the major INAD ligands TRP, PLCβ, and ePKC that are present in the complex at about equimolar ratios [33], additional photoreceptor proteins were shown to interact with INAD [35–37]. These proteins are rhodopsin, the second ion channel TRPL, the unconventional myosin NINAC (neither inactivation no afterpotential C), and calmodulin. They are detected in coimmunoprecipitation studies in substoichiometric concentrations, and their localization to the rhabdomere does not depend on the presence of INAD. While binding of the NINAC myosin III to INAD has been reported to be required for proper termination of the visual response [36], the significance of the proposed interaction of rhodopsin, TRPL, and calmodulin with INAD is not clear.
STRUCTURE OF THE INAD SIGNALING COMPLEX AND BINDING SPECIFICITY The three-dimensional structure of PDZ domains was first solved for the third PDZ domain of PSD95 and for the human homolog of the discs-large protein (hDlg) by x-ray diffraction of crystals containing the PDZ domains and short peptides corresponding to the C-terminal region of their targets [38, 39]. The approximately
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90 amino acids of these PDZ domains fold into a six-stranded β-sheet (B1–B6) and two α-helices (A1, A2). PDZ domains typically bind their targets by interaction with a short stretch of amino acids at the very C-terminal end of the proteins. The peptides bind in a groove between the B2 strand and the A2 helix and form an antiparallel β-strand that interacts with the B2 strand by hydrogen bonding. The region between A2 helix and B2 strand contains a conserved R/K-X-X-X-G-L-G-F motif that forms a carboxylatebinding loop that interacts with the free COO− group at the C-terminus of the ligand (for reviews, see [40, 41]). Screening of an oriented peptide library with nine different PDZ domains showed that consensus sequences for PDZ interaction fall into two main categories: (S/T)-XΦ-COOH and Φ-X-Φ-COOH (X is any amino acid and Φ is a hydrophobic amino acid) [42]. Accordingly, PDZ domains have been grouped into type I PDZ domains that bind (S/T)-X-Φ-COOH and type II PDZ domains that bind Φ-X-Φ-COOH. Additional binding motifs that do not fit into these categories have been identified, for example, the motif D/E-X-Φ-COOH in peptides binding to the PDZ domain of neuronal nitric oxide synthase [43] or H-W-C-COOH at the C-terminus of N-type Ca2+ channel that binds to the first PDZ domain of Mint-1 [44]. Due to this heterogeneity in binding motifs, it is not possible to predict from the amino acid sequence alone whether a given photoreceptor protein is a putative ligand for one of the PDZ domains of INAD. For the INAD signaling complex, structural details are only available for the binding of PLCβ to PDZ1 of INAD. The interaction of a heptapeptide corresponding to the C-terminal region of PLCβ with PDZ1 has been studied by crystallography [45]. The binding of this peptide to PDZ1 differs from typical PDZ–ligand binding schemes because it involves a covalent interaction. The crystal structure revealed a disulfide bond between the cysteine residue in the F-C-A-COOH motif of PLCβ and a cysteine in the B2 strand of the PDZ domain, which results in a high-affinity interaction between PLCβ and INAD. The functional significance of this covalent interaction is, however, not clear. The PLCβ homolog of the related fly species Calliphora has no cysteine near the C-terminus (A. Huber and M. Bähner, unpublished), and this PLCβ can be removed from INAD with high salt buffer under nonreducing conditions [33]. Studies using GST (glutathione S-transferase) pull-down assays, coimmunoprecipitation of recombinantly expressed PDZ domains with putative binding partners, yeast two-hybrid assays, and analysis of Drosophila mutants with mutations in specific PDZ domains or ligand-binding domains provided additional insights into the binding partners of each of the five PDZ domains of INAD. At least in vitro, it appears that binding of the various INAD ligands is not restricted to one particular PDZ domain for each target, for example, ePKC, which was originally shown to bind to PDZ4 was found to interact also with PDZ2 and PDZ3 [37, 46]. PLCβ was shown to bind to PDZ1 with its C-terminal binding motif F-C-A-COOH and also to PDZ5 with an internal sequence that overlaps with the G protein-binding domain [47]. In vivo, PLCβ binding to PDZ5 is relevant for PLCβ stability because a point mutation of a conserved glycine in PDZ5 or introduction of a stop codon between PDZ3 and PDZ4 that results in the expression of a truncated INAD significantly reduces the level of PLCβ [31, 48]. TRP that appears to be associated with PDZ3 in vivo [31, 32] was found to interact also with PDZ4 [37]. The additional possible binding partners of INAD, rhodopsin, TRPL, and the myosin III NINAC also interact
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Fig. 2. Model of proposed supercomplexes consisting of several INAD (inactivation no afterpotential D) signaling complex core units. The core units consist of four molecules INAD (shown as broad lines; PDZ domains are numbered 1–5), four TRP (transient receptor potential) subunits that form a functional cation channel, four molecules PLCβ (phospholipase Cβ), and four molecules ePKC (eye-specific protein kinase C). Possible protein–protein interactions that may contribute in the assembly of supercomplexes as discussed in the text are indicated by dotted lines.
with the PDZ domains of INAD in vitro, while the binding of calmodulin was reported to take place in the region between PDZ1 and PDZ2 [37]. Importantly, Xu et al. (1998) provided evidence that INAD molecules can bind to each other via interaction of PDZ domains 3 and 4. This raised the possibility that the INAD signaling core complexes are organized into larger units composed of several ion channels, phospholipases Cβ, and protein kinases C. These supercomplexes are referred to as signalplex or transducisome [16, 37]. A model for the possible organization of these supercomplexes is shown in Fig. 2. In addition to INAD–INAD interactions, the supercomplexes could be generated by the formation of tetrameric TRP ion channels from TRP momomeres of different INAD core complexes or by the simultaneous interaction of PLCβ with PDZ1 and PDZ5 of different INAD molecules. In addition, it has been shown that PLCβ forms homodimers that could tether together two INAD core complexes [45].
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ANCHORING OF THE INAD SIGNALING COMPLEX TO THE MICROVILLAR MEMBRANE Early studies on the INAD signaling complex have revealed that INAD is required for proper localization of its major ligands (TRP, ePKC, and PLCβ) to the rhabdomere as these signaling proteins are mislocalized in inaD mutants and become degraded [16, 31, 35]. But, how is INAD itself anchored to the microvillar membrane? The localization of the INAD signaling complex to the rhabdomere could be achieved by interaction with components of the microvillar membrane or with the microvillar cytoskeleton. Insight into this question came from findings showing that TRP is crucial for anchoring INAD to the rhabdomeral membrane [49, 50]. INAD becomes mislocalized in trp null mutants or in mutants lacking the PDZ-binding site of TRP but not in mutants defective in other INAD ligands. Together with INAD, ePKC and PLCβ are also mislocalized in a trp mutant, and they are still attached to INAD in this mutant, as revealed by coimmunoprecipitation. Since TRP is the only transmembrane protein among the major components of the INAD signaling complex, it seems reasonable to assume that TRP is required for membrane attachment of the complex. However, a substantial amount of the signaling complex (ca. 25%) of INAD [50] remains in the rhabdomeres of trp mutants, suggesting the existence of an additional TRP-independent mechanism for INAD anchorage. The signaling complexes remaining in the rhabdomere of trp mutants may account for the fact that the electrophysiological phenotype of a trp null mutant, in which the receptor potential is generated by TRPL channels, is by far not as severe as in the inaD null mutant, which shows almost no light response [31]. Expression of INAD proteins with mutations in either of its five PDZ domains in CHO (Chinese hamster ovary) cells indicated that PDZ1 is involved in attaching INAD to the cell membrane [50]. Besides its interaction with PLCβ, PDZ1 of INAD was shown to bind to the unconventional myosin III NINAC, which in Drosophila photoreceptors could anchor the signaling complex to the microvillar actin cytoskeleton [36]. More recently, an interaction of TRP (and of TRPL) with the actin-binding protein moesin has been reported, which could represent an additional mechanism for linking the signaling complex to the cytoskeleton [51]. This last interaction is light dependent: Moesin is bound to the ion channels in dark-raised flies and released after 1 h of light adaptation. The dynamic interaction with TRP and TRPL results in a subcellular redistribution of moesin and concomitant rearrangements of the actin cytoskeleton. The question whether the TRP-INAD interaction is necessary for targeting the signaling complex to the rhabdomere or whether TRP and INAD reach the rhabdomere independently of each other and then require the interaction for staying there has also been clarified. In late pupae, at a time when maturation of rhabdomeres is completed and signaling proteins are first synthesized, TRP was found in the rhabdomeres independently of INAD, and INAD likewise reached the rhabdomeres independently of TRP. These findings suggest that the TRP–INAD interaction is necessary for anchoring of the signaling complex but not for its targeting [49, 50]. On the other hand, in wild-type flies the assembly of at least three proteins of the signaling complex (INAD, ePKC, PLCβ) seems to occur before its components have reached the rhabdomere. Evidence for this conclusion comes from experiments, in which INAD is expressed in the photoreceptors under the control of a heat shock promoter. While recovery of the electrophysiological
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response, which indicates the arrival of functional signaling complexes at the rhabdomeral membrane, was first measured 7 h after the heat shock, interaction of the signaling proteins, as determined by coimmunoprecipitation, was detected already 3 h after the activation of INAD expression by heat shock [50]. The preassembly of the signaling complex could ensure that only complete complexes and no stray complex components are present in the rhabdomere. It may also be required for the correct targeting of ePKC and PLCβ to the rhabdomere and thereby reduce the problem of targeting several proteins to the same location to targeting a single unit. The stage at which TRP enters the signaling complex has not been clarified so far.
FUNCTION OF THE INAD SIGNALING COMPLEX As outlined, INAD determines the localization of the essential phototransduction proteins TRP, PLCβ, and ePKC in the microvillar membrane of the rhabdomeres. Concentration of these proteins in a subcellular signaling compartment specialized for phototransduction certainly enhances signaling specificity by avoiding cross talk with other signaling cascades operating in the photoreceptor cell. Whether the association into the macromolecular INAD signaling unit within the microvillar membrane adds further specificity to the phototransduction pathway is questionable because no signaling pathway other than the phototransduction cascade is known to operate in the rhabdomere of mature photoreceptor cells. Most of the rhodopsin molecules are strictly confined to the rhabdomere but are not part of the signaling complex and therefore could potentially cross talk to other pathways if these pathways were present at this subcellular site. The situation is even worse with respect to the visual G protein and the major visual arrestin (Arr2), which are distributed throughout the photoreceptor cell. Immunostaining with antibodies against the visual G protein subunits detected Gαq, Gβ, and Gγ not only in the rhabdomeres but also in the cell bodies and even in the axons of the photoreceptor cells projecting into the optic ganglia [52, 53]. Gαq was shown to translocate light dependently between the rhabdomere and the cell body, thereby reducing its amount in the rhabdomere in light-raised flies [54, 55]. This mechanism may result in long-term adaptation of the photoreceptor cell. Arr2 translocates in the opposite direction: A major fraction of Arr2 is only present in the rhabdomere when the flies are light adapted, whereas in the dark Arr2 is localized in the cell body [56]. These findings suggest that signaling specificity of the Drosophila phototransduction cascade is mainly determined by compartmentalization into the rhabdomere of the receptor rhodopsin, the effector PLCβ, one of the two principle light-activated ion channels, TRP, and the regulatory protein ePKC. Compartmentalization of the last three components is achieved by formation of the INAD signaling complex. The second light-activated ion channel, TRPL, also translocates to the cell body on prolonged illumination [57]. In addition to a function of the INAD signaling complex in signaling specificity, it has been suggested by several authors that the assembly of signaling proteins may enhance signaling speed by reducing or eliminating diffusional delays [16, 31, 33, 58]. The classical inaD mutant, inaDP215, which has a point mutation in the third PDZ domain and fails to bind TRP, displays a defect in response termination [30, 32]. It has been shown
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that this defect results primarily from prolongation of the latencies for quantum bump generation [31], although a change in the shape of the quantum bumps may contribute to the defect also [59]. In any case, these findings suggest that the interaction between TRP and INAD is required for fast kinetics of the photoresponse. However, this conclusion is contradicted by results obtained with mutants expressing a C-terminally truncated TRP channel, TRP∆1272, which lacks the INAD-binding site [49]. Electrophysiological analysis of flies expressing TRP∆1272 at young age, when the TRP channel is still localized to the rhabdomeres, revealed no obvious differences compared to wild-type flies. A more recent article that analyzed the rescue of retinal degeneration in the rdgA mutant by mutations in INAD showed that the constitutive activity of TRP channels observed in the rdgA mutant does not depend on the TRP–INAD interaction [48]. It is possible that the inaDP215 mutation affects the binding of ligands other than TRP, and that this defect rather than the disrupted interaction with TRP is responsible for prolonged response termination. More severe defects in the photoresponse have been described for mutations that disrupt the interaction between PLCβ and INAD. In inaD2 and norpAC1094S, which have a mutation in PDZ2 or in the INAD-binding site of PLCβ, respectively, light sensitivity is reduced, and response latency and kinetics are substantially prolonged [31, 58]. Finally, the linking of TRP and ePKC in the INAD signaling complex may be important for proper deactivation of the visual response. TRP is phosphorylated in vitro by ePKC [60, 61], and mutation of the ePKC phosphorylation site Ser982 to alanine leads to slow deactivation of the visual response similar to that of InaDP215 [62]. In conclusion, it appears that although TRP can be activated independently of INAD, the kinetics of the photoresponse do depend on the correct assembly of the INAD signaling complex or at least on the INAD-dependent recruitment of the signaling components to the rhabdomeral photoreceptive membrane. INFORMATION TRANSFER FROM RHODOPSIN TO THE SIGNALING COMPLEX BY THE VISUAL G PROTEIN In vertebrate as well as in fly photoreceptors rhodopsin is the most abundant protein of the photoreceptive membrane. For the photoreceptors of larger flies (Calliphora), it has been estimated that 3–5 Gαq molecules and the same number of tetrameric TRP channels are present per 100 molecules of rhodopsin [33]. Since the main components of the signaling complex are thought to be present at an equimolar ratio, each tetrameric TRP channel would be associated with four molecules of INAD, PLCβ, and ePKC. A single photoreceptor microvillus harbors about 1,200 rhodopsins, 50 Gαq molecules, and 50 signaling complex core units (each composed of 4 TRP, 4 PLCβ, 4 ePKC, and 4 INAD molecules). The major fraction of rhodopsin is not tethered to the INAD signaling complex. Assuming that all rhodopsins in a microvillus have the same probability to absorb a photon, the activated rhodopsin may be close or relatively far away from the signaling complex. The spatial distance between activated rhodopsin and the complex has to be bridged, a task that is likely to be the function of the visual G protein. In this scheme (Fig. 3), the Gαq subunit would transport the signal by diffusion from activated rhodopsin to the next-available signaling complex. Indeed, it has been shown that Gαq is not permanently associated with the signaling complex but
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Fig. 3. Organization of the phototransduction cascade in Drosophila. The membrane is densely packed with rhodopsin molecules (Rh; ca. 1,200 per microvillus) and several INAD (inactivation no afterpotential D) signaling complex core units are present. The distance between activated rhodopsin and the next INAD signaling complex is presumably bridged by diffusion of the alpha subunit of the visual G protein. Activation of one rhodopsin molecule results in the coordinated gating of, on average, 15 TRP channels, which may be assembled into a supercomplex. Only two of the four subunits of INAD, PLCβ (phospholipase Cβ), and ePKC (eye-specific protein kinase C) per TRP tetramer are shown. NINAC (neither inactivation no afterpotential C).
interacts with PLCβ subunits that are attached to INAD only after G protein activation [63]. The varying distances between an activated rhodopsin and the signaling complex may underlie the observed variability of latencies of single-photon responses, which amount to between 20 and 100 ms [59]. In other words, the latencies may mainly reflect the time required for the shuttling of Gαq from rhodopsin to the signaling complex. In vertebrate photoreceptors, amplification of the signal is achieved at several levels. In this cascade, one activated rhodopsin activates several hundred G proteins. Each G protein activates one phosphodiesterase that hydrolyzes thousands of cGMP molecules, resulting in closure of numerous cGMP-gated ion channels [1, 2]. In sharp contrast, the Drosophila phototransduction cascade shows relatively little amplification at the level of the G protein. Studies of single-photon responses using severe Gαq hypermorphs showed that a reduction of Gαq subunit to 1% of wild-type level had little effect on the size of the quantum bumps [64, 65]. Instead, the frequency at which quantum bumps were generated was decreased dramatically in the Gαq mutant, leading to a more than 1,000-fold reduction in light sensitivity. Interestingly, the latency of the single-photon responses was not altered in the Gαq mutant. These findings suggest that a single G protein that has encountered an activated rhodopsin triggers the single-photon response like an on/of switch [64]. The data also suggest that there is no amplification at the level of the G protein. A more recent analysis of quantum bumps in the Gαq mutant questioned this last conclusion and suggested instead that one activated rhodopsin may activate about five G proteins [66]. In any case, the amplification at this stage is still relatively little when compared to the situation in vertebrate photoreceptors. To achieve the high sensitivity that allows the detection of a single photon by vertebrate as well as by invertebrate photoreceptors, noise resulting from spontaneous activation of
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signaling components has to be minimized. For example, it has been calculated that spontaneous (i.e., light-independent) activation of a given rhodopsin molecule occurs only once in 3,000 years [67]. In vertebrate photoreceptors, in which one rhodopsin activates many G proteins, spontaneous activation of a single G protein may not contribute significantly to background noise. In Drosophila, however, spontaneous activation of one G protein molecule can result in a quantum bump. Although the mechanism is not fully understood, it has been shown that a 2.5-fold excess of the Gβγ subunit over Gαq is required to suppress spontaneous G protein activation in Drosophila photoreceptor cells [68]. The extra Gβγ is not present in the microvillar membrane, where equal amounts of Gβγ and Gαq were found, but it was detected in the soluble fraction. Yet, a reduction of the total amount of Gβ to 50% results in a dramatic increase in the frequency of spontaneous quantum bump generation. The interaction of Gαq with its effector enzyme PLCβ not only activates PLCβ, but it also turns on the guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase) activity of the Gα-subunit. Thus, in Drosophila phototransduction PLCβ acts as a GAP (GTPase activating protein) accelerates that Gαq inactivation [69]. In Drosophila mutants with a reduced amount of PLCβ, the latency of quantum bump generation is highly increased because, on average, it takes much longer before Gαq encounters a PLCβ molecule and becomes inactivated [65, 69]. At the macroscopic level, PLCβ hypomorphs display prolonged activation of the photoresponse. With respect to signal amplification, these results suggest that there is no amplification at this step of the transduction cascade; that is, one activated G protein activates just one PLCβ. In analogy to vertebrate photoreceptors, it has been assumed that the absorption of one photon affects the gating of a large number of light-sensitive ion channels. However, more recent calculations of single-channel conductance of the TRP channels and average size of quantum bumps showed that the simultaneous opening of about 15 channels is sufficient for generating the single-photon response [59]. However, on subsequent activation of (different) rhodopsin molecules, the quantum bump size shows great variability, suggesting that the number of TRP channels that open in response to the absorption of one photon varies as well. An interesting experiment that provides some insight into the relationship between activation of rhodopsin and the number of gated TRP channels was performed by Scott and Zuker [65]. The authors used a calmodulin mutant that has a defect in rhodopsin inactivation. In this mutant, the same rhodopsin activated the cascade again and again, producing a train of quantum bumps. Surprisingly, the variability in the size of these quantum bumps was much smaller than in quantum bumps generated after activation of different rhodopsin molecules. Assuming that the same rhodopsin always activates the same signaling complex, this finding led to the conclusion that a quantum bump represents the output of a localized signaling complex that contains a defined number of ion channels. Variability in quantum bump size would then be due to differences in the composition of individual signaling complexes [65]. SIGNALING COMPLEXES IN VERTEBRATE PHOTORECEPTOR CELLS The cGMP-gated cation channels are the targets of the vertebrate phototransduction cascade, and these channels are closed on light stimulation, which results in hyperpolarization of the photoreceptor membrane. The cGMP-gated ion channels consist of an
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α- and a β-subunit [70]. The β-subunit has a large cytosolic N-terminal domain, which is referred to as the GARP (glutamine acid-rich protein) region. In addition, rod photoreceptors contain two splice variants of soluble GARPs, GARP1 and GARP2. Similar to INAD in Drosophila photoreceptors, the GARP proteins of rod photoreceptors seem to form a scaffold for the assembly of signaling components of the vertebrate photoreceptor [71, 72]. The GARP proteins contain four proline-rich repeats, which serve as binding sites for ligands. The exact composition of the GARP signaling complex is still unclear. Körschen et al. [71] suggested that the α- and the β-subunits of the cGMP-gated ion channel, as well as the guanylate cyclase, the phosphodiesterase, and an ATP-binding cassette transporter (ABCR) interact with GARP. The phosphodiesterase binds to the complex in its activated form and is inhibited by GARP. In addition, the cytoskeletal elements tubulin and actin have been shown to associate with one of the proline-rich repeats of GARP. As the cGMP-gated channel is localized in the plasma membrane of rod outer segments, whereas guanylate cyclase, phosphodiesterase, and ABCR are associated with the disk membranes, the GARP signaling complex has been proposed to bridge the gap between plasma membrane and disk membrane. This hypothesis is in agreement with the subcellular localization of the GARP proteins at the rim region and incisures of disks. In the above cited in vitro study [71], synthetic peptides containing each of the four proline-containing repeat regions were coupled to Sepharose beads and used as an affinity matrix to identify GARP-binding proteins. Poetsch et al. [72] also investigated possible interactions of GARP proteins with various soluble and membrane-bound proteins of rod outer segments. They used highly specific monoclonal antibodies in conjunction with immunoprecipitation, cross-linking, and electrophoretic techniques to identify membrane proteins of the rod outer segment that interact with GARP proteins. They found that the cGMPgated ion channel and soluble GARP proteins specifically associate with peripherin 2-containing oligomeric complexes at the rim region of disk membranes but not with ABCR or guanylate cyclase. In addition, they show that the cGMP-gated ion channel interacts with the Na/Ca-K exchanger present as a dimer in the plasma membrane of the rod outer segment, which is in agreement with earlier studies [73–76]. GARPmediated protein–protein interactions between the channel-exchanger complex in the plasma membrane of rod outer segments and peripherin 2 complexes in the rim region of the disk membrane may play a role in maintaining the spatial arrangement of the disk and plasma membrane in rod outer segments and anchoring the channelexchanger complex in the plasma membrane, preventing it from freely diffusing in the membrane [72]. While the Drosophila INAD signaling complex may play a role in enhancing signaling speed and specificity, the GARP complexes of vertebrate rod photoreceptors have been proposed to function as “adaptational” signaling complexes by inhibiting light-dependently bound phosphodiesterase and thereby preventing high cGMP turnover during daylight, when rod function is saturated [71, 72]. Alternatively, soluble GARP proteins may serve to cap peripherin 2 complexes at the rim region, preventing the C-terminus of peripherin 2 from initiating fusion of the disks with the plasma membrane [72, 77].
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We wish to thank J. Pfannstiel and I. Huber for critical comments on the manuscript. Our work is supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Hu 839/2-4), the German-Israel-Foundation (GIF), and the Hertie-Foundation. REFERENCES 1. Lamb, T. D. (1996). Gain and kinetics of activation in the G-protein cascade of phototransduction. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 93, 566–570. 2. Stryer, L. (1986). Cyclic GMP cascade of vision. Annu. Rev. Neurosci. 9, 87–119. 3. Hardie, R. C., Raghu, P. (2001). Visual transduction in Drosophila. Nature 413, 186–193. 4. Montell, C. (1999). Visual transduction in Drosophila. Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol. 15, 231–268. 5. Koutalos, Y., Yau, K. W. (1996). Regulation of sensitivity in vertebrate rod photoreceptors by calcium. Trends Neurosci. 19, 73–81. 6. Wu, C. F., Pak, W. L. (1975). Quantal basis of photoreceptor spectral sensitivity of Drosophila melanogaster. J. Gen. Physiol. 66, 149–168. 7. Baylor, D. A., Lamb, T. D., Yau, K. W. (1979). Responses of retinal rods to single photons. J. Physiol. 288, 613–634. 8. Tsunoda, S., Sierralta, J., Zuker, C. S. (1998). Specificity in signaling pathways: assembly into multimolecular signaling complexes. Curr. Opin. Genet. Dev. 8, 419–422. 9. Ranganathan, R., Harris, G. L., Stevens, C. F., Zuker, C. S. (1991). A Drosophila mutant defective in extracellular calcium-dependent photoreceptor deactivation and rapid desensitization. Nature 354, 230–232. 10. Zuker, C. S. (1996). The biology of vision of Drosophila. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 93, 571–576. 11. Minke, B., Parnas, M. (2006). Insights on TRP channels from in vivo studies in Drosophila. Annu. Rev. Physiol. 68, 649–684. 12. Minke, B., Hardie, R. C. (2000). Genetic dissection of Drosophila phototransduction. In: Handbook of biological physics, Volume 3: molecular mechanisms in visual transduction (Stavenga, D., DeGrip, W. J., Pugh, E. N., Jr., eds.), pp. 449–525. Elsevier, Amsterdam. 13. Pak, W. L., Leung, H. T. (2003). Genetic approaches to visual transduction in Drosophila melanogaster. Receptors Channels 9, 149–167. 14. Minke, B., Cook, B. (2002). TRP channel proteins and signal transduction. Physiol. Rev. 82, 429–472. 15. Paulsen, R., Bähner, M., Huber, A., Schillo, M., Schulz, S., Wottrich, R., Bentrop, J. (2001). The molecular design of a visual cascade: Molecular stages of phototransduction in Drosophila. In: Vision: the approach of biophysics and neurosciences (Musio, C., ed.), pp. 41–59. World Scientific, Singapore. 16. Tsunoda, S., Zuker, C. S. (1999). The organization of INAD-signaling complexes by a multivalent PDZ domain protein in Drosophila photoreceptor cells ensures sensitivity and speed of signaling. Cell Calcium 26, 165–171. 17. Paulsen, R., Bähner, M., Bentrop, J., Schillo, M., Schulz, S., Huber, A. (2001). The molecular design of a visual cascade: assembly of the Drosophila phototransduction pathway into a supramolecular signaling complex. In: Vision: the approach of biophysics and neurosciences (Musio, C., ed.), pp. 60–73. World Scientific, Singapore. 18. Montell, C. (1998). TRP trapped in fly signaling web. Curr. Opin. Neurobiol. 8, 389–397. 19. Huber, A. (2001). Scaffolding proteins organize multimolecular protein complexes for sensory signal transduction. Eur. J. Neurosci. 14, 769–776. 20. Ranganathan, R., Ross, E. M. (1997). PDZ domain proteins: scaffolds for signaling complexes. Curr. Biol. 7, R770–R773.
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13 Visual Signal Processing in the Inner Retina Botir T. Sagdullaev, Tomomi Ichinose, Erika D. Eggers, and Peter D. Lukasiewicz CONTENTS Introduction Visual Information Is First Processed in the OPL Bipolar Cells Form Parallel Pathways and Provide Excitatory Input to the IPL Functional Stratification of the IPL Synaptic Mechanisms Shape Excitatory Signals in the IPL Presynaptic Inhibition Conclusions References
INTRODUCTION The inner plexiform layer (IPL) is the second synaptic layer of the retina (Fig. 1) and the final stage for processing visual information before it leaves the eye. Visual signals from rod and cone photoreceptors are first processed in the outer plexiform layer (OPL; Fig. 1), where horizontal cells modulate their signaling to bipolar cells. Bipolar cells transmit these signals to the IPL, where amacrine cells shape bipolar cell signaling to ganglion cells. Bipolar cells form parallel sensory pathways that transmit information about specific aspects of the visual world to the IPL. Synaptic interactions between bipolar, amacrine, and ganglion cells in the IPL result in complex processing of the visual signals that are crucial for the detection of motion, contrast, color, and dim illumination. New evidence is starting to reveal how synaptic interactions in the IPL shape these parallel signals. The output of the IPL is then transmitted to distinct ganglion cell types that convey visual signals to different brain regions. This chapter reviews the current knowledge of how the IPL shapes visual signaling.
From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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Fig. 1. A cross-sectional view of retinal layers and the main vertical and lateral signaling pathways. The retina is organized into three cellular layers, rod (R) and cone (C) photoreceptor somas are located in the outer nuclear layer (ONL); horizontal cell (HC), bipolar cell (BC), and amacrine cell (AC) somas are located in the inner nuclear layer (INL); ganglion cell (GC) somas are located in the ganglion cell layer (GCL). Synaptic connections between photoreceptors, bipolar cells, and horizontal cells are made in the outer plexiform layer (OPL). Synaptic connections between bipolar cells, amacrine cells, and ganglion cells are made in the inner plexiform layer (IPL). Vertical signaling pathways are composed of photoreceptors, bipolar cells, and ganglion cells. Two lateral pathways, comprised of horizontal cells in the OPL and amacrine cells in the IPL, modulate the flow of information along the vertical pathway.
VISUAL INFORMATION IS FIRST PROCESSED IN THE OPL Photoreceptors transduce light into electrical signals, which are processed by retinal interneurons before being sent to the brain. In the first synaptic layer, horizontal cells make synaptic contacts with photoreceptor terminals (Fig. 1). One outcome of this interaction is the establishment of an antagonistic center/surround receptive field organization, which can be revealed by stimulating the retina with light spots of different sizes. Illumination of the receptive field center with a small spot of light alters the activity of photoreceptors, which integrate inputs over small areas. Illumination of the larger receptive field surround alters the activity of horizontal cells, which feed back to the photoreceptor, antagonizing the effects of center illumination [1]. The antagonistic center/surround organization of receptive field is a fundamental feature of bipolar and ganglion cells [2, 3]. In the retina, this receptive field organization contributes to contrast perception, edge detection, and color processing [4, 5]. Additional center-surround signal processing also occurs in the IPL, as described next. BIPOLAR CELLS FORM PARALLEL PATHWAYS AND PROVIDE EXCITATORY INPUT TO THE IPL At the OPL, the processed photoreceptor output is relayed to the IPL by a variety of bipolar cell types that form parallel signaling pathways (reviewed in [6, 7]). Excitatory inputs to the IPL originate from the two main functional classes, ON and OFF bipolar cells. ON bipolar cells depolarize in response to increasing illumination within their receptive field centers, and OFF bipolar cells depolarize in response to decreasing illumination within their receptive field centers. The distinct responses of
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Fig. 2. Bipolar cells form parallel retinal signaling pathways. Vertical view drawings of neurobiotin stained bipolar cells from rat retina illustrate distinct morphological subtypes. A similar diversity of bipolar cells exists in retinas of other mammalian and cold-blooded vertebrates. The axon terminals stratify at different depths of the inner plexiform layer (IPL). ON bipolar cells have axons that terminate in the inner half of the IPL (ON sublamina), and OFF bipolar cells have axons that terminate in the outer half of the IPL (OFF sublamina). Rod bipolar cell (RB) dendrites exclusively contact rods. The remaining cone bipolar cells (CB) only contact cones. GCL ganglion cell layer, INL inner nuclear layer, OPL outer plexiform layer (Used with permission of the American Physiological Society, from [47].)
ON and OFF bipolar cells are determined by separate classes of glutamate receptors present on their dendrites. Glutamate is continuously released by photoreceptors in the dark and depolarizes OFF bipolar cells by activating α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4isoxazol-propionic acid (AMPA) and kainate types of ionotropic glutamate receptors on their dendritic processes [8, 9]. ON bipolar cells, by contrast, are hyperpolarized by glutamate that activates dendritic metabotropic mGluR6 (metabotropic glutamate receptor 6) receptors [10, 11]. In the light, when glutamate release is decreased, ON bipolar cells depolarize, and OFF bipolar cells hyperpolarize. These broad ON and OFF bipolar cell classes are divided further into several subtypes of ON and OFF bipolar cells (reviewed in [6]). In mammalian retina, at least nine morphological classes of ON and OFF bipolar cells receive input from cones, and one class receives input exclusively from rods (Fig. 2). A similar variety of ON and OFF bipolar cells exists in salamander; however, these bipolar cells receive mixed inputs and are either cone or rod dominant [12]. The morphological subtypes of ON and OFF bipolar cells have unique functions. In mammals, ON rod bipolar cells contact rods exclusively and transmit rod signals to the IPL. The remaining bipolar cell types relay different cone signals to the IPL. Some types of cone bipolar cells relay color information between cones and ganglion cells. For instance, midget bipolar cells comprise the red-green signaling pathway and transmit red and green spectral information. The blue cone bipolar cells receive input exclusively from blue cones and comprise the blue pathway. Another cone bipolar cell class, called diffuse bipolar cells, transmits luminosity information without encoding spectral information (“color blind”). The electrical responses of separate bipolar cell classes to photoreceptor input are distinct, consistent with the notion that bipolar cells separate the visual input into parallel signals. How is the photoreceptor input separated into different signals? Distinct gluta-
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Fig. 3. Photoreceptor inputs are differentially filtered by bipolar cell glutamate receptors. A Schematic showing b2 and b3 bipolar cells contacting a single cone. B Depolarization of the cone elicited responses in b2 and b3 bipolar cells that were simultaneously recorded (upper panel). Scaled versions of the simultaneously recorded responses (lower panel) illustrate the difference in response time course, which is attributable to differential filtering by the b2 and b3 bipolar cell synapses. (Panel B is reprinted from [8], with permission from Elsevier.)
mate receptor subtypes differentially filter photoreceptor input in distinct morphological bipolar cell types to transmit different features of the visual input, as illustrated in Fig. 3 [8–10]. This filtering causes some bipolar cells to respond transiently and other bipolar cells to respond in a sustained fashion, enabling separate bipolar cells to extract distinct temporal and spatial features of the visual input. Further separation of color and luminosity information also occurs by distinct bipolar cells [13]. These morphologically and functionally distinct bipolar cell types transmit different representations of the visual scene to the IPL for additional processing [14]. FUNCTIONAL STRATIFICATION OF THE IPL Bipolar cells convey different representations of photoreceptor input to the IPL by slow, graded potentials. When the ON and OFF classes of bipolar cells are depolarized by increments or decrements of illumination, respectively, they release glutamate, which excites postsynaptic ganglion cells and amacrine cells. The excitatory output of each bipolar cell class is shaped by amacrine cell synaptic inputs to bipolar cell terminals, as described in detail, the section on Presynaptic Inhibition. Additional signal processing, attributable to amacrine and ganglion cell interactions, also occurs in the IPL, before visual information is sent to the higher visual centers. ON and OFF Response Stratification The axon terminals of ON and OFF bipolar cells stratify in two distinct sublaminae of the IPL, where they contact the dendrites of ON and OFF ganglion and amacrine cells. These two strata are where synaptic connections are made by the pathways that encode
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visual responses to increments and decrements in intensity across the visual scene (Fig. 2). The outer half of the IPL encodes responses to decrements (the OFF sublaminae), and the inner half encodes responses to increments in illumination (the ON sublaminae) [15, 16]. In the ON sublaminae, synaptic contacts are made between bipolar and ganglion cells that are excited by increments of illumination of their receptive field centers. In the OFF sublaminae, synaptic connections are made between bipolar and ganglion cells that are excited by decrements of illumination of their receptive field centers. The ON and OFF sublaminae are further divided into ten morphological strata (see Fig. 2) that are functionally distinct and encode different representations of the visual scene [14]. Sustained and Transient Response Stratification Some retinal neurons generate brisk, transient responses to continuous visual stimulation, while others maintain their activity for the duration of the stimulus. These transient and sustained cell classes are believed to play crucial roles in encoding the temporal and spatial features of the visual world and represent additional parallel sensory channels in the retina. A major functional subdivision of the ON and OFF sublaminae is the sustained and transient response stratification that occurs in each sublaminae, suggesting that there are transient and sustained responding subtypes of the major ON and OFF classes of retinal neurons. Sustained and transient strata were first described in turtle retina [17] and subsequently confirmed in other species [10, 12, 14]. Sustained and transient bipolar cells provide the inputs to these IPL strata [10]. Transient bipolar cell axon terminals contact transient amacrine and ganglion cell processes in the mid-IPL, and sustained bipolar cells axon terminals contact the sustained responding amacrine and ganglion cells near the inner and outer margins of the IPL [10, 12, 18]. SYNAPTIC MECHANISMS SHAPE EXCITATORY SIGNALS IN THE IPL The functional stratification of the IPL suggests that distinct bipolar cells generate sustained and transient responses. Wunk and Werblin [19] suggest that the separation of sustained and transient visual signals occurs in the IPL, where synaptic interactions generate sustained and transient bipolar cell outputs. However, subsequent work suggests that sustained and transient visual signals are generated in the OPL at the dendrites of different bipolar cell subtypes, attributable to the filtering of distinct glutamate receptors [9, 10]. Although the main signal separation occurs in the OPL, additional refinement of sustained and transient signals takes place in the IPL. Glutamate release from bipolar cells is truncated by inhibitory amacrine cell input to shape the time course of transient excitatory responses in ganglion cells [20–22]. As noted in section, Synaptic Mechanisms Shape Excitatory Signals in the IPL, transient ganglion cell responses are also shaped by other IPL synaptic mechanisms (see Fig. 4B), such as glutamate uptake by transporters [23] and desensitizing glutamate receptors [24]. Glutamate Release Is Tonic and Graded Since bipolar cells do not use action potentials, but use slow graded depolarizations to signal, glutamate release is graded and tonic [25, 26]. The release machinery in bipolar cells is optimized for sustained glutamate release. The L-type calcium channels, present
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Fig. 4. A A bipolar cell terminal illustrating the processes that contribute to tonic glutamate release. Tonic release is attributed to sustained, graded depolarizations, prolonged calcium influx through L-type calcium channels, and a large pool of ribbon-associated vesicles. B A bipolar cell terminal illustrating the synaptic mechanisms that shape excitatory signaling to ganglion cells. Transporters limit excitatory signaling by removing glutamate from the synapse. Desensitizing postsynaptic glutamate receptors (X) limit responses to sustained glutamate release. Glutamate release may be reduced by the activation of presynaptic metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluR) or the activation of presynaptic γ-aminobutyric acid A (GABAA) and GABAC receptors.
in bipolar terminals, open in response to graded depolarization and mediate a sustained calcium influx that elicits tonic glutamate release (Fig. 4A). Specialized structures called synaptic ribbons are located at release zones and contain large numbers of tethered, glutamate-filled vesicles (Fig. 4A) that mediate sustained signaling (for review, see [27]). While tonic glutamate release is tailored for graded signaling to ganglion cells, there are several challenges that this signaling poses. How is the sustained signal rapidly terminated? Do postsynaptic glutamate receptors desensitize to tonic glutamate release? These mechanisms are considered in more detail. Transporters Terminate Excitatory Signaling to Ganglion Cells In most parts of the central nervous system (CNS), synaptic responses are terminated by either the chemical degradation of transmitter or, in case of glutamate, by its rapid diffusion from the synaptic cleft [28, 29]. However, at bipolar-to-ganglion cell synapses [23, 30], and other specialized synapses in the CNS [31–33], excitation is terminated by the active clearance of glutamate by transporters into surrounding neurons and glia. Glutamate transporters shape ganglion cell excitatory responses (Fig. 4B). Blockade of glutamate transporters in the IPL enhances and prolongs glutamate signaling to ganglion cells, indicating that transporters limit the amplitude and time course of ganglion cell excitation [23]. Postsynaptic Glutamate Receptor Properties Shape Ganglion Cell Excitation Glutamate receptors on ganglion cells are exposed to sustained, elevated glutamate concentrations, attributable to sustained light-evoked release and slow clearance by
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transporters (compared to diffusion). Glutamate activates both AMPA and NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) receptors on ganglion cells. AMPA receptors desensitize to sustained activation by glutamate (Fig. 4B), responding transiently to maintained stimuli [34]. When AMPA receptor desensitization is reduced in ganglion cells, either pharmacologically or by holding the cells at positive potentials, excitatory light responses are enhanced, suggesting that AMPA receptor desensitization shapes ganglion cell excitatory responses [23, 24]. Both AMPA receptor desensitization and glutamate uptake limit ganglion cell excitation, but they do so in distinct ways. Glutamate uptake limits the time course of excitation, and receptor desensitization limits the amplitude of the late phase of excitation [23]. Modulating Glutamate Release Shapes Excitatory Responses Several mechanisms that modulate glutamate release from bipolar cells control excitatory signaling to ganglion cells. These mechanisms include autoinhibitory mechanisms by which glutamate and protons that are released from exocytosed vesicles feed back to limit glutamate release [35–37]. Glutamate limits release by activating metabotropic glutamate receptors, and protons limit release by inhibiting calcium influx (Fig. 4B). Also, as described next, presynaptic inhibition by amacrine cells also limits the probability of glutamate release [20, 38]. Amacrine Cells Mediate Inhibition in the IPL While excitatory input to ganglion cells comes almost exclusively from bipolar cells, inhibitory signals in the IPL are mediated by amacrine cells. Amacrine cells are the most diverse class of retinal interneurons (Fig. 5). They are morphologically and functionally distinct, with different sets of neurotransmitters and receptors. Amacrine cells, like ganglion cells, are excited by bipolar cells. They mediate inhibition by releasing either γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) or glycine onto their postsynaptic targets, which include ganglion cell dendrites, bipolar cell axon terminals, and other amacrine cells. Approximately 50% of amacrine cells are GABAergic, and 50% are glycinergic. Ganglion cells receive mainly amacrine cell input (Masland 2001), underscoring the importance of inhibition in shaping the output of the retina. Bipolar cell terminals are inhibited by presynaptic amacrine cell inputs, controlling glutamate release and excitatory signaling to ganglion cells. Amacrine cells also inhibit other amacrine cells, resulting in complex serial, inhibitory synaptic interactions [39–41]. There is also a population of excitatory amacrine cells called starburst amacrine cells, but their role in visual signal processing in adult animals remains unclear (reviewed in [42]) and is considered in the section, Directional-Selective Ganglion Cells. There are two fundamental, morphological classes of amacrine cells, narrow field and wide field, named for the extent of their processes (Fig. 5). Wide-field amacrine cells are composed of many functional and neurochemical (~15) subtypes [6]. However, they share the common attribute of signaling over relatively long distances, usually confined to specific IPL strata. The narrow-field amacrine cell class is also composed of many subtypes that mediate local signaling. Another trait of narrow-field amacrine cells is that they often signal between strata, mediating vertical interaction across different layers within the IPL. Thus, communication between strata that represent distinct functional channels is mediated by narrow-field amacrine cells [43].
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Fig. 5. The major types of amacrine cells in mammalian retina are shown. Amacrine cells comprise the most diverse class of retinal neurons. This illustrates amacrine cells that were morphologically identified in rabbit retina. Narrow-field amacrine cells are shown in the top row, and wide-field amacrine cells are shown in the lower two rows. (Reprinted from [73], with permission from Elsevier.)
PRESYNAPTIC INHIBITION Presynaptic inhibition of bipolar cell terminals by amacrine cells exists in two general forms and contributes to the temporal and spatial properties of visual processing. Local presynaptic inhibition, also called feedback inhibition, mediated by reciprocal synapses between bipolar and amacrine cells shapes the time course [20] and extent of glutamate release [22]. Lateral inhibition, mediated by long-distance presynaptic inhibitory signaling from amacrine cells, contributes to the antagonistic receptive field surround of ganglion cells [44–46]. Asymmetric Presynaptic Inhibition Both ON and OFF bipolar cells receive presynaptic input from amacrine cells, suggesting that signaling to ON and OFF ganglion cells is shaped by presynaptic inhibition. However, presynaptic inhibition differentially shapes ON and OFF pathway signaling in the IPL [22]. This was demonstrated by eliminating the main type of presynaptic inhibition to bipolar cells. When GABAC receptor-mediated presynaptic inhibition was eliminated, Sagdullaev and colleagues showed that ON but not OFF ganglion cell responses were greatly enhanced, suggesting that presynaptic inhibition was asymmetric (Fig. 6). Electrophysiological measurements of light- and electrically evoked excitation to ganglion cells showed that presynaptic inhibition affected the dynamic response ranges in ON ganglion cells by limiting glutamate release from ON but not OFF bipolar cells. Presynaptic inhibition of ON bipolar cells modulates the dynamic response range by limiting the extent of glutamate spillover and activation of perisynaptic NMDA receptors (Fig. 6). Spillover transmission occurs at some synapses, including ON ganglion cells, when glutamate diffuses from the release sites and activates perisynaptic receptors. Recent evidence suggests that spillover activation of NMDA receptors occurs only at ON ganglion cells (Fig. 7) [22]. When glutamate release is increased or glutamate uptake is blocked, glutamate concentrations are increased, and spillover is enhanced. Sagdullaev and colleagues found that manipulations that increased spillover enhanced the activation of NMDA receptors in ON but not OFF ganglion cells. These findings suggest another
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asymmetry is present in the IPL; NMDA receptors are located perisynaptically in ON and synaptically in OFF ganglion cell synapses (Fig. 6). Presynaptic Inhibition Is Filtered by GABA Receptor Properties GABAergic inhibition occurs at the terminals of all classes of bipolar cell. Pharmacological studies indicated that two types of ionotropic GABA receptors, GABAA and GABAC receptors, are present on bipolar terminals [47, 48]. Pharmacologically isolated GABAA and GABAC receptors mediate distinct inhibitory responses to applied GABA [48]. GABAA receptor-mediated responses rise and decay rapidly, while GABAC receptor-mediated responses rise and decay slowly (Fig. 7A). Do these distinct GABA receptor properties shape light-evoked inhibitory responses? We found that these distinct GABA receptors temporally filter synaptic input to bipolar cells [41]. Recordings of light-evoked inhibitory postsynaptic currents (L-IPSCs) from rod bipolar cells demonstrate that slowly responding GABAC receptors prolong the response decay (Fig. 7B). By contrast, the rapidly activating and decaying GABAA receptors (Fig. 7B) determine the rise time and peak amplitude of the response [49]. GABA application experiments indicated that diverse classes of bipolar cells have different proportions of GABA A and GABAC receptors [47, 48], suggesting that light-evoked inhibition is differentially filtered at different classes of bipolar cells. Eggers and colleagues [50] showed that the L-IPSC time course varied in different bipolar cell classes, depending on the relative contributions of GABAA and GABAC receptors. These findings suggest that GABAergic L-IPSCs are temporally filtered by distinct receptors; GABAC receptor-mediated L-IPSCs are prolonged, and GABAA receptor-mediated L-IPSCs are brief. GABAergic L-IPSCs recorded in rod bipolar cells decay slowly because they are dominated by GABAC receptors, while OFF cone bipolar cell L-IPSCs decayed rapidly, reflecting a larger GABAA receptor contribution. These observations demonstrate that different GABA receptor complements differentially tune inhibition for specific bipolar cell types. These two forms of presynaptic inhibition limit bipolar cell outputs in distinct ways. Slow GABAC receptors limit the extent of glutamate release and the duration excitatory responses in amacrine and ganglion cells. Fast GABAA receptors, by contrast, limit the initial glutamate release and the initial postsynaptic excitatory responses. Different complements of GABAA and GABAC receptors also appear to match the time course of inhibition with the time course of photoreceptor input to different bipolar cells. Rod bipolar cells receive prolonged excitatory input from rod photoreceptors and prolonged presynaptic inhibition mediated by GABAC receptors. OFF cone bipolar cells receive brisk excitatory input from cone photoreceptors and fast presynaptic inhibition mediated by GABAA receptors. Presynaptic Inhibition May Be Shaped by Transmitter Release Differences It is not known whether GABAA and GABAC receptors receive input from similar or distinct presynaptic amacrine cell inputs. To address this issue, Eggers and colleagues [49] used deconvolution analysis [51] to estimate the GABA release time courses associated with GABAA and GABAC receptor-mediated light-evoked currents. They found that the apparent release time courses for inputs to GABAA and GABAC receptor-containing synapses were distinct. Although this finding is consistent with
Fig. 6. Asymmetric presynaptic inhibition differentially affects ON and OFF pathway signaling. Raster plots (upper traces) and peristimulus time histograms (PSTHs; middle) illustrating spontaneous and light-evoked firing in WT (Ai) and GABACR null (Null) (Aii) ON-center ganglion cells (GCs); and WT (Bi) and Null (Bii) OFF GCs. The lower traces in (A) and (B) indicate the duration of the stimuli, a bright, centered spot for ON GCs and a dark, centered spot for OFF GCs, presented on an adapting background. Spontaneous and light-evoked firing rates were significantly increased only in ON GCs in Null mice compared to WT mice. C The asymmetric presynaptic inhibition of glutamate release from bipolar cells (BCs) and spillover activation of postsynaptic NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) receptors (NMDARs)on GCs. Ci GABAergic feedback from amacrine cells (ACs) limits glutamate release from ON bipolar cells and limits spillover activation of perisynaptic (NMDARs) on ON GCs dendrites. GABACR-mediated negative feedback confines synaptic transmission and extends the dynamic response range of ON GCs. Cii When GABACR-mediated inhibition is eliminated, the modulation of the excitatory transmission is disrupted and glutamate release is enhanced. D In the OFF pathway, the activation of synaptically localized AMPARs and NMDARs on OFF GC dendrites is not limited by GABACR-mediated feedback to OFF BCs. The output gain of OFF GCs is high because their excitatory inputs are not appreciably modulated by presynaptic inhibition. For simplicity, only the inhibitory feedback component of a reciprocal synapse between a BC and an AC is shown. GABA γ-aminobutyric acid RGC retinal ganglion cell (Reprinted from [22], with permission from Elsevier.)
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Fig. 7. γ-Aminobutyric acid- (GABA-) and light-evoked inhibition at bipolar cell axon terminals is shaped by GABA receptor properties. A Whole-cell recording of currents in response to GABA puffed onto bipolar cell axon terminals. B GABAA and GABAC receptor-mediated currents have distinct time courses. GABAA receptor-mediated responses were isolated using the GABAC receptor antagonist 1,2,5,6-Tetrahydropyridin-4-yl methylphosphinic acid (TPMPA) and GABAC receptor-mediated responses were isolated using the GABAA receptor antagonist bicuculline. A cocktail of glycine and glutamate receptor antagonists was used to isolate the GABA receptor response components. C Light stimulation and recording procedure for measuring GABAergic L-IPSCs in bipolar cells. D. Pharmacologically isolated GABAA- and GABAC-receptor mediated light-evoked inhibitory postsynaptic currents (L-IPSCs) recorded from a bipolar cell, scaled to the same peak amplitude to compare response kinetics. Similar to the puff-evoked responses, the GABAA receptor-mediated L-IPSC exhibited fast rise and decay times, while the GABAC receptor-mediated L-IPSC exhibited slow rise and decay times. GABA-mediated L-IPSCs were isolated by pharmacologically blocking glycine receptors.
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distinct inputs, the release time course sensed by GABAC receptors may be distorted by the saturation and slow deactivation of these receptors, obscuring a common input. Inspection of the apparent GABAC receptor release function reveals a prolonged tail, not observed with GABAA receptors, which is consistent with the spillover activation of GABAC receptors. Because GABAC receptors are more sensitive to GABA than GABAA receptors, they may be activated by low concentrations of GABA that spill over from neighboring release sites. When GABA spillover is enhanced, by either reducing uptake or enhancing release, the GABAC, but not the GABAA, receptor-mediated component of light-evoked inhibition is selectively increased [52]. GABA spillover leads to stronger GABACR-mediated presynaptic inhibition, larger reductions in glutamate release, and reduced ganglion cell excitation [52]. Taken together, these data suggest that, in addition to slow receptor kinetics of GABACRs, spillover contributes to the prolonged GABACRmediated responses. Glycine, the Other Inhibitory Transmitter About one half of all amacrine cells are glycinergic, and there are eight types of glycinergic amacrine cells [53]. Anatomical evidence suggests that rod and OFF cone bipolar cells receive input from glycinergic amacrine cells [54, 55]. Physiological recordings of spontaneous [56] and light-evoked [74] glycinergic inhibitory currents have shown that presynaptic inhibition was most prominent in OFF cone bipolar cells and was also observed in rod bipolar cells, but not in ON cone bipolar cells. Slow rod signals are transmitted from rod bipolar cells to OFF bipolar cell terminals by AII (or rod) amacrine cells. This light-evoked presynaptic inhibition is slow, matches the time course of rod signaling, and is mediated by glycine [74]. There is an apparent mismatch between the slow L-IPSC time course and fast kinetics of the glycine receptors [56]. This discrepancy can be reconciled when one considers that the time course of glycine release from AII amacrine cells is likely to be sustained, similar to its sustained light-evoked depolarization [57, 58]. Thus, the time course of glycinergic inhibition is matched to the slow rod signal time course, but the time course is determined by transmitter release and not receptor properties. Lateral Versus Vertical Inhibitory Pathways in the IPL: The Story of Two Inhibitory Neurotransmitters Why does the IPL utilize two inhibitory transmitters, GABA and glycine? Although both of these transmitters gate chloride channels, these two transmitters are utilized by distinct signaling pathways. In mammalian retina, GABAergic amacrine cells have wide-field processes and are confined to the same laminae and signal laterally [6]. By contrast, the processes of glycinergic amacrine cells have narrow extents, but are typically multistratified and signal vertically between different laminae [6, 53]. GABAergic lateral inhibition plays a critical role in the processing of spatial information. Wide-field GABAergic amacrine cells contribute to the receptive field surround of ganglion cells [44, 45]. Cook and McReynolds [44] suggested that amacrine cell surround input mediates a finer spatial filtering that occurs after the coarser spatial filtering in the OPL, attributed to horizontal cell surround signaling. Wide-field GABAergic amacrine
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cells synapse onto bipolar cell terminals and ganglion cell dendrites. Thus, there are two IPL surround signaling pathways: direct GABAergic inhibition of ganglion cells [44] and presynaptic GABAergic inhibition that limits bipolar cell signaling to ganglion cells [45, 46]. It remains to be seen whether similar or different classes of amacrine cells mediate pre- and postsynaptic wide-field inhibition. Glycinergic amacrine cells have narrow-field processes that extend vertically across the IPL and mediate signaling between different sublamina [14, 43]. The best-described glycinergic amacrine cell is the AII or rod amacrine cell. Rod bipolar cells do not directly contact ganglion cells. Instead, they signal through an AII amacrine cell intermediate that contacts ON and OFF cone bipolar cells, which in turn signal ganglion cells. The AII amacrine splits the ON rod bipolar cell input into an inhibitory glycinergic output to OFF cone bipolar cell terminals [59] and excitatory, electrical output to ON cone bipolar cell terminals, mediated by gap junctional connections [60]. In contrast to wide-field GABAergic amacrine cells that signal laterally within IPL strata, narrow-field glycinergic cells signal vertically between IPL strata. Parallel Ganglion Cell Output Pathways Parallel bipolar cell-signaling pathways relay different aspects of the visual signal to 10–15 morphological types of ganglion cells [6, 61]. As noted, amacrine cells modulate the information transferred between bipolar and ganglion cells. This information is then sent by distinct ganglion cells that comprise parallel signal pathways to different parts of the brain. Like bipolar cells, ganglion cells are divided into two major ON and OFF classes, which convey information about light increments and decrements in their receptive field’s center, respectively, and both classes possess antagonistic surrounds [2]. ON and OFF types can be further divided into X and Y cells that summate inputs linearly and nonlinearly, respectively [62]. They respond to illumination in either a sustained (X) or transient (Y) fashion, similar to bipolar cells. In cat retina, these Y and X ganglion cell classes form distinct morphological types, α- and β-ganglion cells, respectively [63]. Transient bipolar cell terminals and Y ganglion cell dendrites costratify in the middle IPL strata, while sustained bipolar cell terminals and X ganglion cell dendrites costratify at the inner- and outermost strata of the IPL. The X and Y ganglion cells are similar to the parvo (P) and magno (M) classes of primate ganglion cells, which correspond to the morphological midget and parasol classes, respectively (reviewed in [64]). Parvo ganglion cells transmit visual information about form and color (what is it?), while magno ganglion cells transmit information about motion and spatial relationship (where is it?) to the lateral geniculate nucleus (reviewed in [65]). Ganglion Cells Encode Color Information Midget ganglion cells encode color information and relay it to the brain. Like the midget bipolar cells, midget ganglion cells comprise the red-green pathway. This redgreen color opponent pathway is most pronounced in the central retina and is attributed to the unique circuitry of the midget system. Their center response is determined by a strong single red or green cone input, while the surround is determined by weak mixed cone inputs, resulting in color opponency. A unique bistratified ganglion cell that is excited by blue light, via blue bipolar cells, makes contacts at the inner IPL, and that
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is inhibited by yellow light, via red and green signaling bipolar cells, that makes contacts at the outer IPL to process blue-yellow color opponency. Directional-Selective Ganglion Cells A subset of ganglion cells responds to the movement of images, but only in preferred directions. These ganglion cells are called directionally selective (D-S) cells and are a favorite of retinal electrophysiologists because they serve as model output cells that reveal the complexity of synaptic computation in the IPL. Although D-S ganglion cells were first described by Barlow and colleagues [66] over 40 years ago, we still do not know the synaptic interactions responsible for their behavior. What is known is that image motion in the preferred direction excites D-S cells, which are then inhibited after a time lag. By contrast, image motion in the null direction elicits a long-lasting inhibition that shunts the excitatory input, resulting in no response. One study suggested that this D-S computation occurs at the level of the ganglion cell dendrites, which integrate excitatory and inhibitory inputs [67]. However, other studies challenged this notion and suggested that the input neurons to the D-S cells are themselves directionally selective [68–70]. One point of agreement between most studies is that starburst amacrine cells are critical for D-S responses in ganglion cells. The genetic ablation of starburst cells, which provide both cholinergic and GABAergic input to D-S cells, results in the elimination D-S responses [71]. Thus, starburst amacrine cells are most likely critical players in the formation of D-S ganglion cell response, but precise roles of presynaptic and postsynaptic computations still need to be worked out. Intrinsically Photosensitive Ganglion Cells Recent work revealed that 1–3% of ganglion cells contain the photopigment melanopsin and can directly sense light [72]. These ganglion cells respond to light even when rod and cone inputs are disrupted, consistent with the notion that they are intrinsically photosensitive. Intrinsic light responses are long lasting and activated by moderateto-bright light intensities. This class of ganglion cell also receives input from highersensitivity rod and cone synaptic pathways, which elicit responses by these neurons at lower light intensities. These ganglion cells have extensive dendritic fields that completely tile the retina, allowing this system to respond to light impinging on any part of the retina. Intrinsically photosensitive ganglion cells project to areas of the brain that control pupillary reflexes and the light entrainment of circadian rhythms. CONCLUSIONS The IPL is a critical stage in visual processing. Parallel streams of information arrive in the IPL via distinct bipolar cell types. This information is then further shaped by synaptic interaction between inhibitory amacrine cells with the bipolar cell inputs and ganglion cell outputs of the IPL. The ability to detect the direction of movement and certain colors occurs because of processing in the IPL. Many questions about IPL processing still remain. The challenge of future research is to apply new techniques such as molecular genetic approaches of disrupting circuitry and powerful multielectrode recording techniques to gain additional insights into IPL function.
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14 Human Cone Spectral Sensitivities and Color Vision Deficiencies Andrew Stockman and Lindsay T. Sharpe CONTENTS Introduction Cone Spectral Sensitivities Factors that Influence Spectral Sensitivity Congenital Color Vision Deficiencies Conclusions References
INTRODUCTION Overview A precise knowledge of the spectral sensitivities of the human cones is essential for the understanding and modeling of both normal and defective color vision. Here, we discuss cone spectral sensitivities, their relationship to color matching, and their derivation from psychophysical measurements obtained from normal trichromatic, dichromatic and monochromatic observers. We present a consistent set of mean 2-deg and 10-deg cone fundamentals based on the work of Stockman, Sharpe and Fach [1] and Stockman and Sharpe [2]. Along with the associated lens and macular pigment and photopigment templates, these can be used to model color vision at the cornea and retina and to account for individual differences. The common forms of congenital color vision deficiencies are due to alterations to the spectral sensitivities of the cones, or the loss of one or more cone photopigments. We consider these deficits, their symptoms and diagnosis. Transduction Human spectral sensitivity is determined at the very first step in the phototransduction cascade by the energy required to isomerize the visual chromophore in the rod and cone photoreceptors from 11-cis retinal to all-trans retinal. This isomerization triggers the rapid conformational change of the G protein-coupled-receptor-protein rhodopsin into the activated photoproduct, metarhodopsin II, which then activates transducin, the G protein molecule, by initiating the separation of the α-transducin from the trimer (see [3–8]). From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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The isomerization of the chromophore is energized by the absorption of a photon. The likelihood that a given photon will produce an isomerization depends on how closely its energy matches the energy required for the transition. Although the same chromophore is found in all the human photopigments, the isomerization energy is modified by its environment and, in particular, the identity of key amino acids in the parts of the opsin molecule that surround the chromophore. These modify the isomerization energy and thus the spectral sensitivity of the photoreceptor (for reviews of spectral tuning, see [9–11]). In most observers with normal color vision, there are four photoreceptor classes: three types of cone photoreceptors, which are referred to as long-, middle-, and short-wavelength sensitive (L, M, and S), and a single type of rod photoreceptor. Rods, which are more sensitive than cones, mediate vision at night when photons are relatively scarce, whereas cones mediate color vision during the day when photons are abundant. Those conditions under which the rods and the cones operate alone are known as scotopic and photopic, respectively, while those under which they operate jointly are known as mesopic (see Chapter 15 on luminous efficiency functions). Although the cone spectral sensitivities, at the retina, depend mainly on the energy required to isomerize the chromophore, the spectral sensitivities of the human observer measured behaviorally, at the cornea, also depend on the absorption by the optical media and on the density of photopigment in the photoreceptor outer segment, which vary between observers (see the section on other factors that influence spectral sensitivity). Univariance, Monochromacy, Dichromacy, and Trichromacy When a photon causes the isomerization of the chromophore and triggers the phototransduction cascade, the effect on the output is independent of its wavelength. Thus, photoreceptors are effectively sophisticated photon counters, the outputs of which vary univariantly according to the number of photons that are absorbed (e.g., [12, 13]). If the rate of photon absorption changes, it is impossible to tell from the photoreceptor output whether the changes are due to a variation in light intensity or in wavelength. In other words, color and intensity are confounded, and individual rods or cones are color blind. Thus, human color perception requires comparisons between the activities of more than one type of photoreceptor that have distinct spectral sensitivities. If only one photoreceptor type operates, vision is monochromatic or reduced to a single dimension: Two lights of any spectral composition can be made to match perfectly simply by matching their intensities. All normal observers are monochromatic under scotopic conditions (e.g., dim starlight), when only the rods are functioning. However, some rare human observers are monochromatic under photopic conditions because they have either no operating cone photoreceptors (rod monochromats, discussed in a separate section) or only one of the three types (cone monochromats, also discussed in a separate section). If only two cone photoreceptors operate, vision is dichromatic or reduced to two dimensions: Lights of any spectral composition can be matched by a mixture of two other lights. Human observers, who are dichromatic, fall into three classes: protanopes, deuteranopes, and tritanopes, depending on whether they are missing, respectively, the L, M, or S cones (see the sections on protan and deutan defects and on tritanopia). Most observers with normal color vision have three classes of cone photoreceptor and are therefore trichromatic (i.e., they have three dimensions of color vision).
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Fig. 1. Left: The amounts of each of the 444-, 526-, and 645-nm primaries (the tristimulus values) required to match monochromatic lights spanning the visible spectrum are known as the red (R), green (G), and blue (B) color-matching functions or CMFs (red, green, and blue lines respectively; the wavelengths of the primaries are shown by the vertical dashed lines). A negative sign means that the primary must be added to the target to complete the match. CMFs can be linearly transformed from one set of primaries to another. The only restriction on the choice of primary lights is that they must be independent—in the sense that no two will match the third. Right: CMFs for the imaginary cone fundamental L, M, and S primaries, primary lights that would uniquely stimulate the L, M, and S cones, respectively. The fundamentals are the 10° cone sensitivities of Stockman and Sharpe [2].
Trichromacy and Color-Matching Functions Because normal human photopic vision is trichromatic, the color of any light can be defined or matched by just three variables: the intensities of three specially selected or “independent” primary lights, which are typically chosen to be red (R), green (G), and blue (B) (with the essential proviso that no two will match the third). The left panel of Fig. 1 shows examples of the red, green, and blue color-matching functions (CMFs; also known as tristimulus values) for RGB primaries of 645, 526, and 444 nm. Each CMF defines the amount of that primary required to match monochromatic targets throughout an equal energy visible spectrum. The CMFs can be linearly transformed to any other set of real primary lights and, as illustrated in Fig. 1, to imaginary primary lights, such as the L, M, and S cone fundamental primaries (right panel). These three fundamental primaries (or Grundempfindungen, fundamental sensations) are the three imaginary primary lights that would uniquely stimulate each of the three cones to yield the L-, M-, and S-cone spectral sensitivity functions (such lights are not physically realizable because of the overlapping spectral sensitivities of the cone photopigments). The three CMFs corresponding to the three fundamental primaries are the cone fundamental CMFs or cone spectral sensitivities. For a further discussion of colorimetry and its link to the cone fundamentals, see the work of Stockman and Sharpe [2] and Stockman [14]. A knowledge of the linear transformation from the red, green, and blue CMFs to the three cone fundamental CMFs would allow us to define the mean human cone
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spectral sensitivities, but this information is not directly available from normal color matches (except for the S-cone fundamentals; see [15, 16]). Direct measurements of the cone spectral sensitivities made using special, color-deficient, observers not only yield estimates of the cone spectral sensitivities themselves, but also allow estimates of the transformation from the CMFs (which is sometimes preferable to the raw spectral sensitivity data). CONE SPECTRAL SENSITIVITIES Introduction Since the establishment of trichromatic color theory (e.g., [17–19]), a central goal of vision science has been the accurate determination of the L-, M-, and S- cone spectral sensitivities. Studies of human cone spectral sensitivity have encompassed many fields of inquiry, including fundus reflectometry (e.g., [20]), microspectrophotometry (e.g., [21]), suction electrode recordings (e.g., [22, 23]), electroretinography (e.g., [24]), and absorption spectroscopy [25–28]. Visual psychophysical experiments in human observers still provide the most extensive and accurate spectral sensitivity data. Arguably, the first plausible psychophysical estimates of the cone spectral sensitivities were obtained by König and Dieterici [29] (see symbols, Fig. 3, below). Since then, many other estimates have been made, notably those by Bouma [30]; Judd [31, 32]; Wyszecki and Stiles [33]; Vos and Walraven [34]; Vos [35]; Estévez [36], Vos, Estévez, and Walraven [37]; and Stockman, MacLeod, and Johnson [16]. These have been discussed elsewhere (e.g., [38, 39–41]). Until recently, the estimates by Smith and Pokorny [42] have been widely used in science and research as a de facto standard. However, newer estimates by Stockman and Sharpe [2] have improved on these and have now been proposed as the Commission Internationale de l’ Éclairage (International Lighting Commission, CIE) standard for “physiologically relevant” fundamental primaries (CIE Technical Reports: Fundamental Chromaticity Diagram with Physiological Axes, Parts 1 and 2, CIE, Vienna). Most estimates of the cone spectral sensitivities depend on the use of dichromat observers, missing one of the three normal cone types (see the sections on protanopia and deuteranopia and on tritanopia) and the assumption—known as the “loss”, “reduction,” or “König” hypothesis—that their remaining cone classes are normal [29, 43], an approach that now has a firm foundation, molecular genetically [44, 45] and psychophysically [46]. S-cone (or blue-cone) monochromats [47, 48], which are doubly reduced in the sense that they lack both the L and M cones, are particularly useful for measuring S-cone spectral sensitivity (see the section on cone monochromacies). Cone Spectral Sensitivity Measurements The cone fundamentals can be estimated by comparing dichromatic and normal color matches [19, 49] and then deriving a transformation matrix based on the locations of the confusion points of the three varieties of dichromacy. These confusion or copunctal points are the chromaticities at which the color confusion lines of the dichromats converge (see the section on congenital color vision deficiencies). They correspond to the chromaticities of the missing fundamental primaries.
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Fig. 2. Mean spectral sensitivity data. L-cone data from 17 L(ser180) subjects (filled squares) and 5 L(ala180) subjects (open circles) and M-cone data from 9 L1M2/L2M3 protanopes (gray diamonds) measured by Sharpe et al. [46] and S-cone data from 5 normals and 3 blue cone monochromats (filled triangles) measured by Stockman, Sharpe, and Fach [1].
The most straightforward method of estimating the cone fundamentals, however, is to measure the three cone spectral sensitivities directly. Since the three cone spectral sensitivities overlap extensively throughout the spectrum, trichromatic observers are not particularly useful for such measurements. In them, the isolation of the response of a single cone type over substantial regions of the spectrum requires special procedures to favor the desired cone type and disfavor the two undesired ones. A now classical approach is to use selective chromatic adaptation (e.g., [50, 51]) and to present a target of variable wavelength on a larger adapting or background field of a second wavelength (or mixture of wavelengths) that selectively suppresses the sensitivities of the two unwanted cone types. However, cone isolation in normal observers is still difficult to achieve throughout the spectrum. One way of overcoming this difficulty is to use selective adaptation in genotypically identified dichromats, who lack one of the three cone types. With the S cones disadvantaged or suppressed, L- and M-cone spectral sensitivities can be directly measured in deuteranopes who lack M-cone function and in protanopes without L-cone function. Figure 2 shows the mean spectral sensitivity data obtained from 9 L1M2/ L2M3 protanopes (green diamonds), from 17 single-gene L(ser180) deuteranopes with serine at position 180 of their L-cone photopigment opsin gene (red squares), and from 5 single-gene L(ala180) deuteranopes with alanine at position 180 (open circles) (for further details, see [2, 46]). The two mean L-cone functions, which are separated by about 2.5 nm in λmax [46], reflect the two commonly occurring L-cone photopigment
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Fig. 3. S-, M-, and L-cone 2° spectral sensitivity estimates (short-dashed, long-dashed, and solid lines, respectively) of Stockman and Sharpe [2] based on linear transformations of the Stiles and Birch [58] 10° red, green, blue (RGB) color-matching functions (CMFs) using the mean spectral sensitivity data shown in Fig. 2 as a guide. They are compared with the historical S-, M-, and L-cone estimates of König and Dieterici [29] (filled triangles, gray diamonds, and open squares, respectively). The lower inset shows the mean macular density spectrum for a 2° field (dashed line) based on measurements by Bone, Landrum, and Cains [68] and recommended by Stockman and Sharpe [2, 41] and the mean lens density spectrum of van Norren and Vos [59] and slightly adjusted by Stockman, Sharpe, and Fach [1] (solid line).
polymorphisms (see the section on protan and deutan defects). An overall L-cone mean was also derived (not shown) to reflect the proportions of the two polymorphic variants in the population [2]. Tritanopes, who lack the S cones, are less useful in this context because their closely overlapping L- and M-cone spectral sensitivities are hard to isolate by selective adaptation. S-cone spectral sensitivity is most easily measured throughout the spectrum in S-cone monochromats (e.g., [48, 52–57]). In defining a mean S-cone spectral sensitivity, Stockman, Sharpe, and Fach [1] measured S-cone spectral sensitivities in three blue cone monochromats known to lack L and M cones on genotypical as well as phenotypical grounds and combined them with normals’ S-cone data obtained at short and middle wavelengths on an intense yellow background field that selectively adapted
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the M and L cones. Their mean S-cone function is shown in Fig. 2 (filled triangles). The advantage of using S-cone monochromats is that it allows the S-cone spectral sensitivity to be defined at middle and long wavelengths, where it is occluded in normal observers by the more sensitive responses of the M and L cones even when selective chromatic adaptation is employed. From Cone Spectral Sensitivities to Color-Matching Functions Although the cone spectral sensitivities could be defined as the direct sensitivity measurements shown in Fig. 2, it is customary to define them in terms of linear combinations of a set of CMFs, which are—in principle at least—more precise because they are typically based on more data and because the measurements are less variable. All that is required is to find the linear combinations of red (R), green (G), and blue (B) CMFs that best fit each cone spectral sensitivity, allowing adjustments in the densities of prereceptoral filtering and photopigment optical density to account for differences in the mean densities between different populations (these factors are age and race dependent and highly variable between individuals) and to account for differences in retinal area (because the filtering densities change with retinal eccentricity). For more information, see the next section and Chapter 15 on luminous efficiency functions. Figure 3 shows the current 2° estimates of Stockman and Sharpe [2] (lines) compared with the much earlier estimates obtained more than 120 years ago by König and Dieterici [29] (symbols). The Stockman and Sharpe 2° estimates are based on a transformation of the Stiles and Burch [58] 10° CMFs adjusted to 2°. These 10° CMFs, which were measured in 49 subjects from approximately 390 to 730 nm (and in 9 subjects from 730 to 830 nm), are probably the most secure and accurate set of existing color-matching data.
OTHER FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE SPECTRAL SENSITIVITY Several other factors influence spectral sensitivities and color matches. The most important ones arise from individual differences among observers. They should be taken into account when trying to predict the spectral sensitivities of an individual from standard or mean functions. Some of them vary with retinal position and so should be considered when trying to predict the spectral sensitivities for retinal areas or retinal positions that differ from the centrally viewed 2° or 10° areas used to obtain the standard functions. Lens Pigment Light is brought into focus on the retina by the cornea and the pigmented crystalline lens. The pigment in the lens absorbs light mainly of short wavelengths (see lower inset of Fig. 3, black line). Individual differences in lens pigment density can be large, with a range of approximately ±25% of the mean density in young observers (<30 years old) (see [59]). Since lens density increases with the age of the observer (e.g., [60–62]), the variability in the general population is even larger. A two-factor model has been proposed to account for changes in lens density spectrum with age [62, 63]. Stockman, Sharpe, and Fach [1] have proposed a slightly adjusted version of the mean lens density spectrum of van Norren and Vos [59] that is consistent with the Stockman and Sharpe [2] cone fundamentals.
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Macular Pigment Before reaching the photoreceptor, light must pass through the ocular media, including, at the fovea, the macula lutea, which contains macular pigment. This pigment also absorbs light mainly of short wavelengths (see lower inset of Fig. 3, dashed line). Individual differences in its density can also be large, with a range of peak density from 0.0 to about 1.2 at 460 nm [64–66]. The density of the pigment changes with retinal location, tending to become more transparent with eccentricity. It is wholly or largely absent by a retinal eccentricity of 10° (e.g., [67]). Stockman and Sharpe [2] have proposed a mean macular density spectrum based on measurements by Bone, Landrum, and Cairns [68] that is consistent with their cone fundamentals. Photopigment Optical Density The axial optical density of the photopigment in the receptor outer segment varies between individuals. Estimates of photopigment optical density vary considerably depending to a large extent on the method used to estimate them, but all estimates show sizable individual differences (e.g., [69, 70–76]). Decreases in photopigment optical density result in a narrowing of cone spectral sensitivity curves, which causes corresponding changes to their linear transformations, the CMFs. Any corrections are most easily applied to the cone fundamentals rather than the CMFs. For further details and the relevant equations, see Stockman and Sharpe’s [41] Eqs. (9) to (12). Changes with Eccentricity Macular pigment and photopigment optical density both decline with eccentricity. Consequently, cone spectral sensitivities, which are defined for centrally viewed 2° or 10° diameter fields, must be adjusted to predict accurate color matches for other viewing conditions—either for different field sizes or for different viewing angles. The forthcoming CIE Technical Report (Fundamental Chromaticity Diagram with Physiological Axes, Parts 1 and 2, CIE, Vienna) explains how to derive cone fundamentals for every viewing angle between 1° and 10°. Effects of age can also be incorporated by application of the relationship between the absorption of the lens as a function of age. One additional complication is that the S cones are absent in approximately the central 25-min diameter of vision, so that in that region color matches become tritanopic (e.g., [77–80]). The small-field tritanopic effect may also occur with steady fixation of parafoveal fields [79, 81]. The exclusion of the S cones from the very central fovea is usually attributed to the need to counteract the deleterious effects of light scattering and axial chromatic aberration on spatial resolution, which cause blurring or defocus, particularly at short-wavelengths (but see [82]). For most practical purposes, such small-field tritanopia can be largely ignored, however, because its influence on color matching and discrimination is mitigated by the blur introduced by the optics of the eye and constant microsaccades [83, 84]. CONGENITAL COLOR VISION DEFICIENCIES The most common types of color vision deficiencies are inherited. They arise from alterations in the genes encoding the opsin molecules (for a detailed treatment and introduction, see [85]). Genes are lost (due to intergenic nonhomologous recombination), rendered nonfunctional (due to missense or nonsense mutations or coding sequence
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deletions), or altered (due to intragenic recombination between genes of different types or possibly point mutations). Phenotypically, the results of the gene alterations are (1) dichromacy (when one of the cone pigments is missing, and color vision is reduced to two dimensions); (2) anomalous trichromacy (when one of the three cone pigments is altered in its spectral sensitivity, but trichromacy is not fully impaired); or (3) monochromacy (when two or all three of the cone pigments are missing, and color and lightness vision is reduced to a single dimension). Other inherited types of color blindness arise from mutations in genes not encoding the cone opsins but rather components of cone structure and function. Those associated with the loss of function of all three cone types are referred to as complete achromatopsia or rod monochromacy. Protan and Deutan Defects The most common inherited color vision deficiencies are the loss (protanopia and deuteranopia) and alteration (protanomaly and deuteranomaly) forms of protan (L-cone) and deutan (M-cone) defects. Also known as red-green color vision deficiencies, they are associated with disturbances in the X-linked opsin gene array. They manifest in early infancy, mostly in males; the condition is not accompanied by ophthalmologic or other associated clinical abnormalities. Among Caucasians, about 8% of males and 0.5% of females have red-green color vision defects; these defects are less frequent among males of African (3–4%) or Asian (3%) origin (for more details, see [85]). The two genes associated with red-green color vision defects are OPN1LW (opsin 1 long wave), encoding the L-cone pigment, and OPN1MW (opsin 1 middle wave), encoding the M-cone pigment. Red-green deficiencies are diagnosed by a variety of special color confusion charts (e.g., the Dvorine, Ishihara, and Stilling pseudoisochromatic plates), hue discrimination or arrangement tasks (e.g., the Farnsworth–Munsell 100-Hue test, the Farnsworth Panel D-15, the Lanthony Desaturated D-15), and lantern detection tests (e.g., the Edridge– Green, Holmes–Wright), all of which exploit the color deficits of the color blind and have been designed to screen selectively for protan and deutan defects (for an overview of the available clinical tests, see [86–89]). Traditionally, observers with protan and deutan defects are most efficiently and definitively characterized by the nature of their Rayleigh matches [90] on a small viewing field (≤2° diameter) anomaloscope. In the task, the observer is required to match a spectral yellow (ca. 589-nm) primary light to a juxtaposed mixture of spectral red (ca. 679-nm) and green (ca. 544-nm) primary lights by adjusting the intensity of the yellow and the relative proportions of the red and green lights. Most trichromats reproducibly choose a unique match between the red/green mixture ratio and the yellow intensity. In contrast, individuals with protan and deutan defects have displaced Rayleigh match midpoints (i.e., the mean value of the red/green ratio required to match the yellow primary falls outside the normal range) or extended or complete matching ranges (they accept more than one red/green ratio). Protanopia and Deuteranopia Protanopia and deuteranopia are the dichromatic or loss forms of protan and deutan defects, respectively. Although some protanopes and deuteranopes are true reduction
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dichromats, having only one X-chromosome-linked cone photopigment, which is identical to the normal M- or L-cone pigment, others are not. Some have a hybrid X-chromosome-linked cone photopigment, which is intermediate in spectral position between M and L, while others have two cone photopigments with identical or nearly identical spectral sensitivities. By definition, dichromats require only two primaries to match all color stimuli. As a result, they confuse or fail to discriminate colors that are easily distinguished by normal trichromats. In the Rayleigh matching task, deuteranopes (lacking M cones) or protanopes (lacking L cones) are able to fully match the spectral yellow primary to any mixture of the spectral red and green primary lights by merely adjusting the intensity of the yellow regardless of the red-to-green ratio. Thus, instead of a unique match, they will have a fully extended matching range that encompasses both the red and green primaries. As first pointed out by Maxwell [19] and demonstrated by von Helmholtz [91], when the colors confused by dichromats are plotted in a chromaticity diagram, the axes of which may be generated from transformations of standard CMFs, they lie on a series of straight lines called confusion loci that converge to either the protanopic or the deuteranopic copunctal points, which correspond to the chromaticity of the missing fundamental primary (see the section on cone spectral sensitivity measurements). In both protanopes and deuteranopes, the spectrum is dichromic, consisting of just two pure hues [92]. The midpoint of the zone—the neutral point—which, by definition, falls on the confusion line passing through the physiological white point, is relatively easy to specify. For protanopes and deuteranopes, representative neutral point values for a white standard light (of color temperature 6,774 K) are 492.3 nm [93–95] and 498.4 nm [93, 94, 96], respectively. The photopic spectral luminous efficiency function of deuteranopes is normal or relatively slightly more sensitive at long wavelengths than that for normals, whereas that of protanopes is much less sensitive than that for normals at long wavelengths (e.g., [97]). This imbalance arises because the normal luminous efficiency function is dominated by L cones (see Chapter 15 on luminous efficiency functions). Figure 4 shows a simulation of a scene perceived by a normal trichromat (A), protanope (B), deuteranope (C), and tritanope (D). It gives an approximate impression of the sorts of color confusions they make. Photopigment Variability and Protanomaly and Deuteranomaly Protanomaly and deuteranomaly are the alteration forms of protan and deutan defects, respectively. The color deficits associated with these forms of anomalous trichromats are usually less severe than those of dichromats, but there is considerable variability among individuals. They can be categorized as simple or extreme, according to their matching behavior on the Rayleigh equation [98]. Many simple anomalous trichromats may be unaware of their color vision deficiency, whereas many extreme anomalous trichomats may have nearly as poor color discrimination as dichromats. Unlike dichromats, they do not have a neutral zone and see more than two hues in the spectrum. Anomalous red-green trichromacy arises because the spectral sensitivity function of either the L- or M-cone photopigment is shifted from its normal location to an intermediary or anomalous position that lies closer to the location of the spectral sensitivity function of the remaining normal M- or L-cone photopigment (for a review, see [85]). These shifts are caused by the inheritance of hybrid LM or ML cone photopigment opsin
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Fig. 4. A scene from a fruit market as perceived by a normal trichromat (A), a protanope (B), a deuteranope (C), and a tritanope (D). The simulations are based on an algorithm incorporating a colorimetric transformation, which also makes explicit assumptions about the residual sensations experienced by dichromats (see [144, 145]). (From [85].)
genes, which are fusion genes produced by intragenic crossing over, containing the coding sequences of both L- and M-cone pigment genes. Both in vitro [27, 28] and in vivo (e.g., [24, 46]) measurements of the absorbance spectrum peaks of the hybrid pigments reveal a wide range of possible anomalous pigments lying between the normal L- and M-cone pigments. Rather than a continuous distribution, there is a clustering of LM hybrid pigments, with their peak absorbances within about 8 nm of the peak absorbance of the normal M-cone pigment, and a clustering of ML hybrid pigments, with their peak absorbances within about 12 nm of the peak absorbance of the normal L-cone pigment (see Table 1 of [99]). Smaller shifts occur within the normal population because of different polymorphisms (commonly occurring allelic differences) of the M- and L-cone photopigment opsin genes. The most frequently observed polymorphic-induced shift (ca. 2.5 nm) occurs in the L-cone photopigment (when alanine replaces serine at position 180 of the L photopigment opsin gene). The same polymorphic variation occurs in the M-cone photopigment, with a similar shift in spectral sensitivity, but the serine variant is rather rare (see [85]). Hybrid LM and ML pigments in people with otherwise normal photopigments result in anomalous trichromacy. Individuals with a hybrid LM pigment replacing one of the
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two polymorphic variants of the normal L cone pigment are known as protanomalous trichromats, whereas those with a hybrid ML pigment replacing one of the two polymorphic variants of the normal M cone pigment are known as deuteranomalous trichromats. The color vision deficits of anomalous trichromats are usually less severe than those of dichromats, but there is considerable variability among individuals. In general, the smaller the separation between the spectral sensitivities of the normal and anomalous hybrid pigments, the poorer the anomalous trichromat’s color discrimination (for more details, see [85]). Anomalous trichromacy can sometimes arise in individuals lacking either the normal L- or M-cone photopigment because of photopigment optical density differences between photoreceptors containing ostensibly the same remaining L- or M-cone photopigment [100]. Tritanopia Tritan defects affect the S cones. They are often referred to as yellow-blue disorders, although the term blue-green disorder more accurately describes the typical types of color confusions. As for protan and deutan defects, congenital tritanopia arises from alterations in the gene encoding the opsin, but unlike protan and deutan defects, it is autosomal in nature and linked to chromosome 7. The gene associated with tritan vision defects is OPN1SW (opsin 1 short wave) encoding the S-cone pigment. Tritan defects affect the ability to discriminate colors in the short- and middle-wave regions of the spectrum. They often go undetected because of their incomplete manifestation (incomplete tritanopia) and because of the nature of the color vision loss involved. From a practical standpoint, even complete tritanopes are not as disadvantaged as many protanomalous and deuteranomalous trichromats because they can distinguish between the environmentally and culturally important red, yellow, and green colors. On the other hand, the most frequently acquired color vision defects, whether due to aging or to choroidal, pigment epithelial, retinal, or neural disorders, are the type III acquired blue-yellow defects (see [88]). These are similar, but not identical, to tritan defects. Unlike tritan defects (which are assumed to be stationary), acquired defects are usually progressive and have other related signs, such as associated visual acuity deficits (see [85]). In the complete tritanope, confused colors should fall along lines radiating from a single tritanopic copunctal point, corresponding to the chromaticity of the missing S-cone fundamental primary [101, 102]. The spectrum is divided by a neutral zone, which occurs near yellow, at about 569 nm (6500 K white; [103, 104]). The violet end of the spectrum may also appear colorless. The resulting loss of hue discrimination is in the violet, blue, and blue-green portions of the spectrum. “Yellow” and “blue” do not occur in the color world of complete tritanopes. They confuse blue with green and yellow with violet and light gray, but not yellow with blue, as the descriptive classification “yellow-blue” defect would seem to imply. Figure 4D shows a simulation of a scene perceived by a tritanope. The photopic spectral luminous efficiency function in tritanopes is normal [102]. The diagnosis of tritan defects is difficult, and the condition often eludes detection. Special pseudoisochromatic plate tests have been designed, including the AO (HRR), Tokyo Medical College, Farnsworth or F2 (Plate I in [105]), Velhagen, Standard (2nd edition), Stilling, and the Lanthony tritan album. Additional information can be gained from examining chromatic discrimination on pigment arrangement tests, such as the
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Farnsworth–Munsell 100-Hue test or the Farnsworth Panel D-15 (both have a tritan axis). However, none of these tests, alone or in combination, identifies a tritan disturbance unequivocally. Anomaloscope equations similar in concept to the Rayleigh red-green equation, including the Engelking–Trendelenburg equation [106, 107] and the Moreland blue-green equation [108–110], have been designed to detect tritan defects. The Moreland equation, which is now the most frequently employed, involves matching indigo (436 nm) and green (490 nm) mixture primaries to a cyan standard (480 nm plus 580 nm mixed in a fixed ratio). Monochromacies Monochromats can match test lights to just one primary light. In principle, they can lack two of the three cone types (S-, M-, and L-cone monochromats) or all three of them (rod monochromats or complete achromats). Cone Monochromacies Blue cone monochromacy is a rare form of monochromacy or total color blindness caused by loss or rearrangement of the X-linked (red-green) opsin gene array or by loss of the critical (locus control) region that regulates the expression of the gene array [111, 112]. It is also known as blue monocone monochromacy [47, 48], S-cone monochromacy, and X-chromosome-linked incomplete achromatopsia. The S cones are the only photoreceptors, other than the rods, believed to be functioning [47, 48, 57, 113, 114]. The disorder is characterized by severely reduced visual acuity [57, 114–116]; a small, central scotoma (corresponding to the blue-blind central foveola); eccentric fixation; infantile nystagmus (which diminishes or disappears with age); and nearly normal appearing retinal fundi. Color discrimination is typically very poor or nonexistent, although it may improve at mesopic levels when both the rods and S cones are functioning (for reviews, see [117, 118]). There also may be associated myopia [119, 120]. The photopic luminosity function peaks near 440 nm (the peak sensitivity of the S cones) rather than near 555 nm (see Chapter 15 on luminosity efficiency functions), with a resultant greatly reduced sensitivity to long-wavelength lights. A cone-rod break (the Kohlrausch kink) in dark adaptation curves occurs, denoting the transition from S-cone to rod function. Clinically, to distinguish blue cone monochromats from achromats (rod monochromats), a special four-color plate test [121] and a two-color filter test [116] are available. Besides blue-cone monochromacy, there are two other forms of cone monochromacy, known as complete achromatopsia with normal visual acuity [122, 123]. Few cases have ever been described [122–130], and none is fully accepted as authentic (for a review, see [85]). In addition to rods, cone monochromats are conventionally assumed to have either L cones (in which case they are known as L- or red cone monochromats) or M cones (in which case they are known as M- or green cone monochromats), but not both. Although the S cones are assumed to be totally absent or inactive, they may be partially functioning, contributing to luminance but not color discrimination [129]. Evidence of remnant cone function has led to speculation that the defect may be wholly or partially postreceptoral in origin [123–125, 127]. Unlike blue cone or rod monochromacy, there is no reduced visual acuity, nystagmus, or light aversion, and the cone electroretinogram (ERG) appears to be normal.
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Rod Monochromacy In its complete form, the rare congenital disorder of rod monochromacy is also referred to as typical, complete achromatopsia; complete achromatopsia with reduced visual acuity; complete or total colorblindness Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man #216900 (OMIM 216900); or day blindness (hemeralopia). In its incomplete form, it is referred to as atypical, incomplete achromatopsia or incomplete achromatopsia with reduced visual acuity. Its autosomal recessive inheritance distinguishes it from the disorders caused by mutations or structural alterations of the cone opsin genes. However, its manifestation is functionally equivalent to the total loss of all three cone opsin genes. Even if the opsin genes are expressed, they are nevertheless never engaged for vision. To date, mutations in the following three genes are known to be associated with autosomal recessive achromatopsia: CNGB3, accounting for about 50% of affected individuals [131]; CNGA3, accounting for about 25% of affected individuals [132]; and GNAT2, accounting for fewer than 2% of affected individuals [133, 134]. An additional locus (ACHM1) has been assigned to chromosome 14 as a result of a single case of maternal uniparental isodisomy of chromosome 14 [135]. Neither the gene nor the frequency of the locus is known. In the majority of individuals affected by autosomal recessive achromatopsia, mutations in one of the three reported genes result in the complete form of the disorder. In a few cases, mutations in the CNGA3 gene [132, 136–138], and also in GNAT2, are associated with the milder phenotype of incomplete achromatopsia [139]. The estimated prevalence is less than 1 in 30,000 [85, 140, 141]. Most individuals have complete achromatopsia, in which the symptoms can be explained by a total lack of function of all three types of cones, with all visual functions mediated by the rods. The condition is then characterized by photophobia (increased sensitivity to light); severely reduced visual acuity (about 20/200), hyperopia (commonly, but not invariably); pendular nystagmus (which develops during the first few weeks after birth); a central scotoma that is associated with the central rod-free foveola (which is often difficult to demonstrate because of the nystagmus); eccentric fixation; and the complete inability to discriminate between colors (see [141]). On the Rayleigh anomaloscope equation, a complete achromat can always fully color match the spectral yellow primary to any mixture of the spectral red and green primaries, but a brightness match is only possible to red primary-dominated mixtures (because of the reduced long-wavelength sensitivity of the rods). Although visual acuity is usually stable over time, both nystagmus and sensitivity to bright light may improve slightly. The spectral luminous efficiency function, at all intensity levels, peaks at 507 nm, the peak wavelength of the rod or scotopic visual system (see Chapter 15 on spectral luminous efficiency). There is an absence of the Kohlrausch kink (cone-rod break) in the dark-adaptation curve. In the single-flash ERG, the photopic response, including the 30-Hz flicker response, is absent or markedly diminished, while the scotopic response is normal or mildly abnormal. Rarely, individuals have incomplete achromatopsia, in which one or more cone types may be partially functioning along with the rods. The symptoms are similar to those of individuals with complete achromatopsia but generally less severe [85]. Color discrimination ranges from well preserved to severely impaired; photophobia is usually absent; and visual acuity is better preserved than in complete achromatopsia (it may be as high as 20/80).
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Differentiating between achromatopsia and cone dystrophy can be difficult, particularly in individuals with onset in early childhood; the best clinical discriminator is disease progression, which occurs in cone dystrophy and not typically in achromatopsia. In contrast with achromatopsia, dark-adapted rod thresholds are typically elevated by approximately 0.5 log unit in cone dystrophy [142]. CONCLUSIONS A precise knowledge of the spectral sensitivity of the human rod and cone photoreceptors is central to our understanding and modeling of visual function in normals and individuals with color vision deficiencies. For the rods, spectral sensitivity and luminous efficiency are identical, and both are defined by the CIE 1951 V '(λ) function (see Chapter 15 on luminous efficiency functions). For the cones, the 2° and 10° cone fundamentals, and the associated lens and macular pigment and photopigment templates, of Stockman and Sharpe [2] and the photopic luminous efficiency functions of Sharpe et al. [143] provide a consistent set of standard functions with which to model human vision. These functions, and others, can be downloaded from http://www.cvrl.org. ACKNOWLEDGMENT This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust and Fight for Sight. REFERENCES 1. Stockman A, Sharpe LT, Fach CC. The spectral sensitivity of the human short-wavelength cones. Vision Res 1999;39:2901–2927. 2. Stockman A, Sharpe LT. Spectral sensitivities of the middle- and long-wavelength sensitive cones derived from measurements in observers of known genotype. Vision Res 2000;40:1711–1737. 3. Perlman I, Normann RA. Light adaptation and sensitivity controlling mechanisms in vertebrate photoreceptors. Prog Retin Eye Res 1998;17:523–563. 4. Pugh EN Jr, Nikonov S, Lamb TD. Molecular mechanisms of vertebrate photoreceptor light adaptation. Current Opin Neurobiol 1999;9:410–418. 5. Pugh EN Jr, Lamb TD. Phototransduction in vertebrate rods and cones: molecular mechanisms of amplification, recovery and light adaptation. In: Stavenga DG, de Grip WJ, Pugh EN, eds. Handbook of biological physics, Vol. 3, molecular mechanisms of visual transduction. Amsterdam: Elsevier; 2000:183–255. 6. Burns ME, Baylor DA. Activation, deactivation and adaptation in vertebrate photoreceptor cells. Annu Rev Neurosci 2001;24:779–805. 7. Fain GL, Matthews HR, Cornwall MC, Koutalos Y. Adaptation in vertebrate photoreceptors. Physiol Rev 2001;80:117–151. 8. Arshavsky VY, Lamb TD, Pugh EN Jr. G proteins and phototransduction. Annu Rev Physiol 2002;64:153–187. 9. Kochendoerfer GG, Lin SW, Sakmar TP, Mathies RA. How color visual pigments are tuned. Trends Biochem Sci 1999;24:300–305. 10. Yokoyama S. Molecular evolution of vertebrate visual pigments. Prog Retin Eye Res 2000;19:385–419. 11. Deeb SS. The molecular basis of variation in human color vision. Clin Genet 2005;67:369– 377.
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15 Luminous Efficiency Functions Lindsay T. Sharpe and Andrew Stockman CONTENTS Introduction Scotopic (Rod) Luminous Efficiency Function Photopic (Cone) Luminous Efficiency Function Mesopic (Rod-Cone) Luminous Efficiency Functions Individual Differences Influencing Luminous Efficiency Conclusions References
INTRODUCTION The Need for Luminous Efficiency The human visual system operates over an effective range of 11 log10 units of radiant energy: from dim starlight, for which as few as 7 photon absorptions in separate rod photoreceptors suffice for threshold detection [1], to intense sunlight, for which the absorption of as many as 106 photons per cone photoreceptor per second bleaches almost all the photopigment and dazzles the observer [2]. The range is divided into three regions according to which of the two types of photoreceptors, the rods or cones, are functioning. The scotopic or dimmest region, within which only rods operate, includes the light levels between absolute rod threshold and absolute cone threshold. The mesopic or middle region, within which both rods and cones operate, includes the levels between cone threshold and rod saturation. And, the photopic or brightest region, within which only cones operate, includes the levels between rod saturation and the highest bleaching levels (see Fig. 1). Within each region, lights generally increase in apparent brightness with increasing radiance. However, radiance is not directly related to brightness because the individual wavelengths of visible radiant energy do not contribute equally to the overall brightness sensation. In general, wavelengths in the middle of the spectrum, corresponding perceptually to what we call greens, are much more visually effective than those at the spectral extremes, corresponding perceptually to what we call violets and reds (see Chapter 14 on human cone spectral sensitivity and color vision deficiencies). From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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Fig. 1. Illumination levels. Typical ambient light levels are compared with photopic luminance (log cd m−2), mean pupil diameter (mm), photopic and scotopic retinal illuminance (log photopic and scotopic trolands, respectively), and visual function. The scotopic, mesopic, and photopic regions are defined according to whether rods alone, rods and cones, or cones alone operate. The conversion from photopic to scotopic values assumes a white standard CIE (Commission Internationale de l’ Éclairage, International Lighting Commission) D65 illumination. (Based on the design of Hood and Finkelstein, [155].)
The goal of visually relevant light specification (photometry) is to provide a practical method of measuring and specifying the apparent perceived intensity of any monochromatic or spectrally broad-band light or mixtures thereof. This seemingly simple goal, however, is difficult to accomplish because the human visual system as a whole, unlike a typical radiometric detector, does not respond univariantly to light. First, rods and cones do not have the same spectral sensitivities: When measured in vivo, the sensitivities of the rods and the short-wavelength-sensitive (S), middle-wavelength-sensitive (M), and long-wavelength-sensitive (L) cones are displaced relative to one another and peak at about 507 and 440, 545, and 565 nm, respectively. Thus, different spectral luminous efficiency functions have to be defined for the different ranges of human vision: the scotopic luminous efficiency function mediated exclusively by the rods, the photopic luminous efficiency function mediated exclusively by the cones (predominantly
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Fig. 2. Scotopic [CIE (Commission Internationale de l’ Éclairage, International Lighting Commission) 1951 V′(λ), black line] and photopic [V*(λ) function, gray line, [44] ] luminosity functions. The scotopic function is mediated exclusively by the rods; the photopic function is mediated by a linear combination of the L and M cones. The M-cone (long dashed line) and Lcone (short dashed line) spectral sensitivities [23] are also shown, plotted so that their weighted sum equals V *(λ).
the L and M cones), and the mesopic luminous efficiency function mediated by both the rods and cones. Figure 2 allows a comparison between representative scotopic (rod) and photopic (a weighted combination of the L- and M-cone sensitivities) spectral luminous efficiency functions. Second, the relative contributions of the different photoreceptor types to apparent intensity are strongly dependent on chromatic adaptation and other stimulus parameters, such as wavelength, temporal frequency, retinal location, and spatial frequency. These contributions are complicated by the existence of multiple postreceptoral channels that process the cone signals, which include the additive, luminance channel (L + M), and spectrally opponent chromatic channels (L − M) or (S − [L + M]) (e.g., [3–10]). The essential element in converting radiometric measures (such as radiance) to photometric ones (such as luminance) is the derivation of a spectral luminous efficiency (luminosity) function, which defines the relative visual “effectiveness” of lights of different wavelength in specific matching or detection tasks. It is a dimensionless scalar or weighting function, normalized to a maximal value of unity. Dimensions are introduced by defining the luminous efficacy of the monochromatic radiant flux of the maximal value (see, e.g., [11, 12]). The choice of measurement task is crucial in defining luminous efficiency. For photometry to be as practicable as radiometry, the measured luminous efficiency of any mixture of lights must equal the sum of the luminous efficiencies of the component lights. Such additivity is known as obedience
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to Abney’s law [13, 14]. The requirement for additivity typically means that the designated photometric or psychophysical task favors postreceptoral visual mechanisms that are themselves approximately additive, such as the luminance pathway. Psychophysical Measures of Luminous Efficiency The measurement of scotopic luminous efficiency is relatively straightforward because it depends on the activity of a single photoreceptor type, the rods. Since photoreceptors are univariant and additive (see the section on univariance), any technique that maintains rod isolation should yield additive measures of luminous efficiency. Obtaining additive measures of photopic and mesopic luminous efficiency is more challenging because, as noted, multiple photoreceptors and postreceptoral channels can be involved. Many different psychophysical techniques have been used to estimate the photopic spectral luminous efficiency function, including heterochromatic flicker photometry (HFP), heterochromatic modulation photometry (HMP), minimally distinct border (MDB), minimum motion, direct heterochromatic brightness matching (HBM), stepby-step brightness matching, color matching, absolute threshold, increment threshold, critical flicker fusion (CFF), and visual acuity. Confusingly, many of these different procedures and criteria yield very different results (for reviews, see [12, 15–23]). Broadly, the photopic techniques can be divided between those that produce an additive spectral luminous efficiency function and obey Abney’s law and those that do not. Those that do not obey Abney’s law are impractical for photometry and can be largely discarded, although they may have some limited application to specific viewing situations. Those that do include HFP, HMP, MDB, CFF, and minimum motion (e.g., [7, 16, 19, 20, 24, 25]). These additive techniques have in common the use of high temporal or spatial frequencies, which discriminate against the influence of signals from the short-wavelength-sensitive or S-cone pathways or signals in other chromatic pathways and favor signals from the additive, luminance pathway, which sums signals from the L and M cones. For example, in HFP, superimposed lights alternating at moderate-to-high temporal rates are adjusted to minimize the perception of flicker, while in MDB abutting side-by-side lights are adjusted to make the border between them appear minimally distinct. Factors that Influence Luminous Efficiency Even if we restrict our consideration to techniques that yield additive efficiency measurements, other factors need to be taken into account when specifying a standard spectral luminous efficiency function. One important factor is the sizable individual differences in spectral luminous efficiency that are found between observers due to individual variability in preretinal screening and photopigment optical density, both of which change with aging. These are discussed in more detail in a separate section. To define a standard, mean spectral luminous efficiency function for photometry, many subjects must be used in its derivation, so that the mean data are representative of the population as a whole (although distinct functions may have to be derived for different age groups). It is, however, important to recognize that the mean standard functions are unlikely to apply to most individual observers. Nonetheless, corrections, such as those outlined in the section on individual differences influencing luminous efficiency, can be made to the mean functions to make them more representative of the individual observer.
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Another important factor in defining a standard function is that the spectral luminous efficiency function is strongly dependent on the viewing conditions. The function will change as the viewing field increases in size (e.g., “small” 2° as opposed to “large” 10° fields) or as it is moved from the fovea (optimal for photopic luminous efficiency) to the periphery (optimal for scotopic luminous efficiency). As discussed in the section on individual differences influencing luminous efficiency, this is in part due to the decline of the optical densities of the macular pigment and the photopigment with eccentricity. But, under mesopic conditions, the relative contributions of the rods and cones may change as well. A further complication is that the S cones are absent in approximately the central 25-min diameter of vision (e.g., [26–29]). However, S cones make a minimal contribution to photopic photometry if additive techniques are used (see section on psychophysical measures of luminous efficiency). For practical reasons, photopic luminous efficiency functions (see section on photopic (cone) luminous efficiency functions) have been standardized for 2° central viewing fields, which are assumed to be a largely rodfree area and thus exclusively cone dominated, and for 10° central viewing fields because the effective field of view in many real-world situations is much larger than 2°. The application of these standard functions to other viewing conditions may require them to be appropriately adjusted. SCOTOPIC (ROD) LUMINOUS EFFICIENCY FUNCTION Introduction Defining scotopic luminous efficiency is comparatively straightforward because it depends solely on the activity of a single univariant photoreceptor type, the rods. Only at the highest rod operating levels, at luminances above about 10−3 cd m−2 (see Fig. 1), do the cones intrude to complicate things. Even then, their intrusion most conspicuously occurs when small or foveally fixated stimuli are viewed, particularly long-wavelength ones, because for such stimuli the absolute sensitivities of the foveal and parafoveal cones may surpass those of the rods [30]. Under such conditions, the luminous efficiency function then becomes a nonlinear combination of rod and cone responses that varies with the observing, measuring, and adapting conditions (see the section on mesopic (rod-cone) luminous efficiency functions). However, in general, central foveal vision (1°–2° diameter) is not important or useful for rod or scotopic vision because the rods are largely missing from that region. Univariance The rods obey univariance, which means that the photoreceptor response varies only according to the number of photons that are absorbed. All that changes with photon wavelength is the probability that a photon will be absorbed, not the photoreceptor response after it has been absorbed. Thus, individual rod photoreceptors are color blind: Changes in wavelength are indistinguishable from changes in intensity. As a direct consequence of univariance, the shapes of rod spectral sensitivity and scotopic spectral luminous efficiency functions are identical. Moreover, both types of measure obey Abney’s law (see the section on Psychophysical Measures of Luminous Efficiency), are independent of the psychophysical measuring technique and are uninfluenced by the spectral distribution (chromatic properties) of the adapting light [31].
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International Standard In 1951, the CIE (Commission Internationale de l’ Éclairage, International Lighting Commission) [32] formally adopted a standard scotopic luminous efficiency function known as V′(λ) (see Fig. 2; the values can be downloaded from the Web site http://www. cvrl.org). It is derived from (1) absolute thresholds for monochromatic targets (1° diameter target located 8° above the fovea) made by 22 fully dark-adapted young observers, with a mean age of 20 years [30], and (2) direct monochromatic brightness matches to a very dim white reference target 20° in diameter, made by 50 observers under 30 years of age [31]. Thus, strictly, V′(λ) applies to completely dark-adapted observers under the age of 30. The aging effect, mainly owing to the progressive yellowing of the eye’s lens (see the section on attenuation of spectral light by the lens and other ocular media ), which affects values below 500 nm, can be approximately compensated for by applying the following formula [31]: ∆[log10(V′(l))]=10-4(500−l)(A−30),
(1)
where A is the observer’s age. PHOTOPIC (CONE) LUMINOUS EFFICIENCY FUNCTION Introduction Defining luminous efficiency for photopic vision is much more complicated than for scotopic vision. Difficulties arise for two related reasons. First, unlike for the exclusively rod-dominated scotopic vision, univariance fails for photopic vision because at least two different types of cone photoreceptor, depending on the psychophysical measuring technique, are jointly contributing their responses to the luminous efficiency function. Thus, although the scotopic luminous efficiency function is determined primarily by receptoral events, the photopic (and the mesopic) functions are also determined by postreceptoral ones when the different cone signals are combined. If these postreceptoral mechanisms are color opponent, their influence will be wavelength dependent and consequently incompatible with additivity. Therefore, for practical photometry, the psychophysical measuring techniques have to be limited to those that tap into the additive postreceptoral mechanisms, which obey Abney’s law (see the section on psychophysical measures of luminous efficiency). Second, even for those very restricted conditions for which additivity holds, photopic luminous efficiency functions are not fixed in spectral sensitivity but change with chromatic adaptation (e.g., [24, 33–41]). Thus, any particular photopic luminous efficiency function can only be of limited applicability because it defines luminance strictly only under the conditions for which it was measured. Different functions must be derived for different conditions, and any given function is not straightforwardly generalizable to other conditions of adaptation—particularly to other conditions of chromatic adaptation. Nevertheless, a luminous efficiency function is of practical use in many applications, especially for conditions that are similar to those under which the function was originally defined (e.g., neutral adaptation).
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Fig. 3. Photopic luminous efficiency functions for 2° and 10° central viewing conditions. The CIE (Commission Internationale de l’ Éclairage, International Lighting Commission) 1924 2° V(λ) function (open circle) is compared with the newly derived 2° V*(λ) function (solid black line; [44]). The CIE 1964 10° V10(λ) [gray line; also known as the − y 10(l) color-matching function) is compared with the new V10*(λ) function.
International Standards Additive Functions for 2° Viewing Fields In 1924, the CIE [42] established a luminous efficiency function V(λ) for 2° photopic (cone) vision (see Fig. 3; the values can be downloaded from the Web site http://www.cvrl.org), which has since become the standard (mean) photopic observer for business and industry [42, 43]. In visual science, V(λ) or its variants have been assumed to correspond to the spectral sensitivity of a hypothetical human postreceptoral “luminance” channel with additive inputs from the L and M cones (e.g., [8]). Nevertheless, such wide acceptance overlooks serious flaws and complications in V(λ)’s derivation. First, the derivation of V(λ) was not based exclusively on psychophysical techniques that obey additivity. Rather, it is a speculative hybrid function, artificially smoothed and assembled from divergent data measured using both “additive” and “nonadditive” techniques at several laboratories (see [11, 12, 43, 44]). Its most conspicuous flaw is that it seriously underestimates luminous efficiency at short wavelengths (see, for discussion, [22]). Although two attempts were later made to correct this problem [45, 46], the modifications generated functions that are far removed from actual data. The CIE did not adequately specify V(λ) for adaptation level. In fact, the specific adaptive or desensitization states of the L and M cones were not held constant in the various
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experiments (see, for a comment, [44]). The CIE was also unable to take into account variations in genotype, in particular the L-cone polymorphic variation that primarily affects long-wavelength sensitivity (see Chapter 14 on human cone spectral sensitivities and color vision deficiencies). To correct these problems, Sharpe et al. [44] determined a new luminous efficiency function for 2° photopic viewing conditions, V*(λ) (see Fig. 3; the values can be downloaded from the Web site http://www.cvrl.org or from the online article), based exclusively on HFP measurements, which obey additivity, in 40 genotyped observers whose L-cone polymorphic variant was determined. The V*(λ) and the CIE 1924 V(λ) functions can be directly compared in Fig. 3. The two functions differ most conspicuously at short wavelengths below 500 nm. The new function was obtained under neutral adaptation that corresponds to a specific and reproducible phase of natural daylight (CIE standard illuminant D65) adaptation. Moreover, it is defined as a linear combination of the Stockman and Sharpe [23] L- and −(l), respectively]: M-cone sensitivities [l¯(l) and m −(l)]/c, V*(l)=[al¯(l)+ m
(2)
where a is the relative L-cone weight, and c is a constant that scales the function so − (l) themselves both northat it peaks at unity. In relative quantal units, with ¯l(l) and m malized to unity quantal peak, a = 1.890000 and c = 2.80361; in relative energy units, −(l) both normalized to unity energy peak, a = 1.98065 and c = 2.87091 with ¯l(l) and m [44]. The S-cone contribution is so small, and anyhow is so complexly dependent on temporal frequency and adaptation, that it can be safely ignored in defining photopic luminous efficiency under conditions that obey additivity (for a full discussion of this point, see [44, 47]). Note that these constants define photopic luminous efficiency when the eye is adapted to a specific state of “daylight” (D65) adaptation. Necessarily, different states of adaptation will lead to different constants and different luminous efficiency functions, so that the applicability of V*(λ) is unavoidably limited. However, once photopic luminous efficiency is defined in terms of the L- and M-cone sensitivities, it becomes possible to define it for other states of chromatic adaptation merely by investigating and modeling the changes that occur in the relative contributions of the L and M cones as a function of the effective wavelength of the adapting field. Accordingly, Stockman, Jägle, Jagla, and Sharpe [47] have investigated the dependence of V*(λ) on adapting field chromaticity. As expected, through selective cone adaptation or desensitization, short-wavelength fields increase a by decreasing the relative contribution of the M cones, and long-wavelength fields decrease a by decreasing the relative contribution of the L cones (see Fig. 4). A generalized formula is suggested in [47]. Additive Functions for 10° Viewing Fields Until recently, the photopic luminous efficiency function that was considered most representative for large centrally viewed fields was the 1964 CIE V10 (λ) function for 10° fields, which was derived from large-field color-matching data and luminous
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Fig. 4. The 25-Hz heterochromatic flicker photometric (HFP) luminous efficiency functions for the same subject measured on spectral backgrounds ranging from 430 to 670 nm. The curve drawn through each set of data is the best-fitting version of Eq. 1. The background wavelength (in nanometers) and the derived L-cone weighting factor a (from Eq. 1) are noted to the right of each curve. (From [47].) Generally, the L-cone weight or relative contribution of the L cones increases for short-wavelength adaptation and decreases for long-wavelength adaptation. However, the change is not linear with adapting wavelength and is complicated by changes in chromatic adaptation caused by the targets (see [47]).
efficiency measurements made in a subset of subjects at four wavelengths [12]. It is by design identical to the − y 10(l) color-matching function of the CIE 1964 supplementary standard colorimetric observer. This function is shown in Fig. 3 together with the 2° V(λ) and V*(λ) functions (the values can be downloaded from the Web site http://www.cvrl.org). However, a technical committee of the CIE has recommended that a new photopic luminosity function V10*(λ), derived from the V*(λ) function by making corrections for the differences in the mean optical density of the
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Fig. 5. Spectral filtering by the optic media. The standard or average optical density of the lens and other ocular media as a function of wavelength is shown (solid black line; [23]). Also shown is the standard or average optical density of the macular pigment as a function of wavelength for small (2°; solid gray line) and large (10°; dashed gray line) centrally viewed fields. (After [23].)
macular pigment for 2° and 10° viewing fields (see the section on attenuation of spectral light by the macular pigment and Fig. 5), should replace the 1964 CIE V10(λ) function in physiologically relevant colorimetric and photometric systems. The new V10*(λ) function is shown in Fig. 3, in which it can be compared directly with the 1964 CIE V10 (λ) function. There are only slight discrepancies, mostly at short wavelengths. Other Photopic (Nonadditive) Luminous Efficiency Functions The 1924 CIE V(λ) function and the V*(λ) function are not representative of luminous efficiency functions based on HBM. These tend to be broader and to exhibit more than one peak. The CIE Technical Committee 1.4 Vision (TC 1.4) recommended a 2° brightness-matching luminous efficiency function based on a number of studies to supplement V(λ) [12]. Revised brightness-matching standard luminous efficiency functions for 2° and 10° viewing fields [48] and for point sources [49] have since been derived. The 10° field function differs from the 2° function only at short wavelengths, from 410 through 520 nm, when the functions are normalized at 570 nm. The difference is attributed to absorption by the macular pigment. The point source function can be approximated by Judd’s [45] modification of the CIE 1924 V(λ) function. It is pertinent to point out that these functions, based on HBM, will not obey Abney’s law, so their application is very limited.
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MESOPIC (ROD-CONE) LUMINOUS EFFICIENCY FUNCTIONS Introduction Mesopic luminous efficiency is the most inherently complex and most difficult to standardize or model because it depends on the outputs of both the rod and the cone photoreceptors. Not only are there differences in the spectral sensitivities between the rods and cones themselves but also between the properties of the postreceptoral pathways through which the rod and cone signals are transmitted. The nature and balance of these pathways are constantly changing with mesopic luminance. Stockman and Sharpe [50] provided a list of the complexities affecting mesopic luminous efficiency, including (1) mixed rod and cone spectral sensitivities; (2) rod saturation at high mesopic levels (see, e.g., [51, 52]); (3) rod-cone interactions (e.g., [53–65]); (4) different spatial (retinal) distributions of the rods and cones (e.g., [66, 67]); (5) different spatial properties of rod and cone vision (e.g. [68–71]); (6) large temporal differences between rod- and cone-generated signals (e.g., [72–75]); (7) substantial changes in temporal properties that occur in the mesopic range in both the rod and cone systems (e.g., [76]); (8) rod-cone self-cancellation [75, 77]; and (9) rod-rod self-cancellation between signals transmitted through different postreceptoral pathways [78–81]. As a consequence of these complexities, any measure of mesopic luminous efficiency will depend not only on the illumination level, but also on the spectral content of the stimuli used to probe performance, their retinal location, their spatial frequency content, and their temporal frequency content. There is no straightforward or simple solution. Models of Mesopic Luminous Efficiency So far, the main approach has been to measure luminous efficiency as a function of mesopic luminance level and then try to model the results as a weighted linear combination of the scotopic and photopic functions. Not surprisingly, the modeling has proven to be difficult. Quite aside from the difficulties listed, it has to be considered which photopic luminous efficiency function is appropriate for comparison. Because the scotopic luminous efficiency function corresponds to a large or peripheral retinal region, if additivity is the concern, as in all practical photometry, then the most appropriate available photopic function is probably the 10° diameter (large viewing field) photopic V10*(λ) function. However, in some cases the 10° viewing function based on HBM may be more suitable than the V10*(λ) function, which is based on HFP. Mesopic luminous efficiency functions have been measured several times (e.g., [82– 90]). Several attempts have been made to model empirically the scotopic-to-photopic transition. Implicit in most of these models is the assumption that rod and cone signals interact. For instance, Palmer [84] derived a nonlinear empirical formula relating V′(λ) and V10(λ), while Kokoschka and Bodmann [91] derived a model in which the contributions of the three different cone types as well as the rods were considered (see also [92]). More recently, Ikeda and Shimozono [93] and Sagawa and Takeich [87] modeled the logarithm of the mesopic luminous efficiency as the weighted sum of the logarithms of the scotopic and photopic functions (i.e., the geometric mean), but both groups used the CIE brightness rather than the CIE luminance function V(λ) (see also [86, 88]). In fact, as these authors argued, because mesopic luminous efficiency is typically measured by
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direct brightness matching, a photopic brightness-matching function is likely to be more appropriate than a luminance function. Brightness matching, however, does not obey Abney’s law (see the section on psychophysical measures of luminous efficiency). In an attempt to overcome the additivity failures that are inherent in the use of the direct brightness matching method, He and coworkers used a binocular synchronicity method (which they referred to as a reaction time difference method) to measure mesopic visual performance [90, 94]. Although promising, binocular synchronicity measures must be influenced by the complex changes in rod-cone delay that accompany changes in adaptation level (see [50]), as well as by the changes in delay caused by changes in the relative rod and cone contributions to the detection of the two flashes, neither of which are likely to be simple. An obvious complication, given that the adapting field wavelength in one eye is varied from long to short wavelengths, is that the luminous efficiency will be distorted by the additional suppression of the rods by the cones, which are excited more by long-wavelength background fields. International Standard Given the inherent complexity of defining mesopic luminous efficiency, no international standard is currently available. Any practical model of mesopic luminous efficiency will have to incorporate the effects of adaptation, spectral composition, spatial frequency, temporal frequency, retinal location, and retinal area. Moreover, it is likely to be nonadditive. If accuracy is essential, then the only consistently reliable way of estimating mesopic luminous efficiency is to measure it for each new application and stimulus condition. INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES INFLUENCING LUMINOUS EFFICIENCY All luminous efficiency functions vary between observers because of individual differences in the spectral filtering by the ocular media (predominantly by the crystalline lens), the macular pigment, and possibly other as yet unidentified prereceptoral, intraretinal pigments. Other significant individual differences that affect photopic and mesopic luminous efficiency functions include shifts in the spectral positions of the L- and M-cone photopigments owing to genetically encoded polymorphic variants (for reviews, see [95, 96]); regional variations in the optical densities of the cone photopigments; large variations in the relative numbers of L and M cones in the retina; and variations in the contribution of chromatic channels to luminosity (see, e.g., [97]). Attenuation of Spectral Light by the Lens and Other Ocular Media Light to all parts of the retina has to pass through the same anterior eye medium, which absorbs greatest at very short wavelengths. Stockman, Sharpe, and Fach [98] proposed a slightly adjusted version of the mean lens density spectrum of van Norren and Vos [99], which is shown in Fig. 5. The main attenuation is caused by the yellowish pigmentation of the crystalline lens. The average density at 400 nm for an average standard observer of about 30 years of age is 1.76 log unit. However, the value varies between individuals by a factor of at least ±25% of the mean density in young observers (<30 years old) [22, 98–100]. Because lens density increases (becomes progressively more yellow) with the
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age of the observer (e.g., [31, 101, 102]), the variability in the general population is even larger. As a consequence, photopic luminous efficiency functions, measured by different techniques (including HFP and HBM), reveal gradual decreases in average sensitivity at short wavelengths, between about 420 and 560 nm, with increasing age, consistent with age-related increases in the density of the ocular media [103, 104]. The short-wavelength decline in sensitivity is lower in magnitude for functions based on HBM than for those based on HFP [103]. In contrast, infants, because they tend to have very clear optic media, tend to show an elevation in efficiency at short wavelengths [105]. A two-factor model has been proposed to estimate the change in the density of the optic media dlens(λ) with age [102, 106]. The density can be separated into two components: dlens1(λ), which represents the portion affected by aging after age 20, and dlens2(λ), which represents the portion stable after age 20. Thus, the optical density of the lens of an average observer between the ages of 20 and 60 can be estimated as dlens(λ) = d lens1(λ)[1.0 + 0.02(A − 32)] + dlens2(λ),
(4)
where A is the observer’s age. Tables for determining the values of dlens1(λ) and dlens2(λ) as a function of wavelength are provided by the CIE [107]. Likewise, that of an average observer over the age of 60, can be estimated as dlens(λ) = d lens1(λ)[1.56+0.0667(A − 60)] + dlens2(λ)
(5)
The influence of the change in the optical density of the lens pigment dlens(λ) with aging on luminous efficiency can then be approximately compensated for by appropriately adjusting the lens density multiplier klens in Eq. 6 after calculating the age-specific value for 400 nm from the appropriate Eq. 4 or 5: log10V*ind(λ) = log V* (λ) + klensdlens(λ) + kmacdmac(λ)+c
(6)
In which V*ind (λ) is the individual’s photopic luminous efficiency function, dmac (λ) is the optical density of the macular pigment, kmac is the macular density multiplier, and c is simply a unity-normalizing constant (for details, see [47]). The lens pigment density multiplier klens is adjusted to increase or decrease the mean standard observer values—dlens (λ) = 1.48 at 400 nm—to coincide with the actual (age-relevant) optical density of the individual observer. Attenuation of Spectral Light by the Macular Pigment The macular pigment absorbs light mainly of short wavelengths with a peak optical density around 460 nm (see Fig. 5, which is a mean macular density spectrum proposed by [23]). The absorbance spectrum of the macular pigment, like that of the optic media, does not vary between observers. However, individual differences in its density dmac(λ) can be very large, with a range of peak density from 0.0 to about 1.2 at 460 nm [30, 108, 109]. In addition, the optical density of the macular pigment diminishes with retinal location, tending to become more transparent with eccentricity and being wholly or largely absent
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by a retinal eccentricity of 10° (e.g., [110]). Thus, the effective screening of the macular pigment is much less for large centrally viewed fields than for small ones. Representative averages of the maximum optical density at 460 nm are 0.35 for a 2° diameter centrally fixated visual view and 0.095 for a 10° diameter one (for a review, [23]). If the field size is known, the effective optical density dmac(λ), at its maximum value of 460 nm, can be calculated by an exponential formula [111]: dmac(λ=460nm)=0.485e(-s/6.132)
(7)
in which s is the field size in degrees. The influence of the change in the effective optical density of the macular pigment with field size on luminous efficiency can be approximately compensated for in the V*(λ) photopic luminosity function by appropriately adjusting the macular density dmac(λ) by the macular density multiplier kmac in Eq. 6, after calculating the relevant field-size density value at 460 nm from Eq. 7. Only a few studies have investigated how the absorption by the macular pigment depends on age [110, 112–116]. None has shown a strong or significant relationship (see [116]). For more information, see [107]. Optical Densities of the Photopigments The axial optical density of the photopigment in the receptor outer segment, where the photopigment molecules are stacked, varies considerably between individuals (e.g., [117–124]). In addition, for the cones, but not for the rods, it decreases significantly with retinal eccentricity owing to morphological changes in the cone photoreceptors: The peripheral cones are squatter than the foveal ones, with correspondingly shorter outer segments. Changes in axial optical density do not affect the pigment peak sensitivity, but they do change its spectral absorbance (and hence spectral sensitivity), with consequences for luminous efficiency. For instance, peripheral cones, which have low optical densities relative to those of central foveal cones, have narrower spectral sensitivity curves. Thus, photopic luminous efficiencies measured in the peripheral retina or with participation of the peripheral cones will be relatively less sensitive at the spectral extremes than those measured foveally, all other factors being equal. At present, there is no truly reliable way of estimating or correcting for photopigment optical density differences between individuals. But, the dependence on field size of the cone pigment optical density dpigment(max)—it tends to decrease on average as centrally viewed fields increase in size—can be roughly described by an exponential function with an asymptotic value [125]. Some evidence suggests different maximal optical density values for the S cone than for the L and M cones (see [22, 98]): dpigment(max)(L cones) = 0.38 + 0.54.e(-s/1.333) dpigment(max)(M cones) = 0.38 + 0.54.e(-s/1.333) dpigment(max)(M cones) = 0.30 + 0.45.e(-s/1.333),
(8)
in which s is the field size in degrees. These formulas lead to values of 0.50 and 0.38 at, respectively, 2° and 10° for the L and M cones and of 0.40 and 0.30 at, respectively, 2° and 10° for the S cones [107].
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Changes in the optical densities of the cone photopigments on photopic luminous efficiency can only be compensated for by adjusting the optical densities of the L- and M-cone spectral sensitivities themselves (see Chapter 14 on human cone spectral sensitivities and color vision deficiencies) and then recalculating the V*(λ) from Eq. 2. Additional information on how to do this is provided by a CIE technical report [107]. There is some indication that the peak optical densities of the visual pigments in the central visual field decrease gradually as a function of age [116, 126]. Relative Numbers of L and M Cones Photopic luminous efficiency may be affected by the relative numbers of the L and M cones (L:M cone ratio) in the normal human retina. The ratio varies greatly between individuals, with estimates based on the various techniques ranging at least from 1:3 to 19:1 [127–135]. The normal or typical mean L:M cone ratio is believed to be close 2:1 [44, 128, 129, 131–133]. Several research groups have used luminous efficiency functions as a way of estimating the relative number of L and M cones in the retinal area within which it is measured (e.g., [8, 127, 128, 131, 136–143]). The assumption underlying such estimates is that the L-cone weight (i.e., a in Eq. 2) directly reflects the relative numbers of the L and M cones contributing to luminous efficiency. This assumption is, however, questionable because the outputs of each cone type are modified by receptoral adaptation and by postreceptoral adaptation before their signals are combined postreceptorally. Thus, a could, in principle, have little or nothing to do with relative L- and M-cone numbers but instead reflect the relative L- and M-cone contrast gains. This extreme view is unlikely given that L:M cone ratio estimates derived from luminous efficiency functions correlate with estimates derived in the same subjects using other methods (e.g., [131, 133, 137, 140, 141, 144–146]). It does, therefore, seem likely that some of the differences in luminous efficiency functions between individuals is caused by the large individual differences in L:M cone ratio. Nevertheless, to whatever extent a actually corresponds to relative cone numbers, it is also strongly affected by chromatic adaptation (see the section on additive functions for 2° viewing fields and [47]. Cone Pigment Polymorphisms The derivation of photopic luminous efficiency functions is complicated by polymorphisms in the normal population, the most common of which is the frequent replacement of serine by alanine at codon 180 in exon 3 of the X-chromosome-linked opsin gene. Approximately 56% of a large sample of 304 Caucasian males with normal and deutan color vision had the serine variant [identified as L(ser180)] and 44% the alanine variant [identified as L(ala180)] for their L-cone gene (summarized in Table 1 of [23]). In contrast, in the M-cone pigment, the ala180/ser180 polymorphism is much less frequent, 93–94% of males having the ala180 variant [147, 148]. The substitution of alanine for serine causes a shift of about 2.7 nm (see [149]) to shorter wavelengths of the spectral sensitivity of the L cones. This will cause those individuals with the L(ser180) genotype to have a slightly higher luminous efficiency to long wavelengths than those with the L(ala180) genotype. If the individual observer’s genotype is known, the influence of the L-cone polymorphism on photopic luminous efficiency for the V*(λ) (see Eq. 2) can be compensated for by replacing the L-cone [l (λ)] spectral sensitivity values, which are population-corrected
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mean values Lmean, with the appropriate L(ser180) or L(ala180) spectral sensitivity values. These are provided in the Appendix of Stockman, Jägle, Pirzer, and Sharpe [47]. Directional Sensitivity Variation of the point of entry of light entering the pupil (or the obliquity of the light rays reaching the retina) produces, besides the effective change of retinal illumination level (the Stiles-Crawford effect of the first kind [150]), a modification of hue (the Stiles-Crawford effect of the second kind [151]). There is a hue shift throughout the spectrum and an increase in saturation in the blue-green [152] spectrum, both of which will have minor (and difficult to calculate) consequences for photopic luminous efficiency under normal (free) viewing conditions. For scotopic luminous efficiency, the effects of the angle of incidence can be disregarded. This is because the directional sensitivity of the rod photoreceptors is very small in magnitude and virtually negligible in wavelength dependency [153]. Variations in the Contribution of Chromatic Channels An age-related reduction of efficiency has been observed at long wavelengths for photopic luminous efficiency functions based on HBM [104]. The decline has been attributed to a reduced contribution of the chromatic pathway signals to brightness with age. Interestingly, some evidence suggests that the infant’s luminosity function is mediated by luminance (largely without a chromatic pathway contribution) rather than by brightness (with a chromatic pathway contribution) signals, although this is difficult to test [154]. To date, there remains no evidence that the infant visual system computes a brightness signal. Moreover, such young infants also fail to make chromatic discriminations. This may mean that the chrominance pathways develop later than the luminance pathway, which seems to be intact even in 8-week-old infant subjects (see [154]). CONCLUSIONS Spectral luminous efficiency is well defined for almost all conditions of scotopic (rod) vision by the CIE V′(λ) function [32]. For photopic vision, a luminous efficiency function that obeys additivity has been defined for neutral daylight conditions, V*(λ) [44]. It is valid for small central viewing fields of 2° or less in diameter. For large viewing fields, 10° ore more in diameter, the V10*(λ) may be preferred instead. Moreover, both V*(λ) and V10*(λ) are representative of techniques that obey Abney’s law of photometric additivity. For some conditions, for instance, those requiring side-by-side brightness matching, a function based on brightness photometry may be more appropriate (such as the CIE brightness-matching function). However, luminous efficiencies estimated by that function will not obey additivity. For mesopic vision, uncertainties about how the rod and cone signals interact to determine luminous efficiency and how their interaction changes with increasing luminance make any recommendations about which luminous efficiency function to use impracticable. The standard luminous efficiency functions generally apply to young observers for fixed viewing and measuring techniques. However, formulas are available for correcting them so that they more closely approximate the luminous efficiencies of any individual observer for other viewing conditions.
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16 Cone Pigments and Vision in the Mouse Gerald H. Jacobs CONTENTS Introduction Prevalence and Spatial Distribution of Mouse Cones Mouse Cone Pigments Cone Signal Pathways in the Mouse Retina Cone-Based Vision in Mice Alterations in Mouse Vision Consequent to Genetic Manipulations Mouse and Human Cone Vision References
INTRODUCTION The house mouse (Mus musculus) originated in the northern Indian subcontinent approximately 1 million years ago [1]. More than 450 strains of mice have been derived from M. musculus stock for laboratory research [2], and in recent years various versions of this species have become the targets of choice for retinal research. This work generally professes the dual goals of illuminating basic retinal biology and of providing models for study of human retinal diseases. This chapter provides a context for evaluating those cases for which interest is focused on cone-based vision by examining what has been learned about the relationships between mouse cone photopigments and vision. PREVALENCE AND SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF MOUSE CONES All mammalian retinas contain a mixture of rods and cones, with the relative representation and the topographical distributions of the two receptor types varying enormously across the order [3, 4]. Although the early literature contains contradictory claims about the very presence of cones in the mouse, in 1979 Carter-Dawson and LaVail [5] showed that mouse cones could be differentiated from rods by applying several structural criteria (principally, location of the photoreceptor cell bodies in the outer nuclear layer, heterochromatin staining patterns, and morphology of the inner segments). Based on sample
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counts made at three retinal locations, they concluded that cones constitute about 3% of the total mouse photoreceptors. More recently, peanut agglutinin (PNA) lectin binding has been widely employed as a marker to label mammalian cone photoreceptors [6]. Cone counts made using PNA labeling indicate that on average there are some 180,000– 190,000 cones in the retinas of C57/BL6 mice [7, 8]. As is the case for many other rodent retinas, there are only modest regional variations in cone distribution in mouse retinas. From their counts, Carter-Dawson and LaVail [5] inferred that cone density must drop gradually from the central to the peripheral portions of the mouse retina. A more detailed examination of the spatial patterning of mouse cones verified this conclusion [7]. Cell counts made at 15 locations along a vertical meridian bisecting the center of the retina revealed a centroperipheral decline in cone density that encompasses less than a factor of two, with densities falling from about 15,000/mm2 in the central retina to about 8,000/mm2 at the far periphery. Other investigators have reported higher peak cone densities in the mouse retina (range of 22,000– 24,000/mm2) with a slightly steeper falloff in cone density toward the peripheral retina [9]. For comparative context, cone densities achieve peak values of about 200,000/mm2 in the human retina, dropping then to less than 5,000/mm2 in the periphery [10]. There is also a centroperipheral decline in the density of mouse rods paralleling that of the cones. Overall, mouse rods have an average density of about 437,000 cells/mm2, reaching peak densities that are more than twice that of the rods in the human retina. The retinal image magnification factor for C57/BL6 mice has been calculated to have a value of 34 µm/deg [11], and consequently, information gleaned from mouse photoreceptor density maps can be used to calculate the actual numbers of photoreceptors stimulated for various patterns of retinal illumination. Mouse Strain Variations The mouse strain C57/BL6 is acknowledged to be the most widely used of all inbred strains and that also seems likely to be the case for retinal research. Accordingly, unless otherwise specifically indicated, that strain can be assumed to have been the target animal in this chapter. It is worth noting that, setting aside those mouse strains that carry specific mutations affecting cone numbers, there are likely other strain differences that have an impact on cone-based vision. Suggestive evidence for that inference comes from a comparative study of 50 mouse strains that revealed there are strain differences in eye size [12], and one consequence of that is a striking between-strain variation in retinal area (ranging from 15.5 to 21.5 mm2). Although cone populations were not specifically assessed in this work, the clear implication is that there are considerable strain variations in overall cone numbers. Whether there are also strain differences in cone density and cone distribution seems so far unknown. Given there are known strain-related differences in overall ganglion cell numbers [13], similar variations in cone populations would not be surprising. An additional important fact is that mouse eyes continue to grow (albeit with a continuously decreasing rate) for a very significant portion of the life span [13]. Such change holds potential implications for functional studies of mouse vision in which age is either a controlled or uncontrolled variable.
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MOUSE CONE PIGMENTS Most mammalian retinas contain two classes of cone photopigment [3]. The mouse is typical in that regard, although some aspects of the nature and distribution of mouse cone pigments are distinctly atypical. Cone Pigment Spectra Although it had long been known that the retinas of animals of many vertebrate taxa (e.g., fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds) contain cones having maximum absorption in the ultraviolet (UV), such pigments were originally thought to be absent from mammals [14]. Thus, it was a surprise when it was discovered that the mouse retina contains a class of cones having maximum sensitivity in the UV [15]. Subsequently, it has become clear that numerous other rodents also have UV cones [16]. In addition to UV pigment, mouse retinas also contain a second type of cone pigment having maximum absorption in the middle wavelengths (M cones). Measurements of the spectra of these two types of cone pigment have been made in vivo using a variety of electrophysiological techniques and in vitro on pigments reconstituted in artificial expression systems. Although there are small variations across the several studies, possibly traceable to idiosyncratic features of the different measurement techniques or to the different metrics employed to fit photopigment spectra, there is agreement that the two mouse cone pigments have peak (λmax) sensitivity values of about 360 (UV) and 510 (M) nm [15, 17–19]. Figure 1 shows spectral absorption curves for the two types of mouse cone pigment. The third mouse photopigment, that found in rods, is a typical rhodopsin having λmax of about 498 nm [17]. Evolution and Spectral Tuning of Mouse Cone Pigments All vertebrate cone pigments are derived from four paralogous opsin gene families, but only two of these families have been detected in eutherian mammals [20]. One of these (termed SWS1, short-wavelength sensitive) includes those opsin genes that specify pigments with λmax values that extend from about 360 to 445 nm; the other (LWS,
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long-wavelength sensitive) yields cone pigments with peaks distributed over the range from about 493 to 565 nm. Mouse cone pigments are drawn from these two respective families. As is the mammalian norm, the mouse M-cone opsin gene is X chromosome linked, while the UV opsin gene is derived from an autosome, chromosome 7. The SWS1 family includes genes that specify both UV and short-wavelength-sensitive (S) cones. Comparative examinations of opsin gene sequences suggested that the ancestral pigments in the SWS1 group were actually UV pigments, and that in the course of the evolution of different lineages, some of these were converted to become S pigments (and occasionally reconverted to UV pigments) [21]. Mammals that have retained the ancestral UV pigments are mostly rodents, but not all rodents follow this pattern; for example, the retinas of most sciurids contain S pigments. So far, there does not appear to be any consistent correlation between visual lifestyle and short-wavelength sensitivity; for example, there are other nocturnal rodents like the mouse with UV pigments, while still other rodents also classified as nocturnal have S pigments. Mammalian cone opsins derived from LWS genes typically consist of string of about 365 amino acids folded into seven helical arrays to form a transmembrane protein that is covalently linked to the photopigment chromophore 11-cis retinal. Sequence comparisons of a collection of mammalian cone opsin genes carried out in conjunction with measurements of photopigment absorption spectra suggested that dimorphic substitutions of amino acids at a total of only five sites in the protein can account for all of the shifts in spectral positioning of LWS pigments [22]. According to this account, the ancestral mammalian LWS pigment is inferred to have had a λmax value of about 531 nm. From that starting point, various combinations of changes at the five sites can be used to account for the spectral positions of the entire array of mammalian LWS pigments. In the case of the mouse, shifting the ancestral LWS-derived pigment from a peak at 531 nm to the spectral position of the M pigment of the mouse (510 nm) requires at minimum only two amino acid substitutions from the ancestral arrangement. The evolutionary timing and events surrounding these proposed changes remain unknown. The spectral tuning of pigments derived from the SWS1 gene family is more complicated. As noted, this partly reflects the fact that SWS1 genes specify photopigments falling into two spectral classes having different ranges of peak spectral sensitivity, UV and S, and that in the course of evolution there have been numerous interconversions between these two groups. As many as 8 amino acid sites (of a total of about 350) have been implicated in the spectral tuning of pigments in this group [23]. Three of these are believed to be most critical, and at those three sites, the amino acids of the mouse UV opsin are identical to the arrangement believed to represent the ancestral condition in pigments specified by the SWS1 gene family [21]. Regional Distribution of Mouse Cone Pigments Although there are well-documented exceptions (e.g., the absence of S cones from the center of the primate fovea), generally cones containing different photopigment types are rather uniformly intermixed across mammalian retinas. This seems a logical arrangement as it allows local circuits positioned downstream of the photoreceptors to have access to signals originating in the different types of cone, thus allowing various excitatory and inhibitory combinations of the two. To satisfy much the same goals, only a single type
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V Fig. 2. The distribution of cone pigments in the retina of Mus musculus as derived by the application of opsin-specific antibodies [24]. Depicted is a flat-mount map of the mouse retina. The distribution of cone types is given by the fill as follows: vertical lines exclusively populated by cones containing UV (ultraviolet) pigment; horizontal lines predominantly M cones with a small intermixed population of cones containing UV pigment; vertical and horizontal lines with shading cones coexpressing M and UV pigment. As described in the text, there are competing claims on the distribution of cone pigments in the mouse retina. Orientation of the retina: D dorsal; V ventral; T temporal; N nasal.
of cone pigment is usually expressed in any given cone. Mouse cones violate both of these principles. In 1992, Szel and coworkers [24] used opsin antibody labeling to reveal a striking separation of the two cone types across the retina such that cones containing UV pigment are largely relegated to the ventral retina, while cones containing M cone pigment predominate in the dorsal retina. In most mammalian retinas, cones containing pigments derived from LWS opsin genes greatly outnumber those derived from SWS1 genes (often by ratios of ~10:1), but these labeling experiments revealed the mouse has more UV than M cones. As a third surprise, Szel and coworkers documented the presence of a central transitional zone between these two regions where individual cones routinely expressed both UV and M pigments. This unique pattern of cone distribution in the mouse retina is illustrated in Fig. 2. Several functional correlates of these unusual cone distributions in the mouse have been reported. First, in accord with the claim that UV pigment is more abundant than M pigment in the mouse retina, electroretinograms (ERGs) recorded in response to large-field test lights show much higher sensitivity to UV test lights than to similar lights drawn from the middle wavelengths [15, 17]. Second, in support of the idea that cones containing UV and M pigment have different retinal distributions, when UV and middle-wavelength stimuli are imaged onto various subregions of the mouse retina, the ERG shows relative higher sensitivity to UV lights directed to the ventral retina then when the dorsal retina
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is similarly stimulated [25]. Finally, exposure of the mouse eye to an intense light flash having a wavelength content that is exclusively absorbed by M cones greatly suppresses sensitivity to subsequently presented UV test lights [17]. That result is consistent with what would be expected if some mouse cones coexpress both UV and M pigments. It has been discovered that regional disparities in distribution of the different types of cone pigment of the sort first documented in the mouse also occur in other mammalian retinas. For instance, a range of different mouse species have retinal subfields that are dominated by cones containing the short-wavelength-sensitive (presumably, UV) pigment, as do a number of other species, such as rabbit, guinea pig, and vole [9]. Coexpression of cone pigments has now also been seen in a range of other mammalian retinas [9]. The patterning of the regions dominated by one cone type varies considerably across species, as does the extent of coexpression. Despite these species variations, it now seems clear that the mouse is not alone in supporting what were originally thought to be very unusual cone distribution arrangements. The extent of photopigment coexpression in mouse cones remains a somewhat unsettled issue. As noted (Fig. 2), the original observation [24] was that mouse cones coexpressing UV and M pigments were restricted to a narrow strip effectively separating dorsal and ventral retinal subfields, each of which had cones containing a single type of pigment. A subsequent study reached a quite different conclusion. In that case, Northern blotting was used to assess messenger RNA levels for the UV and M opsins in conjunction with opsin antibody labeling to examine the distribution of the cone types across the mouse retina [26]. The essential finding was that, although a small number of cones in the far dorsal retina express only M photopigment, virtually all cones throughout the mouse retina coexpress the two cone types. Further, this study provided evidence that there are gradients of pigment expression across the retina, with M pigment progressively decreasing from the dorsal to the ventral retina, while UV pigment expression shows the inverse pattern. In addition, in accord with earlier ERG results (as described in this section), the retina was judged to contain overall about three times as much UV pigment as it does M pigment [26]. Two more recent studies have bearing on the issue of cone pigment coexpression. One of these used M and UV cone opsin antibodies and searched for double labeling [27]. Counter to the results of the previous study [26], this experiment found that most cones in the dorsal retina express only M pigment, with a small minority (3–5%) expressing only UV pigment. In the ventral retina, most cones express both pigment types, although again a minority of cones (8–20%) contains only UV pigment. Finally, in a recent technical tour de force it proved possible to use suction pipettes to record from the outer segments of individual mouse cones [28]. Although the number of cones examined was somewhat restricted, most of these receptors had sensitivity spectra consistent with the joint presence of UV and M pigments. In addition, results obtained from a majority of the cones (21/29) indicated they contained relatively greater amounts of UV pigment. Given these contradictory conclusions, consensus about the distribution of cone pigments in the mouse retina is not yet at hand. What presently seems clear is that (1) overall, the mouse retina expresses greater amounts of UV than M pigment, (2) a substantial proportion of mouse cones coexpress the two pigments with reciprocal variations in the relative amounts that roughly follow a dorsal/ventral gradient, and (3) opsin-labeling
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experiments indicated that at least some cones express only a single type of pigment. These features of the cone mosaic will profoundly influence the kinds of visual information that the mouse is able to extract from retinal illumination. Some of these issues are considered next. Expression of Mouse Cone Pigments The processes determining which opsin gets expressed in individual cones are not well understood. The mouse retina, with its clear spatial gradient of M and UV pigment expression and with extensive pigment coexpression (implying a failure of the selection mechanism), provides a useful arena in which to examine the details of cone opsin expression. Interest here necessarily focuses on events occurring early in retinal development. Observations made on a number of species suggest that during development SWS1 pigments are expressed prior to the appearance of cone pigments specified by LWS genes. In young mice, for example, cones containing UV pigment can be detected approximately a week before M pigment first appears [29]. More generally, it has been suggested that expression of S/UV pigments represents a default pathway such that the presence of a timed signal is required to induce cones to express M/L pigments [9]. One line of evidence suggests that thyroid hormone may be the signal. The thyroid hormone receptor β2 is found only in cone receptors, where it is believed to regulate gene transcription. When this receptor is deleted, mouse retinas show a selective loss of M cones and a concomitant increase in UV cones [30]. An examination of the role of thyroid hormone availability on the expression of mouse cone pigments provides additional insight. Treatment of retinal explants with exogenous thyroid hormone causes a dose-dependent decrease in UV-expressing cones, while at the same time there is an increase in the abundance of M cones [31]. Further, a dorsal-ventral gradient of thyroid hormone can be detected at the stage in development when M pigment begins to appear, with hormone levels highest in the dorsal retina. These studies thus suggest that thyroid hormone is important for establishing cone opsin patterning across the mouse retina and, by extension, may have an analogous role in all mammalian retinas. Given that the thyroid hormone receptor β2 seems essential for M opsin expression, which factors are required to trigger the expression of mouse UV opsin? An experiment suggested a role for an orphan nuclear receptor called retinoid-related orphan receptor β (RORβ) [32]. Various lines of evidence from this investigation suggested that RORβ, which is abundantly expressed in brain and pineal gland as well as in the retina, activates the upstream promoter sequence of the SWS1 opsin gene during cone photoreceptor development, thus directing UV pigment expression. The evidence includes the facts that (1) there are functional binding sites for RORβ, (2) RORβ actually binds to these sites, and (3) the induction of UV opsin is greatly impaired in mice engineered to lack these binding sites. Presumably, the timing of expression of UV opsin is then linked to the changing levels and patterns of thyroid hormone as described. CONE SIGNAL PATHWAYS IN THE MOUSE RETINA Significant advances have been made in identifying the constituent cells of the mammalian retina, in analyzing the interconnections of these cells, and in detailing the
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retinal pathways through which photoreceptor signals are eventually collated and analyzed (for reviews, see [33, 34]). Two major generalizations have emerged. First, with the exception of specializations that are characteristic of the primate fovea, there is a considerable conservation in the number of cell types and in the pattern of retinal wiring across all mammals. Thus, all mammalian retinas feature a series of parallel circuits that originate in the photoreceptors and pass through the retina via intermediary cells to converge onto 10–15 separate types of ganglion cell. Second, even though rods greatly outnumber cones in most mammalian retinas, the network of postreceptoral cells transmitting cone signals is elaborate relative to the circuitry dedicated to processing rod-based signals. For example, there are 9–11 types of mammalian bipolar cells driven by cones, whereas these same retinas typically have only a single type of bipolar cell dedicated exclusively to the transmission of rod inputs [33]. This last fact is in accord with the view that during the diversification of vertebrate eyes the rod system was simply engrafted onto a cone-based system that had evolved earlier. Whereas the structural organization of the cone pathways in the mouse retina seems generally consistent with the principles just mentioned [7], the regionalization of cone pigments and the variable coexpression of these pigments in individual cones greatly complicate the understanding of nature of cone signals one might expect to see in the mouse retina. For example, a conserved feature of mammalian retinas is the presence of a class of bipolar cells (usually called S-cone ON bipolars) connected through a signinverting synapse to short-wavelength-sensitive cones. Normally, the outputs from such bipolars converge onto ganglion cells along with opposite-sign signals delivered via a class of bipolar cells connected to cones containing middle- and long-wavelengthsensitive pigments [33]. The net result is a ganglion cell that responds in a chromatically opponent fashion (i.e., inhibiting to some wavelengths of light and exciting to others) and thus stands in position to signal onward information that can be used to support a dimension of color vision. If, however, all cones coexpress both short- and longwavelength pigments, as some allege they do in the mouse, then the spectral sensitivities of the contrasting inputs to the ganglion cell will not differ, so that ganglion cell spectral opponency (and, hence, a potential color signal) may be effectively obviated. Given the current uncertainties about the extent and nature of cone pigment coexpression, what actually happens in the cone pathways of the mouse retina is not clear. Based on the observation that the relationship between mouse spectral sensitivity measured in the outer retina and by behavioral means is unusual, it was suggested that, although there is variable coexpression of cone pigments in the mouse retina, the connections made by mouse cones are similar to the typical mammalian pattern, implying that the signals from the majority of those cones that coexpress pigment are connected in the same fashion as is typical of long-wavelength cones in mammalian retinas. Consequently, the convergence of signals onto the ganglion cells of the type under discussion is largely of the nature of UV − (M + UV) [35]. Such cells could yield a significantly muted, but still spectrally opponent, signal. A recent investigation employing markers that made it possible to label UV-cone bipolar cells as well as identify their cone inputs supported this possibility. Indeed, that study concluded that these bipolar cells show the same selectively in their cone contacts as seen in other mammalian retinas; that is, they contact only cones containing UV pigment [27].
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Some observations have been made regarding the nature of cone signal inputs to mouse ganglion cells. Although the results from a pair of single-unit recording studies [36, 37] are not entirely consistent, a majority of mouse ganglion cells are alleged to receive a summative input from the two pigment types with their relative contributions varying from cell to cell. In addition, signals derived from stimulation of UV and M cone pigments are combined in an opponent fashion in a small minority of the ganglion cells (somewhere between 2% and 13% of all cells). What is unusual is the observation that 20% or more of all ganglion cells seem to receive exclusive inputs from either UV or M pigment. Given the substantial convergence of cones to ganglion cells, these results would imply that there must be large patches in the receptor mosaic where one pigment type is expressed exclusively. In sum, although some progress has been made in understanding the nature of cone signal pathways in the mouse retina and their functional implications, much obviously remains to be learned. CONE-BASED VISION IN MICE In one way or another, most of the studies that use mice as models for human retinal disease attempt to draw inferences about the linkages between retinal mechanisms and seeing. To do this in any realistic fashion requires an understanding of the nature of vision in the mouse. Here, I consider what has been learned about cone-based vision in the mouse. Assessment Techniques As the mouse became a principal target for examining linkages between genes and the nervous system, numerous assays were developed to assess the emergent effects of gene alteration. Included in these are various tests of the mouse visual system [38], and among these are applications of electrophysiological indices as well as approaches that involve a number of different behavioral responses. Although there are often strong correlations between the results obtained using these different indices, there can also be significant differences. Such differences are hardly surprising since various tests can index quite different levels of visual system analysis. For example, a basic measure of visual capacity is spectral sensitivity. As described next, measurements of mouse spectral sensitivity can vary greatly depending on the assay technique, with retinal electrophysiological studies yielding results quite different from those embodied in behavioral responses. Behavioral assays of visual capacity in mice fall into two categories. One involves the use of appetitive procedures in which the animal is reinforced, usually by the transient availability of food or fluid, for correctly selecting one visual stimulus from another (or of one among several) [15, 39]. In these experiments, stimulus choice is indicated by the performance of an operant response, such as touching a panel or selecting a particular path to approach the stimulus. The differences between reinforced and nonreinforced stimuli are then progressively changed to obtain threshold measurements of visual capacity. A second general approach employs escape behavior to assess visual capacity. For instance, mice can be trained to escape from water by swimming to a raised platform, the location of which is indicated by a visual stimulus. As in the appetitive
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reinforcement paradigms, the nature of visual cue can then be varied across presentations to obtain a measure of visual capacity. A variety of different configurations of the water escape task have been described [40–42]. In addition to testing behavioral discrimination capacities, examination of mouse vision has also been accomplished by exploiting reflex responses that are elicited by visual stimulation. For instance, animals often make reflexive tracking movements of the eyes, the head, or the whole body to patterned stimuli that are drifted across the visual field [43–45]. The value of the stimulus at which these optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) responses disappear is interpreted as defining a detection threshold. Each of these methods to assess visual capacity in mice has advantages and disadvantages. By exploiting the motivation of animals to seek resources required for survival, the appetitive tasks come closest to tapping natural visually guided behaviors. However, such paradigms require extensive pretraining by someone skilled in behavioral methodologies and are thus not appropriate for screening programs in which it is necessary to examine large numbers of animals. Escape behaviors such as the various swimming tasks require little training and thus provide a more efficient way to examine mouse visual capacity. There are potential downsides to this procedure as well since this task cannot be used in mice with memory deficits or panic reactions (as may be common in some mouse strains), and it has also been observed that 5–10% of mice in numerous strains do not for one reason or another perform well in swimming tasks [42]. Evaluations of mouse vision using optomotor responses can be done rapidly and reliably [44]. A potential disadvantage of such tests is that the visual pathways subserving OKN responses are largely different from those underlying discriminative visual behaviors; consequently, they may provide a quite different picture of the relationships between retinal organization and vision. All mammals feature duplex retinas in which rods subserve vision under low light levels, rods and cones function jointly at intermediate light levels, while at still higher light levels rod signals saturate, and cones become the sole functional photoreceptor at higher light levels. A problem is that the illumination levels defining the boundaries between these separate functional ranges depend on the organizational features of any particular visual system; thus, for example, what defines an illumination level that is sufficient to ensure cone-based vision in one species may or may not apply to another species or, indeed, even for animals of the same species carrying genetic manipulations that influence retinal organization. How can one ensure that behavioral tests of cone vision in mice actually reflect the operation of cones? One solution is purely empirical: Obtain a measurement of spectral sensitivity in the test situation to show that spectral sensitivity function is consistent with what is expected from mouse cones (i.e., predictable from knowledge of the functions described next). For many investigations, this strategy is either too complicated or too time consuming. An alternative is to make use of what has been learned about rod and cone thresholds in the mouse. One starting point for accomplishing this is a recent tutorial that provides useful instruction on how to calculate the effectiveness of standard human luminance measurements in terms of their ability to photoisomerize mouse photopigments [46]. Direct measurements of animals with that retinas have been engineered to lack cone photoreceptors showed that it requires a light sufficient to produce 104–105 photoisomerizations/rod/s to effect rod saturation [47], and measurements made on mice in which
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rod and cone physiology had been manipulated suggested that cone-mediated vision in the mouse is some 10,000 times less sensitive than rod-mediated vision [42]. A potential complicating feature in behavioral studies is the responsiveness of the mouse pupil to ambient illumination. Mouse pupils are unusually sensitive to dim illumination and over their range of constriction can serve to reduce retinal illumination by a factor of about 20 [48]. One effect of pupil dynamics is to keep retinal illumination below the level required for rod saturation in many laboratory situations employing relatively dim stimulus sources (e.g., many computer monitors). There is one other possible complication. An investigation of C57/BL6 mice revealed the surprising fact that pupillary function may be effectively lost in animals that are greater than about 4 months of age [48]. A consequence is that, for any specific lighting circumstance, the effectiveness of the light may be considerably greater for older than for younger animals. Spectral Sensitivity Spectral sensitivity functions show the relative weighting of photic inputs as a function of their wavelength composition and thus serve to index a basic feature of visual capacity. In general, these functions reflect the characteristics of the underlying photopigments, the presence of any ocular screening filters, and the manner in which the photopigment signals are processed in the visual system. Cone-based spectral sensitivity functions derived for the mouse are illustrated in Fig. 3A. The function shown at the top is based on ERG recordings. In line with the observation given here that mouse retinas expresses, overall, more UV than M pigment, sensitivity is highest in the UV wavelengths. Over the wavelengths tested, the mouse lens provides fairly modest differential absorption of light (curve in Fig. 3B). After correction for lens absorption, the ERG data were best fit with a linear summation of absorption curves appropriate for the two classes of cone pigment found in the mouse retina (continuous curve). The lower curve in Fig. 3A plots spectral sensitivity functions obtained from three mice in a behavioral test that involved a visual discrimination task in which animals were required to detect the presence of briefly presented monochromatic test lights that were superimposed on a steady achromatic background. That function was fitted with photopigment absorption curves in the same manner as for the ERG results. Although contributions from both mouse cone photopigments can be detected in outer retinal signals and in behavior, the relationship between the two is unusual. Typically, short-wavelength-sensitive cones make only small contributions to ERG spectral sensitivity curves and then show a greatly enhanced contribution to increment threshold spectral sensitivity determined in the same fashion as the data of Fig. 3A. The reason for this is that increment thresholds tend to favor contributions made by spectrally opponent mechanisms, while signals recorded in the outer retina do not [49]. As was indicated, cone pigment coexpression in mouse cones may result in attenuated cone opponency in the mouse visual system, and this may explain why the spectral sensitivity functions measured in these different ways in the mouse have what seems an odd relationship. Whether that explanation is correct or not, these measurements of mouse spectral sensitivity functions make an important point: Estimates of spectral sensitivity derived from retinal measurements give an inadequate prediction of how a behaving mouse weights the spectral distribution of retinal illumination.
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Fig. 3. Cone-based spectral sensitivity of the mouse. A The spectral sensitivity function at the top was obtained from electroretinogram (ERG) recordings (data points are mean values ± 1 SD for eight mice); the function below is derived from behavioral measurements made in an increment-threshold detection task (means ± 1 SD for three mice). These two functions are arbitrarily positioned on the sensitivity axis where the neighboring tick marks represent steps of 0.5 log units. The sensitivity values in both functions have been best fit with linear summations of the two pigment curves shown in Fig. 1 after having first been corrected for preretinal absorption by the mouse lens. B Lens transmission measurements for mouse. Shown are mean values (±1 SD) for three adult mice. The transmission values have been normalized to 100% at 700 nm. The methods used to make the lens measurements were as described earlier [67], and the spectral sensitivity data were derived from an earlier publication [35].
Spatial and Temporal Sensitivity The ability of an animal to exploit spatial information depends both on the optical characteristics of the eye and on the organization of the visual system. A number of studies have sought to document the abilities of mice to extract spatial information, typically through measures of spatial acuity. This quest has involved the use of the various types of behavioral techniques outlined. The most complete accounts of spatial sensitivity involve determinations of spatial contrast sensitivity curves for which the contrast required for detection of a spatial target, typically a sine wave grating, is determined for each of an array of target sizes. Figure 4 shows such a function for mice as assessed in a water escape task [50]. As is conventional for tests of this kind, target size is specified as spatial frequency, the number of cycles in the test sine wave grating per degree of visual angle. The form of the function is typical of that determined for cone vision in mammals, with maximum sensitivity to targets of intermediate size (for the mouse at ~0.2 c/deg) and with a decline in sensitivity to both larger and smaller targets. The former is typically attributed to the presence
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Fig. 4. Spatial contrast sensitivity function. These results are replotted from behavioral measurements made in a water escape task [50]. Each data point (triangle) represents the mean sensitivity values for five C57BL/6 mice (±1 standard error of the mean [SEM]). The downward arrow indicates the predicted cutoff frequency. See text for further discussion.
of spatially antagonistic interactions in the visual system, while the latter reflects an approach to the acuity limit with the extrapolation of the descending limb to targets of 100% contrast (the cutoff frequency, indicated by the small arrow in Fig. 4), roughly equivalent to classical measures of visual acuity. So determined, the estimated visual acuity is about 0.5–0.6 c/deg. As judged by these measurements, the mouse has low spatial acuity and low contrast sensitivity (maximum ~6). For comparative context, comparable measurements made on pigmented rats yield estimated visual acuities of about 1.1 c/deg with peak contrast sensitivity of about 20 [51]. A number of other measurements of visual acuity in the mouse have yielded similar values, between about 0.5 and 0.6 c/deg [39, 41, 44], while still others have produced lower estimates, around 0.4 c/deg [43] or even lower [52]. These lower estimates were obtained using OKN measures, and it seems possible the difference may reflect the fact that information about the highest spatial frequencies is not processed along the subcortical pathways that underlie OKN. The fact that spatial resolution is significantly poorer in mice with lesions of the visual cortex supports that interpretation [50]. Alternatively, studies in human subjects showed that spatial resolution is heavily dependent on light level, and it might simply be that the effective retinal illumination differs among these various mouse studies. In any case, it should not be automatically assumed that the various means for assessing mouse spatial acuity all index the same processes. So far, there is little information about abilities of mice to make discriminations of temporally varying stimuli. One study has shown that mice can discriminate flickering lights up to frequencies of about 25 Hz [42], and a full spectral sensitivity function was derived based on discrimination of monochromatic lights flickering at 20 Hz [35]. Since genetic manipulations of the mouse retina can influence the timing of signals, a better baseline for understanding mouse temporal resolution would be welcome. Color Vision Like most other mammals, mice have two classes of cone photopigment (Fig. 1). When appropriately tested, animals with such complements are typically shown to have
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Fig. 5. Results from a test for the presence of color vision in the mouse. In a threealternative forced-choice discrimination task mice were required to distinguish various longer test wavelengths from a 370-nm light (open circles) and then, in a subsequent test, various shorter test wavelengths from a 510-nm light (filled triangles). The data points represent asymptotic performance levels achieved when the wavelength pairs were equated to appear equally bright to the mouse. The horizontal dashed line indicates the level of chance performance. (Data taken from [35].)
a dimension of color vision; technically, they are dichromats [3]. For example, the rat retina contains two types of cone pigment having spectral absorption properties very similar to those found in the mouse, and from this arrangement rats derive some color vision [53]. Unlike what is apparently the case in rat, the mouse cone pigments are to some variable extent coexpressed in individual photoreceptors, and as noted, this provides what would seem an unfavorable substrate for producing color vision. An experiment was performed to see if pigment coexpression provides an insurmountable barrier to color vision in the mouse. For this, animals were tested in an appetitive forced-choice discrimination task [35]. Following a training procedure designed to make it possible to obviate cues other than those provided by the spectral differences between lights, it was found that mice could successfully discriminate pure-wavelength differences. Discrimination results shown in Fig. 5 illustrate the fact that mice can discriminate lights of about 400 nm and longer from a UV light, and that the reverse is also possible. The biology that underlies this capacity remains to be understood, but this result makes clear that coexpression of pigments in mouse cones cannot be complete and the same for all cones. A less-obvious point may also be drawn from this color vision experiment. The demonstration of color vision in the mouse required extensive training and testing of highly motivated animals. It seems quite likely that much briefer testing periods, as are typical of the rapid tests often used for screening of visual defects, would have failed to detect the presence of color vision in the mouse. Thus, it is worth keeping in mind that rapid visual screening tests may be inadequate for assessing relatively less-robust visual capacities that may persist after genetic manipulations or indeed be produced in this same fashion.
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ALTERATIONS IN MOUSE VISION CONSEQUENT TO GENETIC MANIPULATIONS A significant number of human visual diseases stem from alterations in the physiology of the photoreceptors. A robust literature body has emerged that examines the consequences of genetic manipulations that ultimately influence photoreceptor operation in the mouse. A significant fraction of these studies is intended to provide models for advancing understanding of human disease. A few examples of this work relevant to the theme of this chapter are reviewed here. Targeted Deletions of Rods or Cones Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a heterogeneous collection of hereditary disorders characterized by progressive retinal degeneration that first destroys rods and then later leads to progressive cone loss. A number of different mouse models have been developed in which there is a loss of rods early in development. These animals can be used to study the dynamics of change as a model for some types of RP and can be exploited to study cone function in the absence of rods. One such model is the rhodopsin knockout mouse, an animal with a mutation in exon 2 of the rod opsin gene. Rhodopsin knockout animals homozygous for the mutation (Rho−/−) show a complete loss of rod signal [54, 55]. Early in development, cone signals in these animals are normal (or even larger than normal), but subsequently they also degenerate, with a consequent loss of cone signal that is effectively complete by 3 months of age. Although the timing of photoreceptor loss is much compressed relative to what it is in humans, the sequence of degenerative change in these mice is similar to that seen in some cases of RP, and thus these mice may stand as a possible model for studies of therapeutic interventions. Other genetic manipulations have also been shown to remove rod function, but they have differing consequences for cone function. For example, mice in which the gene for the rod transducin α-subunit and mice in which rod arrestin has been deleted both display changes in rod function. No rod responses can be recorded from the former animals, while in the latter mice rod signals are detectable but strikingly suppressed over extended time periods (a matter of hours) following intense photic stimulation [56]. Unlike the rhodopsin knockout mice, these animals do maintain their cone function and thus might be used to probe the nature of cone function following severe rod loss. A variety of genetic manipulations have been effected that lead to the opposite photoreceptor outcome in mice—a loss of functional cones. In addition to isolating rods for study, such animals may also serve as models for the human condition congenital achromatopsia. One case targets a cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channel that is found in cone photoreceptors (CNG3) but is absent from rods. ERG signals recorded from mice in which CNG3 has been deleted show normal rod responses, but cone signals are greatly diminished in size by 2 months of age, and they are absent entirely in adult animals [57]. The loss of cones does not apparently have an impact on normal rod function in these animals. Another manipulation impacting mouse cones but leaving rods unscathed involves the production of transgenic animals that have incorporated a DNA segment encoding an attenuated diphtheria toxin under the control of a cone opsin gene promoter [47]. Normal rod signals can be recorded from ganglion cells in such mice,
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but no analogous cone signals are detected, and their absence has allowed an examination of the nature of signaling pathways connecting rods to ganglion cells. Behavioral tests on these so-called coneless mice also allow an examination of the characteristics of rod-based vision at light levels at which cone signals are predominant in animals with normal retinas [8]. A variety of other genetic alterations has been exploited to selectively ablate photoreceptors. On occasion, it has proven useful to be able to remove both rods and cones. For example, in recent years it has been established that a subset of mammalian ganglion cells express the photosensitive pigment melanopsin, and that signals initiated in these cells are important for the photic regulation of circadian cycles [58]. Demonstrations that circadian responses remain intact in the complete absence of photoreceptors (coneless/rodless mice) provided one of the strong pieces of evidence supporting this conclusion [59]. Addition of New Cone Pigments The examples given all involve deletion of function, and they were mostly designed to mimic some aspect of retinal pathology. At the same time, there are circumstances for which it would be useful to examine consequences that flow not from deletion but from the addition of neural components. Component addition occurs naturally during the evolution of visual systems, and thus such artificial manipulations could allow direct tests of ideas about visual system evolution. For example, the bcl2 gene inhibits naturally occurring cell death, and consequently when that gene is overexpressed in a transgenic mouse the number of neurons in the brain increases [39]. This general change includes an increase in ganglion cell number. Based on the idea that the number of ganglion cells serves to limit visual acuity, one might predict that such animals would show an increase in visual acuity. They do not, perhaps because considerable other neuronal rewiring also occurs as a result of component addition [39]. Examination of the phylogeny of opsins indicates that photopigments have frequently been gained and lost during vertebrate evolution, including a number of well-documented changes that have occurred during the diversification of primates [60]. One central question in the evolution of photopigments and the capacities they provide is whether the mere addition of a new pigment is sufficient to yield a change in visual capacity that increases fitness or whether other significant reorganization must occur in the visual system to support new visual capacities. Several attempts have been made to use genetically altered mice to examine these possibilities. One case involved the production of a transgenic mouse that had incorporated a human L-cone opsin gene [61]. This new pigment was found to be abundantly expressed in mouse cones. In addition, ERG measurements indicated that the new pigment worked well, changing spectral sensitivity in the manner predicted by the spectral absorption properties of the L-cone pigment. Even more significant, in behavioral tests it was possible to demonstrate that these transgenic mice could utilize information supplied by their new pigment to support visual discrimination [62]. A comparison of the spectral sensitivity functions obtained from transgenic mice and wild-type controls is shown in Fig. 6, which shows that addition of the human L-cone pigment to the mouse retina produces a significant elevation of sensitivity to long-wavelength lights. This result suggests that
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pigment additions per se can yield immediate alterations in behavioral capacity, and such changes could provide an adaptive advantage. The transgenic mouse just described features a retina that contains three types of cone pigment: native UV, native M, and human L. During evolution, the addition of a new pigment is frequently associated with the emergence of a new dimension of color vision. That capacity did not appear in this transgenic, likely because the transgene was incorporated onto an autosome; thus, human L and mouse M pigment became coexpressed in individual cones [62]. To better approximate the arrangement that normally occurs in mammals would require that the new opsin gene be X chromosome linked; genetically engineered knock-in mice that satisfy that criterion have been developed [63, 64]. In these animals, the normal mouse M-opsin gene (which is located on the X chromosome) was replaced with a construct incorporating the human L-opsin gene. With subsequent breeding, this yields three separate cone pigment phenotypes: All mice have a normal UV pigment with hemizygous males and homozygous females in addition to having either mouse M or human L pigment. At the same time, heterozygous females have both M and L pigments, and through the agency of random X-chromosome inactivation, these two pigments become separately expressed in mouse cones. As for the earlier developed transgenic mice, the novel pigment functions well in these knock-in mice and can be readily shown to support enhanced visual sensitivity. Recent experiments show that these mice can also acquire a new capacity for color vision [65]. These results dramatically demonstrate that adding components to the nervous system via genetic engineering can provide a useful new tool to study the organization of the visual system, thus allowing something close to actual laboratory studies of evolution. MOUSE AND HUMAN CONE VISION The general advantages of using mice as models for studies of human ocular disease and basic retinal biology have been well documented (e.g., [66]). These include the highly conserved features of the two genomes, the ability to control and manipulate
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mouse genetic backgrounds, and the general similarities of retinal construction across all mammals. Because humans are diurnal and because our species has uniquely developed the lighting technology that allows us to convert environmental conditions that would normally involve rod vision into photopic viewing, much of the interest in human vision and human visual pathology focuses on cones. In using mice as models for human cone vision, one has to be cognizant of species differences as well as their similarities. Some of these issues have been noted, and it may be useful to conclude this survey of conebased vision in the mouse by reminding of the following points of difference between mouse and human cone vision: 1. The foveal region of the human retina has a unique structural and functional organization that is unmatched by that found anywhere in the mouse retina. 2. Because of differences in cone pigment complement and preretinal filtering, mice have significant sensitivity to UV radiation that is absent from human vision. One practical consequence of this difference is that visual stimuli frequently used to test mice (e.g., computer monitors) fail to provide photic inputs that maximize the full range of mouse visual capacity. 3. Many mouse cones coexpress two classes of photopigment. This alters dramatically the prospects for deriving color vision and renders signal transmission in the visual system different from what it is in mammals like humans without receptor coexpression. 4. By comparative standards, the mouse has poor visual acuity. This makes it challenging to accurately document small differences in spatial resolution or gradual changes in spatial vision that may be engendered by disease, by age, or by environmental manipulations. ACKNOWLEDGMENT Preparation of this chapter was facilitated by a grant from the National Eye Institute (EY002052). REFERENCES 1. Boursot, P., Din, W., Anand, R., Darviche, D., Dod, B., von Demling, F., Talwar, G. P., Bonhomme, P. (1996). Origin and radiation of the house mouse: Mitochondrial DNA phylogeny. J Evol Biol 9, 391–415. 2. Beck, J. A., Lloyd, S., Hafezparast, M., Lennon-Pierce, M., Eppig, M. T., Festing, M. F., Fisher, E. M. (2000). Genealogies of mouse inbred strains. Nat Genet 24, 23–25. 3. Jacobs, G. H. (1993). The distribution and nature of colour vision among the mammals. Biol Rev 68, 413–471. 4. Ahnelt, P. K., Kolb, H. (2000). The mammalian photoreceptor mosaic-adaptive design. Progr Retin Eye Res 19, 711–770. 5. Carter-Dawson, L. D., LaVail, M. M. (1979). Rods and cones in the mouse retina. I. Structural analysis using light and electron microscopy. J Comp Neurol 188, 245–262. 6. Blanks, J., Johnson, L. V. (1984). Specific binding of peanut lectin to a class of retinal photoreceptor cells: a species comparison. Invest Ophthal Vis Sci 25, 546–557. 7. Jeon, C.-J., Strettoi, E., Masland, R. H. (1998). The major cell populations of the mouse retina. J Neurosci 18, 8936–8946. 8. Williams, G. A., Daigle, K. A., Jacobs, G. H. (2005). Rod and cone function in coneless mice. Vis Neurosci 22, 807–816.
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9. Lukats, A., Szabo, A., Rohlich, P., Vigh, B., Szel, A. (2005). Photopigment coexpression in mammals: comparative and developmental aspects. Histol Histopathol 20, 551–574. 10. Curcio, C. A., Sloan, K. R., Kalina, R. E., Hendrickson, A. E. (1990). Human photoreceptor topography. J Comp Neurol 292, 497–523. 11. Schmucker, C., Schaeffel, F. (2004). A paraxial schematic eye model for the growing C57BL/6 mouse. Vision Res 44, 1857–1867. 12. Zhou, G., Williams, R. W. (1999). Mouse models for myopia: an analysis of variation in eye size in adult mice. Optom Vision Sci 76, 408–418. 13. Williams, R. W., Strom, R. C., Rice, D. S., Goldowitz, D. (1996). Genetic and environmental control of variation in retinal ganglion cell number in mice. J Neurosci 16, 7193–7205. 14. Jacobs, G. H. (1992). Ultraviolet vision in vertebrates. Am Zool 32, 544–554. 15. Jacobs, G. H., Neitz, J., Deegan II, J. F. (1991). Retinal receptors in rodents maximally sensitive to ultraviolet light. Nature 353, 655–656. 16. Peichl, L. (2005). Diversity of mammalian photoreceptor properties: adaptations to habitat and lifestyle? Anat Rec A 287A, 1001–1012. 17. Lyubarsky, A. L., Falsini, B., Pennesi, M. E., Valentini, P., Pugh, E. N., Jr. (1999). UV- and midwave-sensitive cone-driven retinal responses of the mouse: a phenotype for coexpression of cone photopigments. J Neurosci 19, 442–455. 18. Yokoyama, S., Radlwimmer, F. B., Kawamura, S. (1998). Regeneration of ultraviolet pigments of vertebrates. FEBS Lett 423, 155–158. 19. Sun, H., Macke, J. P., Nathans, J. (1997). Mechanisms of spectral tuning in the mouse green cone pigment. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 94, 8860–8865. 20. Yokoyama, S. (2002). Molecular evolution of color vision in vertebrates. Gene 300, 69–78. 21. Hunt, D. M., Cowing, J. A., Wilkie, S. E., Parry, J. W. L., Poopalasundaram, S., Bowmaker, J. K. (2004). Divergent mechanisms for the tuning of shortwave sensitive visual pigments in vertebrates. Photochem Photobiol Sci 3, 713–720. 22. Yokoyama, S., Radlwimmer, F. B. (1999). The molecular genetics of red and green color vision in mammals. Genetics 153, 919–932. 23. Shi, Y., Yokoyama, S. (2003). Molecular analysis of the evolutionary significance of ultraviolet vision in vertebrates. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 100, 8308–8333. 24. Szel, A., Rohlich, P., Caffe, A. R., Juliusson, B., Aguire, G., Van Veen, T. (1992). Unique separation of two spectral classes of cones in the mouse retina. J Comp Neurol 325, 327–342. 25. Calderone, J. B., Jacobs, G. H. (1995). Regional variations in the relative sensitivity to UV light in the mouse retina. Vis Neurosci 12, 463–468. 26. Applebury, M. L., Antoch, M. P., Baxter, L. C., Chun, L. L. Y., Falk, J. D., Farhangfar, F., Kage, K., Kryzystolik, M. L., Lyass, L. A., Robbins, J. T. (2000). The murine cone photoreceptor: a single cone type expresses both S and M opsins with retinal spatial patterning. Neuron 27, 513–523. 27. Haverkamp, S., Wassle, H., Duebel, J., Kuner, T., Augustine, G. J., Feng, G., Euler, T. (2005). The primordial, blue-cone color system of the mouse retina. J Neurosci 25, 5438–5445. 28. Nikonov, S. S., Kholodenko, R., Lem, J., Pugh, E. N., Jr. (2006). Physiological features of the S- and M-cone photoreceptors of wild-type mice from single cell recordings. J Gen Physiol 127, 359–374. 29. Wikler, K. C., Szel, A., Jacobsen, A.-L. (1996). Positional information and opsin identity in retinal cones. J Comp Neurol 374, 96–107. 30. Ng, L., Hurley, J. B., Dierks, B., Srinivas, M., Salto, C., Vennstrom, B., Reh, T. A., Forrest, D. (2001). A thyroid hormone receptor that is required for the development of green cone photoreceptors. Nat Genet 27, 94–98.
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31. Roberts, M. R., Srinivas, M., Forrest, D., Morreale de Escobar, G., Reh, T. A. (2006). Making the gradient: thyroid hormone regulates cone opsin expression in the developing mouse retina. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 103, 6218–6223. 32. Srinivas, M., Ng, L., Liu, H., Jia, L., Forrest, D. (2006). Activation of the blue opsin gene in cone photoreceptor development by RORβ orphan nuclear receptor. Mol Endocrinol 20, 1728–1741. 33. Masland, R. H. (2001). The fundamental plan of the retina. Nat Neurosci 4, 877–886. 34. Wassle, H. (2004). Parallel processing in the mammalian retina. Nat Neurosci 19, 747–757. 35. Jacobs, G. H., Williams, G. A., Fenwick, J. A. (2004). Influence of cone pigment coexpression on spectral sensitivity and color vision in the mouse. Vision Res 44, 1615–1622. 36. Ekesten, B., Gouras, P., Yamamoto, S. (2000). Cone inputs to murine retinal ganglion cells. Vision Res 40, 2573–2577. 37. Ekesten, B., Gouras, P. (2005). Cone and rod inputs to murine retinal ganglion cells: evidence of cone opsin specific channels. Vis Neurosci 22, 893–903. 38. Pinto, L. H., Enroth-Cugell, C. (2000). Tests of the mouse visual system. Mammal Genom 14, 531–536. 39. Gianfranceschi, L., Fiorentini, A., Maffei, L. (1999). Behavioural visual acuity of wild type and bc12 transgenic mice. Vision Res 39, 569–574. 40. Hayes, J. M., Balkema, G. W. (1993). Elevated dark-adapted thresholds in hypopigmented mice measured with a water maze screen apparatus. Behav Genet 23, 395–403. 41. Prusky, G. T., West, P. W. R., Douglas, R. M. (2000). Behavioral assessment of visual acuity in mice and rats. Vision Res 40, 2201–2209. 42. Nathan, J., Reh, R., Ankoudinova, I., Ankoudinova, G., Chang, B., Heckenlively, J. R., Hurley, J. B. (2006). Scotopic and photopic visual thresholds and spatial and temporal discrimination by behavior of mice in a water maze. Photochem Photobiol 82, 1489–1494. 43. Prusky, G. T., Alam, N. M., Beekman, S., Douglas, R. M. (2004). Rapid quantification of adult and developing mouse spatial vision using a virtual optomotor system. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 45, 4611–4616. 44. Abdeljalil, J., Hamid, M., Abel-Mouttalib, O., Stephane, R., Raymond, R., Johan, A., Jose, S., Chambon, P., Serge, P. (2005). The optomotor response: a robust first-line screening method for mice. Vision Res 45, 1439–1446. 45. Schmucker, C., Schaeffel, F. (2006). Contrast sensitivity of wildtype mice wearing diffusers or spectacle lenses, and the effect of atropine. Vision Res 46, 678–687. 46. Lyubarsky, A. L., Daniele, L. L., Pugh, E. N. J. (2004). From candelas to photoisomerizations in the mouse eye by rhodopsin bleaching in situ and the light-rearing dependence of the major components of the mouse ERG. Vision Res 44, 3235–3251. 47. Soucy, E., Wang, Y., Nirenberg, S., Nathans, J., Meister, M. (1998). A novel signalling pathway from rod photorceptors to ganglion cells in mammalian retina. Neuron 21, 481–493. 48. Pennesi, M. E., Lyubarsky, A. L., Pugh, E. N., Jr. (1998). Extreme responsiveness of the pupil of the dark-adapted mouse to steady retinal illumination. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 39, 2148–2156. 49. Lennie, P., Pokorny, J., Smith, V. C. (1993). Luminance. J Opt Soc Am A 10, 1283–1293. 50. Prusky, G. T., Douglas, R. M. (2004). Characterization of mouse cortical spatial vision. Vision Res 44, 3411–3418. 51. Birch, D. G., Jacobs, G. H. (1979). Spatial contrast sensitivity in albino and pigmented rats. Vision Res 19, 933–937. 52. Wong, A. A., Brown, R. E. (2006). Visual detection, pattern discrimination and visual acuity in 14 strains of mice. Genes, Brain Behav 5, 389–403.
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53. Jacobs, G. H., Fenwick, J. A., Williams, G. A. (2001). Cone-based vision of rats for ultraviolet and visible lights. J Exp Biol 204, 2439–2446. 54. Toda, K., Bush, R. A., Humphries, P., Sieving, P. A. (1999). The electroretinogram of the rhodopsin knockout mouse. Vis Neurosci 16, 391–398. 55. Jaissle, G., May, C. A., Reinhard, J., Kohler, K., Fauser, S., Lutgen-Drecoll, E., Zrenner, E., Seeliger, M. W. (2001). Evaluation of the rhodopsin knockout mouse as a model of pure cone function. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 42, 506–513. 56. Lyubarsky, A. L., Lem, J., Chen, J., Falsini, B., Iannaccone, A., Pugh Jr., E. N. (2002). Functionally rodless mice: transgenic models for investigation of cone function in retinal disease and therapy. Vision Res 42, 401–415. 57. Biel, M., Seeliger, M., Pfeifer, A., Kohler, K., Gerstiner, A., Ludwig, A., Jaissle, G., Fauser, S., Zrenner, E., Hofman, F. (1999). Selective loss of cone function in mice lacking the cyclic nucleotide-gated channel CNG3. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96, 7553–7557. 58. Foster, R. G. (2002). Keeping track of time. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Science 43, 1286– 1298. 59. Semo, M., Peirson, S., Lupi, D., Lucas, R. J., Jeffrey, G., Foster, R. G. (2003). Melanopsin retinal ganglion cells and the maintenance of circadian and pupillary responses to light in aged rodless/coneless (rd/rd cl) mice. Eur J Neurosci 17, 1793–1801. 60. Jacobs, G. H., Rowe, M. P. (2004). Evolution of vertebrate colour vision. Clin Exp Optom 87, 206–216. 61. Shaaban, S. A., Crognale, M. A., Calderone, J. B., Huang, J., Jacobs, G. H., Deeb, S. S. (1998). Transgenic mice expressing a functional human photopigment. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 39, 1036–1043. 62. Jacobs, G. H., Fenwick, J. C., Calderone, J. B., Deeb, S. S. (1999). Human cone pigment expressed in transgenic mice yields altered vision. J Neurosci 19, 3258–3265. 63. Smallwood, P. M., Olveczky, B. P., Williams, D. A., Jacobs, G. H., Reese, B. E., Meister, M., Nathans, J. (2003). Genetically engineered mice with an additional class of cone photoreceptors: Implications for the evolution of color vision. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 100, 11706–11711. 64. Onishi, A., Hasegawa, J., Imai, H., Chisaka, O., Ueda, Y., Honda, Y., Tachibana, M., Shichida, Y. (2005). Generation of knock-in mice carrying third cones with spectral sensitivity different from S and L cones. Zool Sci 22, 1145–1156. 65. Jacobs, G.H., Williams, G.A., Cahill, H., Nathans, J. (2007) Emergence of novel color vision in mice engineered to express a human cone photopigment. Science 315, 1723–1725. 66. Chang, B., Hawes, N. L., Hurd, R. E., Wang, J., Howell, D., Davisson, M. T., Roderick, T. H., Nusinowitz, S., Heckenlively, J. R. (2005). Mouse models of ocular disease. Vis Neurosci 22, 587–593. 67. Jacobs, G. H., Calderone, J. B., Fenwick, J. A., Krogh, K., Williams, G. A. (2003). Visual adaptations in a diurnal rodent, Octodon degus. J Comp Physiol A 189, 347–361.
17 Multifocal Oscillatory Potentials of the Human Retina Anne Kurtenbach and Herbert Jägle CONTENTS Introduction Recording Techniques Underlying Mechanisms The Influence of Age and Gender Disease-Related Changes Conclusion References
INTRODUCTION There are several stages in the processing of visual information in the retina before the transduction process is completed and action potentials are formed. The transformation process itself takes place in the photoreceptors of the outer retina, but signals are transmitted vertically through the retina via the bipolar cells to the ganglion cells before their first action potential is formed. Signals are additionally modulated by horizontal connections across the retina via horizontal and amacrine cells. In this chapter, we examine the electrical activity generated at one stage in this chain of information processing in the human retina, at the level of the inner retina, by examining the recordings of multifocal oscillatory potentials (mfOPs) from the human eye. It is probable that there is a close similarity between oscillatory potentials conventionally recorded after a flash stimulus (focal oscillatory potentials, fOPs) and those recorded multifocally [1, 2]. We concentrate here on the mfOPs, obtained using the slow multifocal m-sequence stimulation introduced by Sutter and Tran [3]. RECORDING TECHNIQUES The mfOPs were recorded using a technique first described by Wu and Sutter [4] using the VERIS™ system. The stimulus consisted of 61 hexagons pseudorandomly flickering between two colors according to a binary m-sequence. The length of the m-sequence was From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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213−1, resulting in a recording time of 3.7 min split into 16 shorter sequences. The hexagon size was scaled with cone density for each stimulated area. For fixation, a dim red cross was presented at the center of the stimulus display. The stimuli were presented on either an Iiyama or Sony color display at a refresh rate of 75 Hz. For black-white stimulation, each hexagon was alternated between white (81 or 100 cd/m2 depending on the study) and black (1.5 or 0.2 cd/m2) with an ambient room luminance of about 20 cd/m2. Stimuli aimed at isolating the response to either the L or M cones, using the silent substitution technique [5, 6], were calculated from the emission spectra of the monitor and the L- and M-cone spectral sensitivities [7]. The L-cone-isolating stimulus had an average luminance of 19.2 cd/m2, that of the M cone was 33.8 cd/m2. This corresponds to average quantal catches of approximately 4.46 log quanta/s/cone for the L-cone-isolating stimulus and 4.43 log quanta/s/cone for the M-cone-isolating stimulus, with a Michelson contrast of around 47% for both. To slow the stimulation frequency, three black frames were inserted between consecutive stimulus frames, producing a base interval for the pseudorandom stimulation of 53.33 ms. The signal was recorded from both eyes simultaneously with DTL (Dawson-Trick-Litzkow) fiber electrodes (UniMed) that were positioned on the conjunctiva beneath the cornea. Reference and ground electrodes (Ag-AgCl) were attached to the ipsilateral temple and forehead, respectively. The signal was amplified using a Grass amplifier with a frequency bandpass of 100–1000 Hz. For recording, pupils were dilated to 8 mm or more with 0.5% tropicamide. Monitoring the raw signal controlled the quality of recordings, and segments contaminated by blink artifacts or saccades were discarded and rerecorded. Signals were analyzed after a single step of artifact rejection. Average response amplitudes (nV/deg−2) were calculated from retinal areas of equal eccentricity for the first-order and second-order first-slice kernel of the mfOPs. The first-order component is the mean response to all the “white” frames minus the mean response to all the “black” frames in the m-sequence, giving largely the linear response to the stimulation. However, interaction between flashes can also occur, which is considered by the second-order (first-slice) response component. This component is computed from the sum of responses to stimulation from two consecutive responses of the same sign (i.e., both black or both white), minus the sum of traces obtained when two consecutive hexagons have different signs. As we will see later, the first-order kernel from a normal subject typically shows two peaks at around 22 and 30 ms, although a small additional potential at around 15 ms is apparent in some cases. The first slice of the second-order kernel displays three potentials around 21, 27, and 32 ms. UNDERLYING MECHANISMS The topography of the mfOP response, the response pattern over the retina, recorded from normal healthy subjects can provide information about the mechanisms underlying their formation. In Fig. 1 we show typical thee-dimensional representations of the topography of the first- and second-order (first-slice) kernel response amplitudes of mfOPs over the central 50° of the retina from a 27-year-old healthy subject. Striking is that the responses are by no means uniform throughout the retina. Both kernel analyses clearly show evidence of the blind spot, or optic nerve head (right of array), which lacks photoreceptors. A second major feature of these topographies is that there is no large peak in the central area, although the fovea has over ten times more cone photoreceptors than at
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5° [8, 9]. This indicates that cone signals alone do not play a major role in the generation of mfOPs or that the signals are modified by other retinal processes. The importance of postreceptoral activity in the generation of mfOPs has been shown in recordings from animals treated with pharmacological agents, which can elucidate cell interactions by blocking one or more of the neurotransmitters responsible for the propagation of the signal from one retinal cell type to another. When signals that arise in the inner retina of rabbits and rhesus monkey are selectively blocked, for example using the inhibitory neurotransmitters glycine or GABA (γ-aminobutyric acid), the oscillatory potentials extracted from photopic mfERGs (multifocal electroretinogram) are selectively diminished [10, 11]. This has also been shown for conventional fOP recordings from the mudpuppy retina [12], where, however, the early oscillatory potentials appear more sensitive to the treatment than the later. Treatment with pharmacological agents can also selectively block specific pathways in the retina. Cone circuitry involves two parallel pathways directly from the cone photoreceptor to the ganglion cell through the cone bipolar cell, one that hyperpolarizes to light stimuli (ON pathway) and one that depolarizes on stimulation (OFF pathway). In rhesus monkeys, the suppression of ON activity with APB (L-2-amino-4-phosphononbutyric acid) causes the selective extinction of almost all of the mfOPs, demonstrating that the ON pathway plays a crucial role in their generation [11]. There is evidence from clinical studies (see congenital stationary night blindness [CSNB] discussion), however, that the OFF pathway does contribute to some of the mfOP response in humans. Although the amacrine cells of the inner retina are important for mfOP generation, only certain types among the 40 or so different morphological forms are important. Some are dependent on the neurotransmitter dopamine, but it has been demonstrated that this transmitter is not crucial for mfOP generation in humans: Patients with early
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Fig. 2. Comparison of traces from a 20-year-old normal subject (dashed lines) with those of a 50-year-old normal subject (continuous lines), both grouped into rings of equal eccentricity (see upper right inset). The major waveform components from the older subject are generally smaller and are delayed compared to those of the younger subject.
Parkinson’s disease, who have reduced dopamine levels, have intact mfOPs extracted from mfERGs [13]. It is evident from Fig. 1 that in addition to depressed recordings from the fovea and optic nerve head, the responses are not uniform throughout the retina, and that there is a considerable amount of local variation in amplitude. In the first-order kernel analysis (left in Fig. 1), it will be seen that the maximum amplitude is found in a concentric ring between about 2° and 13° around the fovea (see also Fig. 2, left), indicating that both rods
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and cones are probably active, as found for conventionally recorded oscillatory potentials (see [14] for review). Wu and Sutter [4] have shown that mfOPs are strongly dependent on the luminance of the stimulus. Reducing the luminance, and thus cone activity, caused a decrease in amplitude. On the other hand, a strong bleach, which eliminated rod activity, caused a reduction and delay in the implicit time of the first-order kernel responses and a complete elimination of all second-order (first-slice) potentials. Thus, a pronounced contribution of rod-cone interactions to the second-order kernel was proposed. Examination of the topography of the second-order kernel (right in Fig. 1) reveals a superior-inferior asymmetry: Amplitudes in the superior retina are larger than those of the inferior. Rods are much more numerous in the superior retina than in the inferior [8, 9], so that this asymmetry provides further evidence for the importance of rods in the generation of mfOPs. The second-order kernel (Fig. 1 right) also shows a pronounced nasotemporal asymmetry, with the nasal retina giving smaller responses than the temporal [15–17]. This asymmetry may be connected to the differing sizes of amacrine cell receptive fields in the nasal and temporal retinal hemifields [17]. However, Bearse and colleagues [16] have isolated an mfOP component that contributes to the nasotemporal asymmetry and is caused by activity arising from the optic nerve head, where ganglion cell axons first become myelinated. This signal is superimposed onto the activity stemming from the retina and is delayed on the temporal retina as a function of distance from the optic nerve head. Differences in amplitude in nasal and temporal fields will therefore be caused by the alignment or misalignment of the wavelets from the retina and those from the optic nerve head component. Further evidence for the theory that mfOPs have two underlying components comes from pharmacological studies that have shown that the nasotemporal asymmetry disappears after intravitrial injection of tetrodotoxin citrate (TTX). This agent blocks sodium-dependent spiking at the ganglion cells, some amacrine cells, and the interplexiform cells [18]. THE INFLUENCE OF AGE AND GENDER Age affects almost all visual functions, and mfOP recordings are no exception. In Fig. 2 we have reproduced representative traces from a healthy 20-year-old subject (dashed lines) along with those of a healthy 59-year-old (continuous lines). For analysis, the 61 traces recorded are grouped into five rings of hexagons concentric around the fovea. The first-order kernel is shown on the left and the first slice of the second-order kernel on the right. The first-order kernel potentials have the highest amplitudes between about 2° and 13° eccentricity as discussed in the preceding section (Fig. 1). It will be seen that all potentials of both first- and second-order kernel are reduced in amplitude and delayed in the older subject compared to those of the younger. In a study involving 58 subjects and five decades of age, which controlled for prereceptoral factors such as pupil size and visual acuity, we found that the decrease in peak amplitude and the increase in implicit time are linear with age [19]. The rate of change with age was largest in the amplitudes of the second peak of the first-order kernel (0.4 nV/deg2 per decade) and the implicit time of the third peak of the second-order kernel (0.37 nV/deg2 per decade). The amplitudes of the potentials have a larger distribution in the normal population than that of the implicit times, and combined with their generally small size, it can be difficult to obtain an adequate signal-to-noise ratio in older subjects.
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There is also a tendency for a gender difference in the mfOP response amplitude [20]. Using a cone-isolating technique based on the silent substitution method [21], stimuli were set up that modulated activity of either the long-wavelength sensitive cone (L cone) alone or the middle-wavelength sensitive cone (M cone) alone. The summed amplitudes from the two cone types (L + M) tend to be higher, and the ratio of the amplitudes of L:M, corresponding to the cone ratio, is slightly lower for female than for male observers. One reason for this difference may lie in a direct effect of sex hormones on Na+-K+ adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity and K+ and Ca+ channel function [22]. A gender difference has also been reported in mfOP recordings from monkeys. Cynomolgus females have higher amplitudes (extracted from mfERG recordings) than males in both first- and second-order kernel analysis [23], as in humans. However, these authors additionally showed that the gender difference is species dependent: Rhesus females give significantly lower mfOPs than males in both kernels. DISEASE-RELATED CHANGES The evidence outlined indicates that mfOPs arise in the inner retina, and that both rods and cones are active in their generation. Further information about the origins of the mfOPs can be sought in recordings from patients suffering from diseases with a known pathogenesis. Conversely, mfOPs can be a useful tool in the clinic to detect a dysfunction of the inner retinal layer. Origins of Single Potentials Although in some cases all mfOPs are altered to a greater or lesser degree in response to disease or other processes, there are instances when pronounced differences occur in the behavior of the individual potentials. Dichromats About 8% of the male population suffers from a color vision deficit arising from alterations in the genes on the X chromosome, which encode the opsins, the cone photopigments responsible for the absorption of photons. A small group of them are the single-gene dichromats, found in about 2–3% of the male population; the single-gene protanopes have lost the function of the long-wavelength sensitive (L) cone and the single-gene deuteranopes that of the middle-wavelength sensitive (M) cone. As mentioned, we set up stimuli, which modulated activity in only one class of photoreceptor (either the L or M cone), and tested them in ten normal control subjects, two protanopes, and two deuteranopes [24]. In Fig. 3 we show the average response waveform of the traces of all 61 hexagons for one control subject aged 20 years (dashed lines), for a single-gene protanope aged 29 years (thick continuous lines), and for a single-gene deuteranope aged 25 years (thin continuous line). The first-order traces are shown in the upper panel, the second-order kernel in the lower panel. The upper traces in each panel show the results from all three subjects to the black-and-white stimulus. Here, there is little difference between the control traces and those of the dichromats. The lower traces in each panel show a comparison of the results of the control subject to L-cone stimulation with those of the deuteranope (left) and of M-cone stimulation in the control with those of the protanope (right). In the first-order
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Fig. 3. Black-white and L- and M-cone-driven multifocal oscillatory potential (mfOP) traces, from one control subject aged 20 years (dashed lines), one protanope aged 29 years (thick continuous line), and one deuteranope aged 25 years (thin continuous line) summed over all 61 hexagons. The first-order kernel is shown in the upper panel, the second-order (first-slice) kernel in the lower panel. The traces obtained from black-white stimulation (upper traces of each panel) are similar for all three subjects and show two major peaks in the first-order and three major peaks in the second-order kernel response. In contrast, stimulating a single cone class (either L or M cones) produces only the first potential in the first-order kernel and the second potential in the second order.
kernel, all subjects show only one potential around 22–23 ms. The second-order kernel traces are again similar, showing evidence of only a much-reduced second potential and the hint of a first potential for the L-cone stimulation. The dichromats showed no response to modulation of the missing receptor type. The control results to stimulation of only
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one cone type in the first-order kernel are generally smaller in amplitude than those of the dichromats, indicating that the missing receptor type in these subjects may be replaced by a functioning photoreceptor. The results of this experiment thus indicate that the first mfOP in the first-order kernel may stem from the additive activity of the L or M cones. This type of cone-specific stimulation can additionally give a very quick diagnosis of an L or M color vision deficit. Congenital Stationary Night Blindness In another experiment, we looked at the mfOP activity when rod function is altered [25]. Congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB) is a genetically heterogeneous retinal disorder of X-linked inheritance. In the complete form (CSNB1), rod responses to dim flashes are not detectable, whereas in the incomplete form (CSNB2, residual rod responses are found. The cone system is also affected in CSNB: There is a selective defect of the ON response in CSNB1 patients, leaving only the cone OFF responses intact [26]. The defect in CSNB2 patients, on the other hand, appears to affect both ON and OFF cone pathways, leaving only residual rod activity [26, 27]. In Fig. 4 we show a comparison of typical recordings from a 14-year-old patient with CSNB1, a 17-year-old patient with CSNB2, and a healthy 15-year-old control subject. In the CSNB1 patient, the mfOP peak amplitudes of the first-order kernel response show a significant reduction of the first peak without significant reduction of the second, whereas in CSNB2 both peak amplitudes are severely compromised. In the second-order kernel, only the third potential is prominent in CSNB1 patients, and again none are discernable from noise in CSNB2 patients. Implicit times are not significantly altered. The difference in mfOP amplitude between CSNB1 and CSNB2 patients probably reflects the different molecular mechanisms underlying the two types of disease, which differentially affect the postreceptoral pathways of cone signal processing. The wellpreserved peak 2 amplitudes of the first-order mfOPs and peak 3 amplitudes of secondorder mfOPs in CSNB1 patients point to a major impact of OFF pathway components on these responses that are not present in CSNB2 patients. Thus, in the clinic, mfOP recordings are a quick way of distinguishing between the 2 CSNB types. Taken together, these experiments suggest that the first peak in the first mfOP kernel is affected to a large extent by additive cone ON responses, whereas the second is heavily influenced by cone OFF responses. In the second-order kernel, the third peak is also dependent on cone OFF responses, whereas peaks 1 and 2 have a component based on cone ON responses. However, in all second-order kernel peaks, rod activity is also necessary to obtain potentials of normal amplitude [4]. Topographical Alterations As for fOPs, mfOPs can be a sensitive indicator of inner retinal function. The advantage is that it is a sensitive method that may be able to detect local retinal changes, thus giving the potential of discovering pathological conditions early in their pathogenesis. Hypoxia of the retina plays a role in many retinal diseases and causes a reduction in the mean amplitude of mfOPs [28].
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Fig. 4. Average of all 61 traces from one 15-year-old control subject (dashed lines), one 14-year-old patient with congenital stationary night blindness 1 (CSNB1; thin continuous lines) and one 17-year-old patient with CSNB2 (thick continuous lines). The first-order kernel is shown in the upper traces and second-order kernel in the lower traces. The second potential of the firstorder and the third potential of the second-order kernel response remain prominent in the recordings from the CSNB1 patient. No decipherable potentials were found in the recordings from the CSNB2 patient.
Diabetes High blood glucose levels cause an altered metabolism in retinal cells. Alterations in the mfOP recordings of patients with diabetes mellitus can be found in the absence of any diabetic complications. In a group of 12 insulin-dependent (type 1) patients without evidence of diabetic retinopathy, most potentials were significantly delayed by 1–2 ms compared to those of an age-similar control group [15]. We show an example of this in Fig. 5. The typical results for a 20-year-old patient (continuous lines) who had had diabetes for 7 years are depicted alongside those of a healthy subject, also aged 20
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Fig. 5. Comparison of traces from a 20-year-old normal subject (dashed lines) with those of a 20-year-old diabetic subject with no clinical evidence of a retinopathy (continuous lines). The recordings are grouped into a central region and four retinal quadrants (see upper right). The diabetic subject showed delayed potentials throughout the retina compared to those of the control.
years (dashed lines). We show an example of a quadrant analysis of the retina, which also illustrates the nasotemporal and superior-inferior asymmetries in the second -order responses (right) as discussed earlier. These small early delays cannot easily show local topographical alterations. Other studies have looked at some measure of the summed amplitudes of all potentials and have detected local areas of reduced function in diabetic patients without retinopathy
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[29] and reduced amplitudes along with implicit time delays in peripheral regions in patients with nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR) [29, 30]. Bearse et al. [29] have also been able to detect abnormalities of the second-order kernel, which are associated with local retinal sites containing NPDR. Panretinal photocoagulation reduces amplitudes significantly in peripheral regions [30]. The results of recording mfOPs in diabetic patients indicate that there is an early alteration in retinal sensitivity causing a short delay in most potentials. A longer implicit time has been shown to be caused by decreased rod activity [4], indicative perhaps of an impaired rod-cone interaction at this early stage of the disease. Even before the development of retinopathy, the method can provide information about local areas of dysfunction and can therefore serve as a method for detecting early changes in retinal metabolism. Retinal Vessel Occlusion Topographical alterations in the summed mfOP amplitudes from mfERG waveforms have also been shown in patients with branch retinal artery occlusion [31]. Again, decreased amplitudes were found in affected areas, which corresponded to perimetric measurements of sensitivity. MfOP recordings can further differentiate between patients with ischemic and non-ischemic branch retinal vein occlusion [32], demonstrating the importance of an intact retinal circulation in their formation. Glaucoma In the paragraph describing the mechanisms underlying mfOP generation, we saw that there is evidence for a ganglion cell component in the mfOPs that is responsible for the nasotemporal asymmetry in mfOP amplitude. Glaucoma patients suffer from ganglion cell damage, often caused by an increased intraocular pressure, and first experiments indicated that the presence of this component can be used diagnostically in the clinic. The selective loss of an oscillatory feature in the temporal retina has been shown in mfERG recordings from primary open angle glaucoma patients, which may indicate loss of the optic nerve head component [33]. However, it cannot be ruled out that the feature arises in the inner plexiform layer. Experimental glaucoma induced in monkeys also reduces the nasotemporal asymmetry as well as the amplitudes of high-frequency oscillatory potentials, derived from a Fourier fast transform of a slow-sequence mfERG, which are thought to be generated to a larger extent by ganglion cell activity than the low-frequency potentials [18]. MfOPs appear to be especially sensitive to retinal alterations caused by normaltension glaucoma. A scalar product of the mfOPs extracted from mfERGs recorded from normal-tension patients was shown to be significantly different from control patients in the central 7.5° and in the nasal field. The traces from patients with high-tension glaucoma, on the other hand, differed significantly from the control only in the central 7.5°. The mfOPs were able to detect 85% of the normal-tension glaucoma patients and 73% of the high-tension patients [34]. General Alterations Whereas the previous paragraphs have dealt mostly with alterations that affect specific potentials or with topographical alterations in mfOP recordings, there are
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Fig. 6. Average of all 61 traces from a 59-year-old control subject (dashed lines) and a 53-year-old patient with a mild visual field constriction who had been taking vigabatrin for 5 years (continuous lines). The first-order kernel is shown in the upper traces and the second-order kernel in the lower. Potentials are delayed and in most cases reduced in the vigabatrin patient.
cases for which the alterations appear to affect all retinal areas and all potentials more or less equally. Vigabatrin Treatment Vigabatrin is an effective antiepileptic drug that inhibits GABA aminotransferase, an enzyme inducing degradation of GABA in the retina and brain, but it has been reported as causing visual disturbances [35]. In the course of a study to assess the visual alterations caused by vigabatrin, mfOPs were recorded from 20 patients and compared to those of control subjects [36]. In Fig. 6 we show representative average traces of all 61 hexagons from a 59-year-old control subject along with those of a 53-year-old patient who had been taking vigabatrin for 5 years and who manifested a mild visual field constriction. All potentials of both first- and second-order kernel are delayed by about 2–3 ms. Since such abnormalities of the mfOPs were seen in all patients with visual field defects, a dysfunction of GABAergic retinal cell transmission might be assumed to contribute to the increased implicit time.
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CONCLUSION Oscillatory potentials recorded multifocally provide an insight into the function of the inner retina. Despite their small amplitude, they can be used for diagnosis, and the topographical information obtained can increase their sensitivity over fOPs in allowing early detection of retinal dysfunction. Individual response waveform peak analysis may help to dissect disease mechanisms and thus increase the diagnostic value of mfOPs in the clinic [37]. REFERENCES 1. Chakor Dj A, Sasseville A, McKerral M, Faubert J, Hébert M, Lachapelle P. Are multifocal OPs (mfOPs) equivalent to flash OPs (FOPs)? Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2004;45:E-abstract 4231. 2. Chakor H, Lavigne C, Little J, Koenekoop R, Polomeno R, Hébert M, et al. Evidence suggesting a center to periphery organisation of multifocal ERG oscillatory potentials (mfOPs). Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2005;46:E-abstract 3427. 3. Sutter EE, Tran D. The field topography of ERG components in man. I. The photopic luminance response. Vision Res 1992;32:433–446. 4. Wu S, Sutter EE. A topographic study of oscillatory potentials in man. Vis Neurosci 1995;12:1013–1025. 5. Estévez O, Spekreijse H. The “silent substitution” method in visual research. Vision Res 1982;22:681–691. 6. Kremers J, Usui T, Scholl HP, Sharpe LT. Cone signal contributions o electroretiniograms in dichromats and trichromats. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1999;40:920–930. 7. Stockmann A, Sharpe LT. The spectral sensitivity of the middle and long-wavelength sensitive cones derived from measurements in observers of known genotype. Vision Res 2000; 40 1711–1737. 8. Osterberg G. Topography of the layer of rods and cones in the human retina. Acta Ophthalmol 1935;6(Suppl):1–102. 9. Curcio CE, Sloan KR, Kalina RE, Hendrickson AE. Human photoreceptor topography. J Comp Neurol 1990;292:497–523. 10. Horiguchi M, Suzuki S, Kondo M, Tanikawa A, Miyake Y. Effect of glutamate analogues and inhibitory neurotransmitters on the electroretinograms elicited by random sequence stimuli in rabbits. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1998;39:2171–2176. 11. Rangaswamy NV, Hood DC, Frishman LJ. Regional variations in local contributions to the primate photopic flash ERG: revealed using the slow-sequence mfERG. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2003;44:3233–3247. 12. Wachtmeister L, Dowling JE. The oscillatory potentials of the mudpuppy retina. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1978;17:1176–1188. 13. Palmowski-Wolfe AM, Perez MT, Behnke S, Fuss G, Martziniak M, Ruprecht KW. Influence of dopamine deficiency in early Parkinson’s disease on the slow stimulation multifocalERG. Doc Ophthalmol 2006b;112(3):209–215. 14. Wachtmeister L. Oscillatory potentials in the retina: what do they reveal. Prog Ret Eye Res 1998;17:485–521. 15. Kurtenbach A, Langrova H, Zrenner E. Multifocal oscillatory potentials in type 1 diabetics without retinopathy. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2000;41:3243–3241. 16. Bearse MA, Shimada Y, Sutter E. Distribution of oscillatory components in the central retina. Doc Ophthalmol 2000;100:185–205. 17. Miyake Y, Shiroyama N, Horiguchi M, Ota I. Asymmetry of focal ERG in human macular region. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1989;30:1743–1749.
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18. Rangaswamy NV, Zhou W, Harwerth RS, Frishman LJ. Effect of experimental glaucoma in primates on oscillatory potentials of the slow-sequence mfERG. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2006;47:753–767. 19. Kurtenbach A, Weiss M. The effect of aging on multifocal oscillatory potentials. J Opt Soc Am A 2002;19:190–196. 20. Jägle H, Heine J, Kurtenbach A. L:M-cone ratio estimates of the outer and inner retina and its impact on sex differences in ERG amplitudes. Doc Ophthalmol 2006;113. 21. Estévez O, Spekreijse H. A spectral compensation method for determining the flicker characteristics of the human colour mechanisms. Vision Res 1974;14:823–830. 22. Ogueta SB, Schwartz SD, Yamashita CK, Farber DB. Estrogene receptors in the human eye: influence of gender and age on gene expression. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1999;40:1906–1911. 23. Kim CB, Ver Hoeve JN, Kaufman PL, Nork TM. Interspecies and gender differences in multifocal electroretinograms of cynomolgus and rhesus macaques. Doc Ophthalmol 2004; 109:73–86. 24. Kurtenbach A, Heine J, Jägle H. The multifocal electroretinogram in trichromat and dichromat observers under cone isolating conditions. Vis Neurosci 2004;21:249–255. 25. Schuster A, Pusch CM, Gamer D, Apfelstedt-Sylla E, Zrenner E, Kurtenbach A. Multifocal oscillatory potentials in CSNB1 and CSNB2 type congenital stationary night blindness. Int J Mol Med 2005;15:159–167. 26. Miyake Y, Yagasaki K, Horiguchi M, Kawase Y. On- and off-responses in photopic electroretinogram in complete and incomplete types of congenital stationary night blindness. Jpn J Ophthalmol 1987;31:81–87. 27. Lachapelle P, Little JM, Polomeno RC. The photopic electroretinogram in congenital stationary night blindness with myopia. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1983;24:442–450. 28. Klemp K, Sander B, Larsen M. The effect of hypoxia in the human multifocal electroretinogram (mfERG) and multifocal oscillatory potentials. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2004;45: E-abstract 4232. 29. Bearse MA, Han Y, Schneck ME, Barez S, Jacobsen C, Adams AJ. Local multifocal oscillatory potential abnormalities in diabetes and early diabetic retinopathy. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2004;45:3259–3265. 30. Onozu H, Yamamoto S. Oscillatory potentials of multifocal electroretinogram retinopathy. Doc Ophthalmol 2003;106:327–332. 31. Hasegawa S, Ohshima A, Hayakawa Y, Tagagi M, Abe H. Multifical electroretinograms in patients with branch retinal artery occlusion. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2001;42:298–304. 32. Stepien JA, Jagle H, Kurtenbach A, Stepien MW, Omulecki W. [Multifocal oscillatory potentials (mfOPs) in patients with central retinal vein occlusion]. Klinika oczna 2006;108: 424–430. 33. Fortune B, Bearse MAJ, Cioffi GA, Johnson CJ. Selective loss of an oscillatory component from temporal retinal multifocal ERG responses in glaucoma. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2002;43:2638–2647. 34. Palmowski-Wolfe AM, Allgayer RJ, Vernaleken B, Schotzau A, Ruprecht KW. Slow-stimulated multifocal ERG in high- and normal-tension glaucoma. Doc Ophthalmol 2006;112:157–168. 35. Elke T, Talbot JF, Lawden MC. Severe persistent visual field constriction associated with vigabatrin. Br Med J 1997;341:180–181. 36. Besch D, Kurtenbach A, Apfelstedt-Sylla E, Sadowski B, Dennig D, Asenbauer C, et al. Visual field constriction and electrophysiological changes associated with vigabatrin. Doc Ophthalmol 2002;104:151–170. 37. Lachapelle P. The human suprathreshold photopic oscillatory potentials: method of analysis and clinical application. Doc Ophthalmol 1994;88:1–25.
18 The Aging of the Retina Caren Bellmann and José A. Sahel CONTENTS Introduction Morphological Alterations Retinal Function Changes Age-Related Macular Disease Conclusions References
INTRODUCTION Aging has been defined as “the progressive accumulation of changes with time that are associated with or responsible for the ever-increasing susceptibility to disease and death which accompanies advancing age” [1]. Age-related degeneration of the retina is among the most prevalent and feared complications of aging. Although little is known about trigger and accelerating mechanisms, the amount of knowledge generated over the past few years in this field has increased exponentially. The retina is a highly differentiated neuroectodermal tissue. The retina consists of two distinct regions: the central retina (the macular area, which is specialized for detailed vision) and the peripheral retina. Microscopic examinations show that the macular area can be further subdivided into the fovea (a depression in the inner retinal surface) and the foveola (the central floor of the fovea). Vertical sections of all vertebrate retinas are composed of three layers of nerve cell bodies and two layers of synapses. The outer nuclear layer contains photoreceptor cell bodies; the inner nuclear layer contains the cell bodies of the bipolar, horizontal, and amacrine cells; and the ganglion cell layer contains the cell bodies of ganglion cells and displaced amacrine cells. The human adult retina includes two types of photoreceptor named rods and cones. Cone density is highest in the fovea and decreases rapidly from the fovea to the peripheral retina. Cones are adapted to photopic conditions and allow us to percept colors as well as to resolve fine details. Rods are the major component of the peripheral retina, with a maximal density in the perimacular region (5 mm from the macular center) [2]. These cells are sensitive to dim monochromatic light, allowing night and contrast vision as well as motion detection.
From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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The photoreceptor cells form a functional unit with the underlying retinal pigment epithelium, a mononuclear cell layer located between the choroidal vascular network and photoreceptor outer segments. Retinal pigment epithelial cells regulate important functions, such as the delivery of nutrients and metabolites to the photoreceptors, and control retinoid metabolism, outer segment phagocytosis, neuroretinal adhesion, interphotoreceptor metabolism, absorption of light by the melanosomes, and participation in the constitution of the blood–retina barrier. Their alterations are therefore a common feature within the retinal aging process. The extremely large number of genes described and implicated in hereditary retinal diseases indicates photoreceptor cells as most sensitive to biochemical modifications and led us also to a better understanding of functional and morphological changes that may occur during normal and pathological retinal aging. MORPHOLOGICAL ALTERATIONS Morphological changes accompanying the aging process primarily involve the photoreceptor cells and underlying retinal pigment epithelial cells. They are manifested by cell atrophy and cell loss, depigmentation and hyperpigmentation of the retinal pigment epithelium, progressive accumulation of lipofuscin, drusen formation, thickening of Bruch’s membrane, and the appearance of basal deposits [3, 4]. Neural Changes Neural cell loss is one major characteristic of aging in the human retina, with rod photoreceptor cells more affected than cone photoreceptor cells [5, 6]. Approximately half of all rods in whole retina are lost between the second and the fourth decade, with an annual disappearance of 970 cells/mm2 [6]. Curcio and colleagues showed that the density of rods in the central retina decreases by 30% between the ages of 34 and 90 years, whereas the number of cones remains stable [5]. However, the kinetics of rod loss does not follow a sigmoidal curve and suggests that the neural cell death rate is not related solely to the accumulation of damage [7]. Rod vulnerability is a frequent phenomenon in hereditary retinal diseases. In retinitis pigmentosa, most of the mutated genes known today are expressed specifically in rods. In these cases, the disease develops sequentially, with an initial rod loss followed by a secondary cone loss [8, 9]. Studies of animal models of retinitis pigmentosa have shown that cones are lost some time after rods and suggest that the cone loss is independent from the initial mechanism that causes the death of rods [10]. Apparently, the survival of cones depends on the presence of rods, even if these rods are not functional any longer. A rod-derived viability factor has been described recently and supports the hypothesis that rods secrete a factor mandatory for cone survival [11–14]. A similar mechanism may be present in retinal aging [15]. Mitochondrial alterations may play an important role in the aging process of photoreceptor cells. Mitochondria are mandatory for the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which includes the photoreceptor-specific ATP-binding cassette transporter, a key agent in the retinoid cycle between the retinal pigment epithelium and photoreceptors, through oxidative phosphorylation. As highly metabolically active cells, photoreceptors are the
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prime site for acquired mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations [16]. During its whole life, the retina is exposed to light of variable wavelength, including ultraviolet (UV) light that may contribute to mtDNA damage in retinal cells. As in other organs, retinal cells encounter a cumulative amount of oxidative and metabolic stress. The accumulation of damaged molecules leads to dysfunction of various metabolic and signaling pathways with subsequent impaired cellular function and cell death. The outer retina is exposed to a relatively high oxygen tension that is close to that found in arterial blood. The photoreceptor membranes are rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids. The combination of these different elements results in a tissue that is especially prone to oxidative damage [17]. Astrocytes display higher levels of glial fibrillary acidic protein and more cytoplasmic organelles [18], indicating an increased cell metabolism in the aging retina. Because of the relatively high antioxidant content, astrocytes are especially resistant to oxidative stress, suggesting that they may be able to protect neurons from free radicals by upregulating enzymatic and nonenzymatic antioxidant defenses [18]. The decreased number of ganglion cells is in line with the rod photoreceptor loss described [6, 19]. About 40% of all ganglion cells are lost by the ninth decade, which implies that their loss contributes to visual function deficits found in aged individuals. Retinal Pigment Epithelium and Lipofuscin Formation An apparently universal feature of aging is the accumulation of fluorescent, nondegradable material, termed lipofuscin, which is observed primarily in all postmitotic and long-lived cells in a variety of organisms. It has been hypothesized that this material forms due partly to age- and disease-dependent defects in the proteolytic capacity of cells, resulting in toxic biomolecules that may interact with normal cell function [20, 21]. The accumulation of lipofuscin in retinal pigment epithelial cells appears to be an important marker of retinal aging. Oxidative damage seems to play an important role in age-related retinal pigment epithelial cell damage, but the mechanisms are not completely understood. Lipofuscin is a by-product of photoreceptor outer segment turnover [22] and is a primary source for reactive oxygen species, responsible for cellular and extracellular matrix alterations. Lipofuscin accumulation in postmitotic retinal pigment epithelial cells serves as a clear example of an aging cell. It accumulates in an agedependent manner in the lysosomal compartment of the retinal pigment epithelial cells [23] and is most likely harmful when present in sufficient amount [24]. Lipofuscin becomes apparent within the retinal pigment epithelium by the age of 10 years. By the age of 40 years, already 8% of the cytoplasmic volume is occupied, and by 80 years of age this figure has risen to more than 20%. Lipofuscin may influence dramatically the physiology of the retinal pigment epithelium due to its potential toxicity. Lipofuscin is a heterogeneous material composed of a mixture of lipids, particularly lipid peroxides; proteins; and different fluorescent compounds, derived mainly from vitamin A, as a by-product of the visual cycle. N-RetinylideneN-retinylethanolamine (A2E) is the major autofluorescent component of lipofuscin. It is formed after hydrolysis of its precursor, A2E-phosphatidyletholamine (A2-PE), and may alter the process of lysosomal degradation in retinal pigment epithelial cells by inhibition of the ATP-dependent lysosomal proton pump [25] as well as by its detergent
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and phototoxic properties [21, 26]. Results obtained in cultured retinal pigment epithelial cells indicated further that A2E is able to induce apoptosis via a mitochondria-related and wavelength-dependent mechanism [27]. More superoxide anions are generated in granules exposed to blue light (400–520 nm) than in granules exposed to red light (660–730 nm) or full white light [28]. Further analysis of isolated lipofuscin granules allowed the observation of other toxic molecules, including malondialdehyde (MDA), 4-hydroxynonenale (HNE), advanced glycation end products (ÂGE) [29], and A2E) [30]. These proteins have shown posttranslational modifications, underscoring the potential contribution of oxidative damage in lipofuscin biogenesis with subsequent impaired cellular function and cell death [31, 32]. An additional retinal pigment epithelial lipofuscin fluorophore that originates as a condensation product of two molecules of all-trans retinal (ATR) dimer and forms a protonated Schiff base conjugate with phosphatidylethanolamine (ATR dimer–PE) has been identified in isolated bovine photoreceptor outer segments, although in much smaller quantities than A2E or its precursor A2-PE. This ATR dimer may play an important role in the photoreactivity of retinal pigment epithelial lipofuscin as it undergoes a photooxidation process and has UV-visible absorbance maxima at 285 and 506 nm [33]. Bruch’s Membrane and Choroid A number of age-related changes have been described in Bruch’s membrane, which is situated between the retinal pigment epithelium and the choriocapillaris [34–37]. Its most prominent alterations are the formation of drusen and basal deposits. These deposits contain a variety of inflammation-related proteins, including C-reactive protein, vitronectin, α-antichymotrypsin, amyloid P component, and fibrinogen [38–41]. They are observed also in atherosclerosis, dermal elastosis, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis type II, and Alzheimer’s disease [40, 41], strengthening the hypothesis for local inflammation with complement activation and immune complex deposition in the formation of drusen. The identification and localization of multiple complement activators (nuclear fragments, membrane-bound vesicles, lipofuscin, cholesterol, and microfibrillar debris) [42, 43] as well as terminal complement compounds support the conclusion that they act as a trigger for the activation of the complement cascade, a basic physiological reaction to foreign cells, dead cells, or cell fragments. Cellular debris that derives from compromised retinal pigment epithelial cells may act as an additional chronic inflammatory stimulus for drusen formation. Failure to eliminate the entrapped material generates an additional local proinflammatory signal, sufficient to trigger subsequent events, including local upregulation of cytokines, acute phase reactants, and other proinflammatory mediators as well as the invasion of incipient drusen by processes of dendritic cells from the choroid. Bruch’s membrane functions as a physical barrier to cell movement, restricting the passage of cells between the choroid and the retina. Virtually all of the nutrition for the central retina derives from the choroid. In young human eyes, this layer is only 2 µ thin, but gradually thickens with increasing age, reaching about 6 µ late in life. Massive accumulation of esterified cholesterol renders the Bruch’s membrane increasingly hydrophobic with age [44]. A growing number of fibers with a higher incidence of fibers displaying an atypical banding periodicity as well as increased calcification [36] leads
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to loss of elasticity that involves also the adjacent choriocapillaris, impeding the diffusion between the retinal pigment epithelium and choroidal vessels. This undoubtedly contributes to a further decline in metabolic transfer capacity from the circulation to the photoreceptor outer segments that includes also decreased transport of vitamin A, resulting in slowing of dark adaptation and visual cycle pigment regeneration [45]. RETINAL FUNCTION CHANGES Aging is associated with a decline in visual function evident in most elderly individuals. Visual acuity is usually well maintained but other psychophysical tests such as contrast sensitivity, color discrimination, visual fields, and dark adaptation sensitivity indicate an age-related loss [46–49]. Preretinal factors (i.e., crystalline lens opacification, progressive optical aberrations, loss of pupillary reactivity) may alter the way in which the visual signal is propagated to the retina [50]. However, neural loss is considered to be the major contributor to visual function loss in the elderly [51]. Visual field sensitivity undergoes a gradual reduction and is particularly visible at increasing visual field eccentricities [52]. In studies in which photopic and scotopic vision are examined, scotopic visual sensitivity loss is typically more severe than photopic sensitivity loss [53], and dark adaptation is delayed in the elderly [54, 55]. A number of neural causes for this visual deficit have been suggested, including agingrelated delays in rhodopsin regeneration [54], changes in the metabolic support structures of the retina [56], rod loss, ganglion cell loss [6], as well as postreceptoral and cortical dysfunction in the neural pathway [57]. Alterations of the retinal pigment epithelium and the Bruch’s membrane that impede the passage of vitamin A or other molecules to the rod photoreceptors are also discussed as a source for the scotopic sensitivity impairment in the aging retina [45, 53]. Electrophysiological studies reported similar age-related changes. Standard Ganzfeld electroretinography commonly presents a significant increase in implicit times with a decrease in a-wave (photoreceptor responses) and b-wave amplitudes (bipolar and Müller cell responses) [58, 59]. Multifocal electroretinography is a more recent technique and allows obtaining electroretinogram responses in smaller localized retinal areas (multiple, spatially localized electroretinograms) at the posterior pole of the eye. Results obtained with this technique indicate similarly increased implicit times and decreased amplitudes [60, 61]. However, this decline in visual function is thought to be caused not solely by neural changes but may be the result also of preretinal modifications. Multifocal oscillatory potentials reflect the inner retinal function. Kurtenbach and Weiss described a linear decrease in amplitude and increase in latency [62] and suggested an age-related impairment that occurs at or before the inner retina. AGE-RELATED MACULAR DISEASE Age-related macular disease (AMD) is the leading cause of legal blindness among the elderly in Western nations [63]. This disease is characterized by a progressive loss of central vision. The pathogenesis is poorly understood, but it is thought to be a multifactorial disease.
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Both retinal aging and AMD are part of a continuous deterioration process. All of the previously described age-related changes in the physiology of the retina may contribute to a pathological state of aging as being influenced by a variety of initiating, promoting, or inhibiting genetically and exogenous factors. Early changes of AMD are described as drusen and pigmentary changes at the posterior pole of the eye [64]. Patients with these changes usually do not report any symptoms, and visual acuity may be normal. However, late stages of this disease are in general combined with irreversible degeneration of the neurosensory retina and dismal visual prognosis. The growth of choroidal neovascularization or, alternatively, geographic atrophy of the retinal pigment epithelium may lead to a retinal scotoma in the central visual field (macula), compromising many important everyday tasks [65]. Aside from age, cardiovascular disease, history of smoking, female sex, level of pigmentation, environment (exposure to UV light and to oxidative damage), and nutrition are considered important risk factors for AMD [66, 67]. Smoking is thought to reduce the antioxidant level in the retina and subsequently may alter the protection mechanisms against reactive oxygen species. Atherosclerotic vascular changes may contribute to a reduced metabolic transfer and waste disposition between the choroid and the retinal pigment epithelium. AMD seems to be not merely the result of a nonspecific aging process. Results from epidemiological research and twin studies propose a primarily polygenic etiology for AMD [68, 69]. Different ethnic groups have independent profiles with different phenotypic responses. A correlation with certain alleles of apoprotein E (apoE) and AMD is discussed. The presence of the epsilon 4 allele seems to be associated with a reduced risk for AMD. Variants of complement factor H (CFH) are coupled with an up to sevenfold increased risk for AMD [70, 71]. This gene encodes a major inhibitor of the alternative complement pathway, strengthening the hypothesis that the immune system plays an important role in the pathogenesis of AMD. Furthermore, the phenotypic similarity with monogenic diseases suggests potential gene candidates. The ABCA4 gene is responsible for Stargardt’s macular dystrophy and may be involved in certain forms of AMD, sharing the phenotype of retinotoxic lipofuscin accumulation in retinal pigment epithelium cells [72]. Lipofuscin fluorophores are formed in large part as a by-product of the visual cycle. Radu and colleagues were able to show that treatment with 13-cis retinoic acid (known as isotretinoin or Accutane) slows rhodopsin regeneration due to its inhibition of RPE65, an essential protein for the operation of the visual cycle, and of 11-cis-RDH. The 13-cis retinoic acid inhibits accumulation of A2E, but its daily administration risks systemic toxicity and teratogenicity, so there is a need to develop other treatment forms that may prove to be safe for long-term therapy in lipofuscin-related retinal degenerations [73]. The same group presented another therapeutic approach that aims to regulate serum retinol by N-(4-hydroxyphenyl) retinamide (HPR). This molecule has been widely used already as a chemotherapeutic agent for a variety of cancers and is known to reduce reversibly serum retinol and retinol-binding protein levels. In a recent study on ABCA4 knockout mice, HPR was able to block the formation of A2E and other lipofuscin fluorophores with no deleterious effects on visual function or retinal morphology [74]. Maiti and colleagues were able to prevent the formation of lipofuscin by inhibiting the visual cycle function with chronic treatment of specific, nonretinoid isoprenoid compounds.
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These molecules serve as antagonists of RPE65 and thus block the regeneration of 11-cis retinal, the chromophore of rhodopsin [75]. To date, these treatments have been applied only in animal models but may represent future candidates for preventing the onset of lipofuscin-sensitive forms of macular degeneration, such as geographic atrophy in AMD. Nutritional supplementation with antioxidants in patients with early forms of AMD is considered helpful in slowing the progression in a subset of patients with early retinal changes of intermediate severity into advanced disease with central vision loss [66]. Macular pigments are thought to protect the retina both by filtering high-energy blue light and by serving an antioxidant function. Recent evidence suggests that the photochemical reactions against which the macular pigments zeaxanthin and lutein (xanthophylls) protect may also include those initiated by A2-PE, a bis-retinoid compound that is the immediate precursor of the lipofuscin fluorophore A2E [76–78]. In contrast, currently available treatment possibilities aim only to stabilize visual acuity. They can be applied solitarily for the exudative form of AMD and seek to inhibit the growth of choroidal neovascularization. The mechanisms that trigger the development of choroidal neovascularization in AMD are still not completely understood. An imbalance between proangiogenic and antiangiogenic factors that controls the angiogenesis is discussed. Major progress in recent years allows us now to use antiangiogenic drugs in the treatment of choroidal neovascularization. These drugs are currently under investigation in clinical trials. They are based on the events that occur sequentially during the angiogenic response: antagonizing proangiogenic activities (primarily vascular endothelial growth factor: Macugen® and Lucentis®), administration of angiogenic inhibitors (adenovirus encoding the pigment epithelium-derived factor), or the use of indirect angiogenesis inhibitors (Evizon® and Retaane®) [79–81]. CONCLUSIONS The physiology of the retina involves a large number of complex mechanisms in which the functions of many cell types depend on interactions with other cell types, particularly interactions between photoreceptors and the underlying retinal pigment epithelium. Studies of monogenic retinal diseases such as retinitis pigmentosa and Stargardt’s disease have helped improve greatly our understanding of retinal physiology. The pathological aging of the retina is an even more complex phenomenon. Novel treatment approaches try to modify risk factors and to prevent disease progression. However, to date no curative treatment is known for patients with AMD. To foster the development of preventive measures and of more effective treatments, an improved understanding of AMD pathogenesis has become a major public health mission in industrialized countries. High-resolution visual acuity is often considered to be the most important indicator in measuring quality of vision but underestimates the degree of vision function loss that is suffered by many older individuals under the nonoptimal viewing conditions encountered in daily life. Results from psychophysical and electrophysiological studies suggest functional changes that affect many different retinal cell types during the aging process. More advanced visual function tests are mandatory for assessing retinal function loss in the natural course of aging as well in the assessment of novel and successful therapies for pathological aging, such as AMD.
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58. Birch, D.G., Anderson, J.L. (1992) Standardized full-field electroretinography, normal values and their variation with age. Arch. Ophthalmol. 110, 1571–1576. 59. Weleber, R.G. (1981) The effect of age on human cone and rod ganzfeld electroretinograms. Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 20, 392–399. 60. Fortune, B., Johnson, C.A. (2002) Decline of photopic multifocal electroretinogram responses with age is due primarily to preretinal optical factors. J. Opt. Soc. Am. A. Opt. Image. Sci. Vis. 19, 173–184. 61. Gerth, C., Garcia, S.M., Ma, L., Keltner, J.L., Werner, J.S. (2002) Multifocal electroretinogram: age-related changes for different luminance levels. Graefes. Arch. Clin. Exp. Ophthalmol. 240, 202–208. 62. Kurtenbach, A., Weiss, M. (2002) Effect of aging on multifocal oscillatory potentials. J. Opt. Soc. Am. A. Opt. Image. Sci. Vis. 19, 190–196. 63. Klein, R., Klein, B.E., Linton, K.L. (1992) Prevalence of age-related maculopathy. The Beaver Dam Eye Study. Ophthalmology. 99, 933–943. 64. Bird, A.C., Bressler, N.M., Bressler, S.B., Chisholm, I.H., Coscas, G., Davis, M.D., de Jong, P.T., Klaver, C.C., Klein, B.E., Klein, R., Mitchell, P., Sarks, J.P., Sarks, S.H., Soubrane, G., Taylor, H.R., Vingerling, J.R. (1995) An international classification and grading system for age-related maculopathy and age-related macular degeneration. The International ARM Epidemiological Study Group. Surv. Ophthalmol. 39, 367–374. 65. Whittaker, S.G., Budd, J., Cummings, R.W. (1988) Eccentric fixation with macular scotoma. Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 29, 268–278. 66. Age-Related Eye Disease Study Research Group. (2001) A randomized, placebo-controlled, clinical trial of high-dose supplementation with vitamins C and E, beta carotene, and zinc for age-related macular degeneration and vision loss: AREDS report no. 8. Arch. Ophthalmol. 119, 1417–1436. 67. Evans, J.R. (2001) Risk factors for age-related macular degeneration. Prog. Retin. Eye. Res. 20, 227–53. 68. Grizzard, S.W., Arnett, D., Haag, S.L. (2003) Twin study of age-related macular degeneration. Ophthalmic Epidemiol. 10, 315–322. 69. Hammond, C.J., Webster, A.R., Snieder, H., Bird, A.C., Gilbert, C.E., Spector, T.D. (2002) Genetic influence on early age-related maculopathy: a twin study. Ophthalmology. 109, 730–736. 70. Sepp, T., Khan, J.C., Thurlby, D.A., Shahid, H., Clayton, D.G., Moore, A.T., Bird, A.C., Yates, J.R. (2006) Complement factor H variant Y402H is a major risk determinant for geographic atrophy and choroidal neovascularization in smokers and nonsmokers. Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 47, 536–540. 71. Malek, G., Johnson, L.V., Mace, B.E., Saloupis, P., Schmechel, D.E., Rickman, D.W., Toth, C.A., Sullivan, P.M., Bowes Rickman, C. (2005) Apolipoprotein E allele-dependent pathogenesis: a model for age-related retinal degeneration. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 102, 11900–11905. 72. Rivera, A., White, K., Stohr, H., Steiner, K., Hemmrich, N., Grimm, T., Jurklies, B., Lorenz, B., Scholl, H.P., Apfelstedt-Sylla, E., Weber, B.H. (2000) A comprehensive survey of sequence variation in the ABCA4 (ABCR) gene in Stargardt disease and age-related macular degeneration. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 67, 800–813. 73. Radu, R.A., Mata, N.L., Nusinowitz, S., Liu, X., Sieving, P.A., Travis, G.H. (2003) Treatment with isotretinoin inhibits lipofuscin accumulation in a mouse model of recessive Stargardt’s macular degeneration. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A 100, 4742–7. 74. Radu, R.A., Han, Y., Bui, T.V., Nusinowitz, S., Bok, D., Lichter, J., Widder, K., Travis, G.H., Mata, N.L. (2005) Reductions in serum vitamin A arrest accumulation of toxic retinal
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19 Aging of the Retinal Pigment Epithelium Michael E. Boulton CONTENTS Introduction Agiing Changes in the Fundus Age-Related Changes in RPE Morphology Functional Consequences of RPE Cell Aging Oxidative Stress and RPE Aging The Relationship Between Aging and Retinal Pathologies Summary and Conclusions References
INTRODUCTION The retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) is a hexanocuboidal monolayer of cells located between the neural retina and the choroid (Fig. 1). The RPE plays a critical role in ensuring the function and survival of the overlying photoreceptor cells [1, 2]. The functions of the RPE include (1) establishment of a blood retinal barrier that regulates transepithelial transport of nutrients and waste products to and from the photoreceptors; (2) the transport and storage of retinoids; (3) phagocytosis and degradation of spent photoreceptor outer segment tips; (4) absorption of optical radiation that has passed through the neural retina; (5) protection of the outer retina from damage by reactive oxygen species (ROS); (6) the production of growth factors and cytokines; (7) maintenance of the choriocapillaris. The structure and function of the RPE varies depending on retinal location (i.e., macula vs. periphery) [1–4]. RPE cells in the macula measure about 14 mm in diameter, while those toward the periphery can measure up to 60 mm in diameter, with cell size and shape becoming particularly irregular [3, 5, 6]. Macular RPE cells, which cover an area of around 5-mm diameter, are likely to be the most metabolically active since they are located in a region critical for visual function. The RPE is a normally nondividing cell layer throughout life and thus accumulates cellular damage, which can eventually result in structural and functional changes.
From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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Fig. 1. An electron micrograph of human retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) from a 52-yearold donor. AM apical microvilli, BI basal interdigitations, BM Bruch’s membrane, JC apicolateral junctional complexes, L lipofuscin granules, M melanosomes located toward the apical portion of the cell, Mt a high density of basically located mitochondria, POS photoreceptor outer segment. Magnification ×13,100 (Reproduced courtesy of John Marshall, St. Thomas’s Hospital, London.)
AGING CHANGES IN THE FUNDUS The RPE and its inherent pigmentation are partly responsible for the characteristic red color of the fundus. It is noteworthy that with age the fundus becomes much paler, probably reflecting a loss of melanosomes and an increase in lipofuscin granules. By age 60, the appearance of the fundus begins to show a number of changes. These can include loss of fundus reflexes, greater visibility of larger choroidal vessels, areas of hypo- and hyperpigmentation, a marked increase in fundus autofluorescence, and the appearance of focal sub-RPE deposits called drusen [7, 8]. Many of these changes represent the hallmark of early age-related macular degeneration (AMD) or age-related maculopathy. These changes can become more apparent in some individuals, in whom RPE atrophy, confluent drusen, hypo- and hyperpigmentation, regions of hypofluorescence, RPE detachment, or subretinal neovascularization can be observed (Fig. 2). Such presentation is typically associated with the later stages of AMD and often coincides with visual impairment. It should be emphasized that age-related changes in the neural retina and RPE show tremendous interindividual variation, which presumably reflects the degree of environmental exposure and genetic susceptibility. AGE-RELATED CHANGES IN RPE MORPHOLOGY There have been numerous studies to determine changes in RPE cell density with age. It appears that RPE cell density decreases by about 0.36% per year in the peripheral and equatorial retina with increasing age [9]. However, despite the potentially higher
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Fig. 2. Examples of two patients in their late 70s who presented to clinic with visual acuity of 20/40 (6/9) in both eyes. On examination, one patient was found to have large confluent soft drusen (A), but the corresponding autofluorescence images showed intact retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) by relative homogeneous autofluorescence (B). The other patient had less drusen, which were smaller (C), but the autofluorescence images showed the RPE was not intact, indicated by multiple areas of increased autofluorescence throughout the macula. Despite the biomicroscopy findings, the second patient is at higher risk for progression to exudative age-related macular degeneration (AMD) because the RPE is not intact. (Images kindly provided by Dr. Erik Van Kuijk, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston.)
metabolic load on the macular RPE, there is no significant reduction in RPE cells in the central retina [10], suggesting that the cells are more resistant to attrition than their peripheral counterparts. Interestingly, Dorey et al. reported that RPE cell loss is greater in blacks than whites [11]; however, this has yet to be substantiated by further studies. It is reasonable to postulate that if RPE loss occurs at a faster rate than overlying
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Fig. 3. A Confocal image of flat mount human retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) showing the variable distribution of lipofuscin between individual cells. The annulus devoid of lipofuscin surrounds a druse similar to that shown in D. B The variable relative fluorescence intensity (RFI) between individual RPE cells from a 68-year-old. C, D Fluorescent images of retinal cross sections showing the different distributions of lipofuscin associated with drusen. (Images provided by M. Boulton and K. Njoh.)
photoreceptor cells, then the overall functional load on the RPE will significantly increase. However, reports remain contradictory since one study has reported that the ratio of RPE cells to photoreceptor cells decreases with age across the fundus [11], while a subsequent study failed to reveal any significant changes in the central retina [10]. The inability to generate unequivocal data on RPE cell loss with age suggests that this is not a major event during our life span. In the peripheral retina where cell loss is apparent, there is an overall increase in the area of remaining cells brought about by spreading to fill in the gaps. This increase in cell area is associated with an increase in height of RPE cells [11, 12]. It should be emphasized that there is considerable cell–cell variability throughout the monolayer with respect to appearance, pigment content, and protein expression [13], and this variability increases with age (Fig. 3a,b). However, there is considerable evidence of morphological change to RPE cells at an ultrastructural level [1, 3]. This includes loss of the typical epithelial cobblestone morphology and the appearance of a more pleotrophic cell layer; hyperplasia and regions of multilayered cells; disorganization of apical microvilli; a reduction in basal interdigitations; and an increase in intracellular pigment granules.
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Melanosomes The RPE melanosomes show a regional distribution across the fundus, decreasing from the equator to the posterior pole with a marked peak at the macula [12, 14]. While this differential distribution of melanosomes is maintained throughout life, there is a significant decline in the number of granules in all regions after age 40. Feeney-Burns estimated the decline in melanin granules to be about 35% between the early and late decades of life [12]. This decline will result in decreased light absorption and reduced binding of xenobiotics and ions in the aged RPE [15]. The loss of melanosomes correlates with the association of melanosomes with lysosomes or lipofuscin granules and voiding of material into the sub-RPE space. Furthermore, aged RPE melanin granules have often lost their cigar shape and are less electron dense, possibly due to partial degradation by lysosomal enzymes [12]. RPE melanosomes demonstrate a number of biophysical changes with increasing age. Analysis of the absorption spectra of melanosomes from young and old donors demonstrates an age-dependent increase in the absorption of intact melanosomes between 250 and 450 nm [16]. However, the overall effect of this age-related increase in absorption by melanosomes is negated by the age-related loss of melanosomes. Not surprisingly, melanosomes exhibit a weak fluorescent emission when excited at 364 nm. However, RPE melanin demonstrates an age-dependent decrease in the blue emission of young melanosomes, with a shift toward red in the fluorescence spectrum with increasing age [16]. Lipofuscin Lipofuscin granules accumulate within the RPE throughout life, eventually occupying up to 19% of cytoplasmic volume by 80 years of age [12, 17]. These granules, which are less electron dense than melanosomes, accumulate in the mid- to basal cytoplasm of RPE cells and are normally around 1 µm in diameter [3]. Their composition is complex, and studies are so far equivocal due to the variable “purities” of the granules used for the analyses [18–20]. However, recent evidence would indicate that lipofuscin granules have minimal protein content [21]. Topographically, maximal accumulation of lipofuscin granules occurs in the posterior pole, albeit with a decrease at the fovea. This correlates with the density distribution of rod photoreceptors, which are thought to be the primary substrate for lipofuscin. A characteristic feature of lipofuscin is its goldenyellow fluorescence when excited by short-wavelength light. It appears that the overall fluorescent intensity of lipofuscin granules increases with age by as much as 40% [16]. However, studies demonstrated considerable heterogeneity in the emission properties of individual granules from the same donor [22, 23]. Pigment Complexes With increasing age, a variety of pigment complexes is present with the RPE [24]. Predominant are melanolysosomes and melanolipofuscin. The origin of melanolipofuscin is unclear. The common view is that it represents fusion of melanosomes with lipofuscin. However, the observation of predominantly lipofuscin-containing complexes may suggest some melanin synthesis in postmitotic cells. The regional distribution of
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these complexes across the fundus mirrors that of lipofuscin, and the spectral characteristics are intermediate between those of melanin and lipofuscin [12]. Mitochondria The RPE, typically for a highly metabolically active cell, contains large numbers of mitochondria [3]. These organelles are located toward the base of the cell, where the majority of active transport takes place (Fig. 1). Feher and colleagues demonstrated a significant decrease in number and area of RPE mitochondria with increasing age as well as loss of cristae and matrix density [25]. Alterations of mitochondria were accompanied by proliferation of peroxisomes and lipofuscin granules. Bruch’s Membrane Bruch’s membrane is an acellular membrane that separates the RPE from the underlying choroid. Entrapment of molecules and cellular debris occurs within Bruch’s membrane throughout life [26–28]. This results in an age-related increase in thickness and lipid content of Bruch’s membrane and appears to be greatest in the macular region. The accumulation of material within Bruch’s membrane acts to reduce or prevent the free flow of molecules between the choroidal circulation and the photoreceptors [29]. Bruch’s membrane also becomes more brittle with age due to loss of the elastin layer [30, 31] and the formation of cross-links such as advanced glycation end products (AGEs) [32]. To what extent the RPE contributes to these changes is unclear. However, the RPE is almost certainly the source of basal linear deposits that form on the innermost margin of Bruch’s membrane. Over the age of 40 years, focal aggregation of subpigment epithelial deposits is associated with Bruch’s membrane; these deposits are termed drusen [33]. Drusen are usually concentrated in the macular region and can be predominantly either lipid or protein. FUNCTIONAL CONSEQUENCES OF RPE CELL AGING Phagocytic Load It has been postulated that loss of RPE cells occurs at a greater rate than overlying photoreceptors, and that this increases the phagocytic burden on the RPE. However, this would not appear to be the case for the macula, in which photoreceptor loss is greater than RPE loss [10, 34, 35]. However, decreased activity in many of the intrinsic functions of an RPE cell may place an added burden on the RPE, leading to loss of overlying photoreceptors cells. The Effect of Lipofuscin on the RPE Analysis of blue light photoreactivity of isolated human RPE cells demonstrates that the rate of photoinducible oxygen uptake increases with donor age, the uptake of oxygen being predominantly due to lipofuscin [36]. Lipofuscin is a photoinducible generator of superoxide anion, singlet oxygen, hydrogen peroxide, and lipid peroxides [36–38]. The generation of these radical species is strongly wavelength dependent, with, for example, efficiency increasing with wavelength by a factor of ten when excitations of
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Fig. 4. The effect of lipofuscin on mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) (A) and nuclear DNA (nDNA) damage (B). Confluent human retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cultures were fed lipofuscin and exposed to blue light for 1, 3, and 6 h. Control cultures were maintained in the dark. The graphs represent the number of lesions per 10 kb as determined by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) of mitochondrial and nuclear genes in the presence of lipofuscin. The vertical bars indicate the standard error of the mean (SEM). (Reproduced from [41] courtesy of the Journal of Biological Chemistry.)
520 and 420 nm are compared. Given the photoreactivity of RPE lipofuscin, it is not surprising that exposure of RPE cells containing lipofuscin to short-wavelength visible light (390–550 nm) results in wavelength-dependent lipid peroxidation (malondialdehyde and 4-hydroxy-nonenal), protein oxidation (protein carbonyl formation), loss of lysosomal integrity, DNA damage, and RPE cell death [39–41]. Lipofuscin was able to photodamage both nuclear DNA (nDNA) and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in blue light-exposed RPE cells, with greatest damage occurring to nDNA (Fig. 4) [41]. The most studied of the potential photosensitizers of RPE lipofuscin is A2E (N-retinylidene-N-retinylethanolamine), which can provoke an apoptotic form of cell death [42–44]. However, the potency of A2E is at least an order of magnitude less than lipofuscin, suggesting the presence of other, more reactive chromophores, which may be nonretinoid in origin [45, 46]. However, A2E can form epoxides, which are significantly more photoreactive than A2E [47]. Furthermore, A2E has been shown to be a photoinducible upregulator of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) [48] and
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complement activation [49] in RPE cells, both of which are implicated in the pathogenesis of AMD. In addition to its photoreactivity, A2E has been shown to have lysosomotropic properties. Exogenous A2E localizes predominantly to lysosomes in cultured RPE cells, causing an increase in lysosomal pH and exerting an inhibitory effect on protein and glycosaminoglycan catabolic pathways. Interestingly, both lipofuscin and melanin granules can be found in early drusen [33], and lipofuscin distribution shows a characteristic distribution within RPE cells overlying drusen (Fig. 3A,C,D). Melanosomes The blue light photoreactivity of melanosomes increases significantly with age [50], and this can result in toxicity to the RPE [51]. Cultured RPE cells containing human melanosomes from aged eyes exposed to blue light exhibit vacuolation, membrane blebbing, and cell death [51]. By contrast, melanosomes from young eyes do not exhibit a substantial phototoxic effect. The phototoxicity of aged melanosomes is at least one order of magnitude less than lipofuscin. Antioxidant Capacity of the RPE Even though the neural retina and RPE are particularly rich in a range of antioxidants [52–54], the levels of these decrease in the macular RPE after 70 years of age, while levels in peripheral cells remain constant throughout life [55]. Catalase activity in the human RPE has been shown to decrease with age and AMD, while superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity does not appear to show a correlation with donor age [56]. Castorina et al. demonstrated an age-related correlation between lipid peroxidation and antioxidant enzyme activity [57]. Decreased levels of carotenoids are associated with aging and AMD [58]. Microsomal glutathione S-transferase-1, an enzyme that displays significant reduction activity toward peroxides, oxidized RPE lipids, and oxidized retinoids, decreases three- to fourfold with increasing age in the mouse RPE [59]. Heat shock proteins and chaperones such as crystallins may also protect proteins from oxidative damage [60]. Crystallin becomes truncated with age, and this reduces its ability to protect proteins against oxidative damage [61]. Those ROS that do escape detoxification will contribute to an insidious buildup of oxidative damage within the RPE throughout life that will manifest itself as pathology in the aged eye and is likely to contribute to the pathogenesis of such diseases as AMD. Interestingly, a pathology with similarity to AMD including drusen, geographic atrophy, RPE dysfunction, and choroidal neovascularization presents when CuZn–SOD is knocked out in mice [62]. Lysosomal Enzyme Activity Any decrease in the degradatory capacity of lysosomal enzymes within the RPE would affect the careful balance in the breakdown of ingested photoreceptors by the RPE. It is clear that there is a regional distribution of lysosomal enzyme activity, with highest activities found in the macular region. While the effect of aging on RPE lysosomal enzyme activity is equivocal, an age-related increase in acid phosphates and cathepsin D has been reported (Fig. 5) [63]. Ogawa and colleagues similarly reported
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Fig. 5. The activity of acid phosphatase as a function of age in human retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells taken from different regions of the fundus. (Modified from [63].)
an increase in cathepsin S in the RPE of aged mice [64]. This increase is perhaps not surprising since lysosomes are associated with pigment granules, and these granules increase with age. Thus, the net lysosomal enzyme activity available to break down ingested photoreceptors may actually be reduced in aged eyes and contribute to the buildup of lipofuscin granules. Mitochondrial Damage in the RPE The RPE cells contain high numbers of mitochondria, typical for a cell with high metabolic needs. Mitochondria not only provide a steady supply of energy in the form of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) but also regulate the cellular redox state and influence
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apoptotic cell fate. Loss of mitochondrial activity will have a negative impact on the metabolic function, and the cell will operate below its threshold. One of the most prevalent theories of aging is the mitochondrial theory, which proposes that oxidative damage can eventually lead to dysfunctional or defective mitochondria. As highlighted by Liang and Godley, damage to mtDNA probably has more relevance to the mitochondrial theory of aging than damage to lipid or protein [65]. The latter can be repaired, while the former can be propagated during replacement of mitochondria. Mitochondria redox function in macular RPE cells has a greater susceptibility to oxidative damage compared to peripheral RPE, and this vulnerability appears to increase with age [66]. Moreover, this appears to correlate with mtDNA damage, which is significantly higher in macular RPE cells compared to those in the periphery [67]. It appears that RPE mtDNA is particularly susceptible to oxidative damage, and that such damage is only poorly repaired. Thus, mitochondria, while essential for cell metabolism, may make a significant contribution to RPE aging and dysfunction. It further appears that the age-related loss of mitochondria reported by Feher et al. is accelerated in AMD patients [25]. Bruch’s Membrane Aging The overall flow of nutrients and waste products across the RPE is likely to be significantly impaired with increasing age [26, 68]. This will be a combination of a decrease in basal interdigitations, thus reducing the area of RPE plasma membrane available for transport; a reduction in the activity of enzymes involved in transepithelial transport; and a decrease in the hydraulic conductivity of Bruch’s membrane. The deposition of lipid-rich membranous debris [69, 70] together with diminishing membrane porosity due to the accumulation of AGEs results in a significant decline in resistance to water movement and permeability to small solutes and macromolecules [71]. Bruch’s membrane aging alters the normal gene expression profile of RPE cells, including the upregulation of transforming growth factor-α and downregulation of vitronectin and the membrane transporter ATP-binding cassette, sub-family C, 5 (ABCC5) [72]. This may in part be due to the accumulation of AGEs in Bruch’s membrane with increasing age and the expression of the AGE receptors receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE), AGE R1, and AGE R3 by RPE cells [73]. This is supported by the observation that AGE-induced aging of the RPE was associated with a transcriptome response of early inflammation, matrix expansion, and aberrant lipid processing and later downregulation of energy metabolism genes and upregulation of crystalline genes [74]. RPE cell survival is significantly impaired on aged submacular Bruch’s membrane, further confirming the impact of matrix aging on RPE function [75]. OXIDATIVE STRESS AND RPE AGING Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are highly reactive molecules that can cause oxidative damage to proteins, nucleic acids, and lipids (Fig. 6) [76]. ROS can be free radicals (i.e., species capable of independent existence that contain one or more unpaired electrons), oxygen species that have been elevated to a higher energy level (e.g., singlet oxygen), or strong oxidizing agents (e.g., hydrogen peroxide). The most important
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Fig. 6. Cellular generation of reactive oxygen species and antioxidant defenses. Fe2+ ferrous ion, GPx glutathione peroxidase, H2O2 hydrogen peroxide, NO+ nitric oxide, O2− superoxide anion, OH hydroxyl radical, onoo− peroxynitrite, SOD superoxide dismutase (Modified from [98].
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ROS of pathophysiological relevance in the eye are the superoxide anion (O2 ), hydroxyl . . radical (OH ), singlet oxygen, nitric oxide (NO), lipid peroxyl radicals (LOO ), and per. oxynitrites (ONOO ) (see [76]). The hydroxyl radical and superoxide anion are highly reactive, have short half-lives of 10−9 and 10−5 s, respectively, and normally react with molecules in their immediate vicinity [53]. Mitochondria account for the bulk of endogenously formed ROS in most cells [76– 78]. An unavoidable respiratory electron leak results in the formation of superoxide anions, which are toxic to mitochondrial enzymes and can undergo the Fenton reaction, generating the most reactive and harmful of ROS, the hydroxyl radical. In addition, the superoxide anion can be reduced by SOD to form hydrogen peroxide, which can itself undergo the Fenton reaction to form hydroxyl radicals. It is the reaction of these ROS with lipids and proteins that leads to the formation of lipid hydroperoxides and lipid–protein adducts (e.g., Schiff bases), which while not as reactive as superoxide anions and hydroxyl radicals, have a significantly longer half-life and can diffuse through the cell to cause oxidative damage at distant sites [76]. Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) is present in most cells and converts L-arginine to citrulline and nitric oxide. Nitric oxide is itself a contradiction since on the one hand it can act as an intracellular signaling molecule, while on the other it can react with the superoxide anion to form peroxynitrite, which can cause lipid peroxidation [79, 80]. Lipid peroxidation, irrespective of the ROS responsible for its initiation, leads to the formation of lipid hydroperoxides capable of propagating a lipid peroxidation chain reaction.
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In addition to the ROS discussed, which are common to most, it not all, cells in the body, singlet oxygen is especially important in the retina. Singlet oxygen (1O2) can be generated chemically, enzymatically, and photochemically [81]. The daily exposure of the eye to light means that photochemical generation of singlet oxygen is a dominant pathway in the retina. The transfer of energy from activated photosensitizers to oxygen leads to the formation of singlet oxygen, which exists in an excited state. Singlet oxygen can generate ROS such as the superoxide anion due to interaction with diatomic oxygen (O2) and by reacting directly with electrons with double bonds without the formation of free-radical intermediates [81]. While the generation of ROS occurs under physiological conditions, damage is minimized by antioxidants and repair mechanisms. However, cellular stress leads to an upregulation of ROS, which overwhelms the antioxidative capacity of cells. This can lead to acute oxidative damage, culminating in cell death or chronic oxidative damage, which leads to the accumulation of oxidatively damaged molecules, particularly in postmitotic cells such as the RPE, which eventually results in cellular dysfunction. This slow buildup of randomly damaged molecules fits with the stochastic theory of aging and thus promotes oxidative damage as the major cause of cellular and tissue aging [82]. The retina provides the ideal environment for the generation of ROS: a high metabolic rate so there is a high density of mitochondria, lots of photosensitizers, a high oxygen environment, and regular exposure to light. In addition, the daily phagocytosis of photoreceptor outer segments results in the generation of ROS [83]. Thus, the constant production of ROS in the retina is likely to contribute to aging changes in the retina and may well pass a threshold at which aging changes take on pathological significance, and vision is lost [52, 53, 84]. While melanin has the ability to efficiently scavenge a wide range of radicals, including peroxyl and carotenoid cation radicals [85–87], as well as quenching electronic excited states, it is likely that any antioxidant activity is restricted to the immediate vicinity of the melanosome. However, a study indicated that it is unlikely that melanosomes play a significant antioxidant role in RPE cells [88]. An indirect antioxidant role for melanin may be its ability to sequester redox active metal ions, thus rendering them significantly less damaging to the cellular components [15]. We have recently shown that human RPE cells have greatest resistance to oxidative stress compared to many other cell types in the body, including those normally exposed to a high oxidative environment [89]. This oxidative tolerance of the RPE coincides with greater CuZn–SOD, GPX, and catalase enzymatic activity. It is clear that cells, such as the RPE, located in highly oxidizing microenvironments appear to have more efficient oxidative defense and repair mechanisms. This increased resistance to oxidative stress may in part be due to the ability of cells to adapt to oxidative stress. The adaptive response is a biological phenomenon that involves cells reacting at a molecular level to acquire greater cellular resistance against a wide range of physiological stresses, including ROS [90]. Prior exposure of RPE cells to sublethal oxidative stress confirmed an adaptive response (Fig. 7), resulting in a greater cellular resistance to subsequent toxic exposures compared to nonadapted RPE [91]. Greater catalase, glutathione peroxidase (GTX), and CuZn–SOD activity and increased nDNA protection were also observed. However, there was no adaptive benefit for mtDNA protection or repair in response
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Fig. 7. The adaptive response of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells exposed to sublethal concentrations of H2O2. RPE cell cultures were exposed to the indicated nontoxic concentrations of H2O2 every day for 5 days. After incubation, the adapted and nonadapted RPE were challenged with a toxic oxidative stress from 3 mM H2O2 for 1 h. Cell viability was assessed using the MTT [3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide] assay, and the results were expressed as the percentage increase in cell survival of the adapted RPE compared to the nonadapted RPE. Significant difference in cell viability of the adapted RPE compared to the nonadapted RPE: *p < .05. (Reproduced from [91] courtesy of Free Radical Biology and Medicine.)
to oxidative stress. This suggests that the mitochondria in the RPE are a weak link in otherwise efficient oxidative stress defenses, and that this may contribute to aging and age-related disease. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGING AND RETINAL PATHOLOGIES Age changes in the RPE and Bruch’s membrane have been associated with a wide variety of retinal pathologies, in particular AMD [26, 52]. AMD, which affects more than 35% of people over the age of 65 years and accounts for 50% of the blind registrations in the age group, is always associated with RPE atrophy, pigment dispersion, increased fundus autofluorescence, or drusen. There is now strong evidence to link lipofuscin accumulation with a variety of retinal degenerations, in particular both the wet and dry forms of AMD, Leber’s amaurosis, Best’s disease, and Stargardt’s disease [17]. A further age-related retinal condition, that of RPE detachment, has been postulated to occur as a direct result of the increased accumulation of lipids within Bruch’s membrane, resulting in the impedance of fluid transport out of the retina [92]. The disturbances created by increased lipid concentration, calcification, and changes in the structural integrity of Bruch’s membrane may predispose this region to invasion by macrophages or RPE cells and neovascular invasion of the sub-RPE space [93, 94]. Other diseases that are not overtly age related, such as Best’s disease, fundus flavimaculatis, retinitis pigmentosa, and Lawrence–Moon–Biedl syndrome, also exhibit abnormal accumulations of lipofuscin and subepithelial deposits [95]. Attempts at understanding these age-related diseases is
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complicated by the regional variations in the structure and function of RPE cells and the paucity of relevant animal models. However, studies in mice clearly demonstrated that genetic or dietary manipulation can cause an AMD-like pathology in aged animals but not in young animals [96, 97].
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS This review documented age-related changes within the RPE and examined some of the casual mechanisms that result in such changes. However, despite considerable research, there is no general agreement about the fundamental cause or causes of aging. REFERENCES 1. Boulton, M., Ageing of the retinal pigment epithelium, in Progress in retinal research, N. Osborne and G. Chader, eds. Oxford, UK: Pergamon; 1991:125–151. 2. Marmor, F., T.J. Wolfensberger, The retinal pigment epithelium. New York: Oxford University Press; 1998. 3. Hogan, M.J., J.A. Alvarado, J.E. Weddell, Histology of the human eye. Philadelphia: Saunders; 1971. 4. Boulton, M., P. Dayhaw-Barker, The role of the retinal pigment epithelium: topographical variation and ageing changes. Eye, 2001;15(Pt 3):384–389. 5. Streeten, B.W., Development of the human retinal pigment epithelium and the posterior segment. Arch Ophthalmol, 1969;81(3):383–394. 6. Marshall, J., The ageing retina: physiology or pathology? Eye, 1987;1:282–295. 7. Kanski, J., Clinical ophthalmology: a systematic approach. London: Butterworth-Heinemann; 2003. 8. Salvi, S.M., S. Akhtar, Z. Currie, Ageing changes in the eye. Postgrad Med J, 2006;82(971): 581–587. 9. Panda-Jonas, S., J.B. Jonas, M. Jakobczyk-Zmija, Retinal pigment epithelial cell count, distribution, and correlations in normal human eyes. Am J Ophthalmol, 1996;121(2):181–189. 10. Gao, H., J.G. Hollyfield, Aging of the human retina. Differential loss of neurons and retinal pigment epithelial cells. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1992;33(1):1–17. 11. Dorey, C.K., et al., Cell loss in the aging retina. Relationship to lipofuscin accumulation and macular degeneration. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1989;30(8):1691–1699. 12. Feeney-Burns, L., E.S. Hilderbrand, S. Eldridge, Aging human RPE: morphometric analysis of macular, equatorial, and peripheral cells. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1984;25(2):195–200. 13. Burke, J.M., L.M. Hjelmeland, Mosaicism of the retinal pigment epithelium: seeing the small picture. Mol Interv, 2005;5(4):241–249. 14. Weiter, J.J., et al., Retinal pigment epithelial lipofuscin and melanin and choroidal melanin in human eyes. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1986;27(2):145–152. 15. Sarna, T., Properties and function of the ocular melanin—a photophysical view. J Photochem Photobiol B Biol, 1992;12:215–258. 16. Boulton, M., et al., Age-related changes in the morphology, absorption and fluorescence of melanosomes and lipofuscin granules of the retinal pigment epithelium. Vision Res, 1990;30(9):1291–1303. 17. Boulton, M., et al., The photoreactivity of ocular lipofuscin. Photochem Photobiol Sci, 2004;3(8):759–764.
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18. Schutt, F., et al., Proteome analysis of lipofuscin in human retinal pigment epithelial cells. FEBS Lett, 2002;528(1–3):217–221. 19. Schutt, F., et al., Proteins modified by malondialdehyde, 4-hydroxynonenal, or advanced glycation end products in lipofuscin of human retinal pigment epithelium. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 2003;44(8):3663–3668. 20. Warburton, S., et al., Examining the proteins of functional retinal lipofuscin using proteomic analysis as a guide for understanding its origin. Mol Vis, 2005. 11:1122–1134. 21. Renganathan, K., K. Ng, M. Mavies, X. Gu, M. Rozanowska, M. Rayborn, R.G. Salmon, J.G. Hollyfield, M.E. Boulton, J.W. Crabb. Does lipofuscin contain protein? Amino acid, protein and ultrastructural analysis of human lipofuscin. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2007; 48: ARVO E-abstract 5059. 22. Clancy, K.M.R., et al., Atomic force microscopy and near-field scanning optical microscopy measurements of single human retinal lipofuscin granules. J Phys Chem B, 2000;104: 12098–12101. 23. Haralampus-Grynaviski, N.M., et al., Probing the spatial dependence of the emission spectrum of single human retinal lipofuscin granules using near-field scanning optical microscopy. Photochem Photobiol, 2001;74(2):364–368. 24. Feeney, L., Lipofuscin and melanin of human retinal pigment epithelium. Fluorescence, enzyme cytochemical, and ultrastructural studies. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1978;17(7): 583–600. 25. Feher, J., et al., Mitochondrial alterations of retinal pigment epithelium in age-related macular degeneration. Neurobiol Aging, 2006;27(7):983–993. 26. de Jong, P.T., Age-related macular degeneration. N Engl J Med, 2006;355(14):1474–1485. 27. Guymer, R., P. Luthert, A. Bird, Changes in Bruch’s membrane and related structures with age. Prog Retin Eye Res, 1999;18(1):59–90. 28. Bird, A.C., Doyne lecture. Pathogenesis of retinal pigment epithelial detachment in the elderly; the relevance of Bruch’s membrane change. Eye, 1991;5:1–12. 29. Marshall, J., et al., Aging and Bruch’s membrane, in The retinal pigment epithelium, M.F. Marmor and T.J. Wolfensberger, eds. New York: Oxford University Press; 1998: 669–692. 30. Chong, N.H., et al., Decreased thickness and integrity of the macular elastic layer of Bruch’s membrane correspond to the distribution of lesions associated with age-related macular degeneration. Am J Pathol, 2005;166(1):241–251. 31. Ugarte, M., A.A. Hussain, J. Marshall, An experimental study of the elastic properties of the human Bruch’s membrane-choroid complex: relevance to ageing. Br J Ophthalmol, 2006;90(5):621–626. 32. Handa, J.T., et al., Increase in the advanced glycation end product pentosidine in Bruch’s membrane with age. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1999;40(3):775–779. 33. Hageman, G.S., R.F. Mullins, Molecular composition of drusen as related to substructural phenotype. Mol Vis, 1999;5:28. 34. Curcio, C.A., et al., Aging of the human photoreceptor mosaic: evidence for selective vulnerability of rods in central retina. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci, 1993;34(12):3278–3296. 35. Jackson, G.R., C. Owsley, and C.A. Curcio, Photoreceptor degeneration and dysfunction in aging and age-related maculopathy. Ageing Res Rev, 2002;1(3):381–396. 36. Rozanowska, M., et al., Blue light-induced reactivity of retinal age pigment. In vitro generation of oxygen-reactive species. J Biol Chem, 1995;270(32):18825–18830. 37. Rozanowska, M., et al., Blue light-induced singlet oxygen generation by retinal lipofuscin in non-polar media. Free Radic Biol Med, 1998;24(7–8):1107–1112.
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20 Visual Transduction and Age-Related Changes in Lipofuscin . . Małgorzata Rózanowski and Bartosz Rózanowski CONTENTS Introduction: What Is Lipofuscin? Lipofuscin of the Retinal Pigment Epithelium Factors Affecting Accumulation of RPE Lipofuscin Effects of Lipofuscin on RPE Function and Viability Approaches to Diminish Lipofuscin Accumulation or Lipofuscin-Induced Damage Conclusions References
INTRODUCTION: WHAT IS LIPOFUSCIN? With aging, postmitotic cells accumulate brownish-yellow lipophilic granules with fluorescent properties called age pigment or lipofuscin [1–5]. Histochemical identification of lipofuscin is based on its granular appearance enclosed with lipid membrane and on staining with methods used for lipids, proteins, and carbohydrates. These residual bodies can also be stained using traditional methods used for detection of lysosomal enzymes. Lipofuscin accumulates not only in cells of long-lived primates but also in other mammals with much shorter life spans as well as in phylogenetically lower species, such as insects, crustaceans, and even plants. Chemical composition, physicochemical properties, and the rates of lipofuscin accumulation are dependent on the type of cells in which the accumulation occurs and on the metabolic rate or level of oxidative stress to which the cells are exposed. For example, in human heart muscle cells the rate of accumulation of lipofuscin is about 0.6% of cell volume per decade of life, whereas in motor neurons the accumulation of lipofuscin is much faster, and it reaches up to 75% of cell volume in centenarians. Despite extensive research, the genesis of lipofuscin and its cellular effects are not fully understood. It is generally believed that lipofuscin is formed as a result of incomplete lysosomal degradation of autophagocytosed or endocytosed material.
From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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The loss of efficiency of lysosomal degradation may be due to inactivation of lysosomal enzymes by components of lipofuscin or generation of products no longer susceptible for lysosomal degradation, such as oxidatively modified and cross-linked proteins, lipids, nucleic acids, and carbohydrates. Inhibition of autophagy by 3-methyladenine or inhibition of lysosomal enzymes by leupeptin leads to rapid intracellular accumulation of autofluorescent material in confluent fibroblasts and astrocytes and eventually results in their apoptotic death [6]. Also, inhibition of proteasomal pathways of protein degradation leads to increased accumulation of lipofuscin in neurons [7]. Accumulation of lipofuscin may consecutively induce proteasome inhibition, which eventually leads to cell death [8, 9]. Fluorescence is a characteristic feature of all lipofuscins, which emit yellow-orange light on photoexcitation with ultraviolet (UV) or blue light (330–490 nm). The spectral characteristics of lipofuscin fluorescence vary depending on the type of tissue and type of lipofuscin. To identify the components of lipofuscin responsible for its fluorescence, several different products with fluorescent properties have been synthesized by incubation of products of lipid peroxidation, such as 4-hydroxynonenal or malondialdehyde, with proteins or amino acids [10]. Also, polymerized products of lipid oxidation and modified proteins due to nonenzymatic glycation exhibit autofluorescence. It has been demonstrated that there are some similarities in fluorescence features between those synthetic products and autofluorescence of oxidized subcellular components. Oxidative stress seems to play a key role in lipofuscin accumulation. For example, the accumulation of lipofuscin in heart muscle cells in vitro is strongly increased in the presence of iron ions, at increased oxygen tension, and at decreased levels of reduced glutathione, a peptide that plays a major role in antioxidant defenses. Antioxidants, such as vitamin E and chelators of metal ions, inhibit accumulation of lipofuscin. To sum, accumulation of lipofuscin is a characteristic feature of postmitotic cells exhibiting high metabolism or under oxidative stress conditions. There is a growing body of evidence that age-related increase of lipofuscin in metabolically active postmitotic cells may, on exceeding a certain threshold, adversely affect cell function and viability and contribute to numerous age-related pathologies. LIPOFUSCIN OF THE RETINAL PIGMENT EPITHELIUM In the retina, the greatest accumulation of lipofuscin occurs in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and is strongly dependent on age [11, 12]. The RPE separates the retina from the choroidal blood supply and plays multiple roles essential for survival and function of photoreceptors (Fig. 1) [13]. With age, there is a linear increase in lipofuscin as well as in complex granules, containing both melanin and lipofuscin, called melanolipofuscin. Accumulation of lipofuscin exhibits strong racial differences and occurs faster in white people with lighter pigmentation of the iris and choroid than in black people with darker pigmentation [14]. In white people, lipofuscin fluorescence in the RPE cells increases linearly up to the age of 70, after which it exhibits a gradual decline [12]. Morphometric data indicate that lipofuscin occupies almost 20% of RPE cytoplasmic volume in people above 80 years old [11].
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Fig. 1. Schematic diagrams of the retina (A) and shedding, phagocytosis, and lysosomal degradation of the outer segment distal tips (B). The diagram of the retina depicts only cells involved in primary phototransduction (photoreceptors: rods and cones) and regeneration of visual pigment chromophore (retinal pigment epithelium [RPE] and Müller cells). All second-order neurons are omitted for clarity. The photoreceptor cells are roughly cylindrical in shape and are organized into specific specialized regions: synaptic terminal, cell body with nucleus (N), mitochondria (Mt)-rich inner segment (IS), and outer segment (OS) containing visual pigments. The outer retina is exposed to high oxygen tension provided by the choroidal blood supply. Light passes through most of the retina before being absorbed in the OSs. In rods, the outer segments consist of stacks of flattened membraneous disks discontinuous from the plasma membrane. In cones, the disks are continuous with the plasma membrane and are open to the extracellular space. The OSs undergo a continual process of renewal. The OSs grow outward from their bases adjacent to the IS. The tips of OSs are shed daily from the photoreceptors and are phagocytosed by the RPE. Phagosomes (Ph) fuse with lysosomes (Ls) to form phagolysosome (PhL), where the material undergoes degradation. The incomplete degradation results in accumulation of autofluorescent bodies, lipofuscin (LF). Apart from typical cellular organelles, RPE cells contain melanosomes (Ms), which absorb light passing through OSs, and retinosomes (Rs), which store retinyl esters. The drawings are not to scale.
Age-related accumulation of lipofuscin is greatest in the parafoveal area corresponding to the greatest density of rods [11, 12, 14–17]. Interestingly, in the center of the fovea, corresponding to the greatest density of cones, lipofuscin concentration is almost twice as small than elsewhere in the macula [14]. Lipofuscin accumulation in the RPE is strongly accelerated in patients with Stargardt’s disease [18, 19], Best’s disease [20], and some cases of retinitis pigmentosa [21, 22]. Retinas with different features of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) exhibit characteristic patterns of autofluorescence depending on the AMD status [23–26]. Composition of RPE Lipofuscin RPE lipofuscin is an amorphous pigment with heterogeneous chemical composition, including mainly lipids and proteins, which account for at least 93% of the dry mass
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of lipofuscin [27–30], and a number of fluorophores [31, 32]. Chloroform/methanol/ phosphate-buffered saline extraction yields chloroform-soluble components and insoluble interphase material accounting for about 0.08–0.10 and 0.08–0.14 pg of dry mass per lipofuscin granule, respectively [33]. Lipids of lipofuscin consist of free fatty acids (∼40%), phosphatidylcholine (∼30%), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE; ∼13%), phosphatidylinositol (∼7%), phosphatidylserine (∼4%), and diacylglycerols (∼3%). Free fatty acids and acyl chains of phospholipids contain a large proportion of polyunsaturated chains, including docosahexaenoate (DHA) and arachidoneate [27]. Aging is accompanied by a decrease of lipid-to-protein ratio in lipofuscin granules. It has been estimated that RPE lipofuscin isolated from donors below 40 years old contains 0.77 nmol of lipids per 1 mg of protein, while lipofuscin isolated from donors above 47 years old has 0.41 mmol/mg protein [27]. The content of insoluble components of lipofuscin granule increases from 0.08 pg in donors below 40 years old to 0.14 pg in donors above 80 years old, while the content of soluble components does not show any significant difference with age [33]. Proteomic analyses of lipofuscin identified up to 160 proteins, including several lysosomal enzymes; proteins of photoreceptor outer segment (POS), mitochondrial, and endoplasmic reticulum origin; cytoskeletal proteins; and retinoid chaperones but also proteins originating from blood plasma and erythrocytes [28–30]. The purification of lipofuscin granules before proteomic analysis remains a challenge. Currently employed protocols include homogenization of RPE cells followed by a series of centrifugations and ultracentrifugations, imposing a risk that the lipofuscin fraction may become contaminated by other organelles during the isolation procedure, while individual lipofuscin granules may be contaminated by adhering molecules. To remove superficial molecules from lipofuscin, Gugiu et al. employed incubations with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and proteinase K [30]. Interestingly, this treatment resulted in complete removal of peptides from the lipofuscin granule while preserving its granular appearance under transmission electron microscopy [30]. Proteins present in lipofuscin exhibit many oxidative modifications, such as oxidation of methionine residues to methionine sulfoxides and sulfones or adducts with products of lipid peroxidation (malondialdehyde, 4-hydroxynonenal, carboxyethylpyrrole [CEP]) or with advanced glycation end products [29, 30, 34]. In particular, lipofuscin proteins exhibit extensive damage as detected by the presence of abundant carbonyl groups, which may impede protein identification [29]. Lipofuscin contains a number of fluorophores, one of which was identified as 2-(2,6-dimethyl-8-(2,6,6-trimethyl-1-cyclohexen-1-yl)-1E,3E,4E,7E-octatetraenyl)-1-(2-hydroxylethyl)-4-(4-methyl-6-(2,6,6-trimethyl-1-cyclohexen-1-yl)-1E,3E,5Ehexatrienyl)-pyridinium [32, 35]. As the compound can be derived from two molecules of all-trans retinal (ATR; vitamin A aldehydes) and a molecule of ethanolamine, this pyridynium bisretinoid was called A2E. Other A2E isomers were also identified in the human RPE. A2E accounts for 7.8 × 10−20 mol per lipofuscin granule, which corresponds to 0.019–0.024% of dry mass of the lipofuscin [33, 36]. Another conjugate of two ATR molecules with PE, called ATR dimer–PE conjugate, has been detected in the human RPE extracts [37]. Chromophores of lipofuscin may potentially include ATR–lysine adducts, but their presence in the retina or lipofuscin has not been reported to date [38]. Such adducts with fluorescent properties were generated
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in vitro as a result of 3-day incubation of bovine POSs in the presence of ATR in fourfold and greater molar excess over rhodopsin. A2E and ATR dimer–PE conjugate are, like their precursor ATR, susceptible to oxidation and photodegradation [37, 39–42]. Several degradation products of A2E have been identified in the human RPE, including mono- and polyperoxy-A2E, and furanA2E derivatives and many carbonyl derivatives of A2E [41–44]. Fluorescence Properties of RPE Lipofuscin A characteristic feature of RPE lipofuscin is its golden-yellow fluorescence. Excitation of lipofuscin granules with 364 nm gives an emission with a broad maximum at 600 nm that exhibits multiexponential decay [45–47]. Different lifetimes of fluorescence indicate different environments of the fluorophore or several different fluorophores involved. Fluorescence properties of lipofuscin undergo age-related changes, suggesting that the composition of lipofuscin chromophores or the environment of fluorophores within lipofuscin granules changes with age. Most studies of lipofuscin fluorophores were performed on chloroform-soluble extracts from lipofuscin or whole RPE [31, 32, 48]. At least ten fluorophores of different excitation and emission maxima were detected in these chloroform-soluble extracts from the RPE. Two were assigned as retinol and retinyl palmitate, emitting green light with a maximum at 520 nm on excitation with UV light centered at 330 nm. These two retinoids are normally present in the RPE cells independently of lipofuscin. Nevertheless, retinyl palmitate was identified as a component of lipofuscin [49]. Other fluorophores include a fluorophore emitting broadband yellow light (540–640 nm), at least three fluorophores emitting yellow-green light, and three fluorophores emitting orange-red light. One of the orange fluorophores was identified as A2E and was claimed to be “the major orangeemitting fluorophore” of lipofuscin [32, 35]. Interestingly, the quantum yield of lipofuscin fluorescence in solution is about 70 times greater than for A2E [48]. Fluorescence lifetimes of lipofuscin in solution exhibit at least four components of 60-ps, 320-ps, 1.2-ns, and 4.8-ns lifetimes [48], while the A2E fluorescence lifetime was determined to be only 12 ps [50]. These discrepancies were explained by Haralampus-Grynaviski and colleagues, who demonstrated that A2E can act as an energy acceptor from different blue-light-absorbing chromophores within lipofuscin granules. So indeed, the long-wavelength emission (> 580 nm) of the lipofuscin granule is due to A2E fluorescence, but it results mainly from energy transfer from other blue-light-absorbing chromophores of lipofuscin and not via direct photoexcitation of A2E [51]. Also, fundus fluorescence in vivo exhibits remarkable similarities to the fluorescence of A2E [52]. It needs to be stressed, however, that lipofuscins accumulated in vivo exhibit a substantial variability in fluorescence characteristics between different granules [51]. There is also a remarkable heterogeneity of fluorescence among different RPE cells within the retina [53]. Fluorescence of lipofuscin observed during fundoscopic examination serves as a diagnostic tool in several retinal degenerations as well as for quantification of bluelight-absorbing macular pigment in the neural part of the retina [52, 54]. Therefore, it is important to elucidate the fluorescence properties of lipofuscin in vivo, including their changes during normal aging and retinal degenerations.
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A2E as a Marker of Lipofuscin Accumulation Experiments on ABCR−/− animals indicated that A2E, once accumulated over a period of 12 months when animals are kept in a light/dark cycle, is not further metabolized by the RPE over a period of 16 months when animals are kept in the dark [55]. It suggests that A2E may be used as a quantitative marker of lipofuscin accumulation. The content of A2E/iso-A2E has been estimated at about 7.8 × 10−20 mol per lipofuscin granule isolated from human donors 60–70 years old [36]. Thus, based on A2E content determined by Sparrow and colleagues in RPE cells obtained postmortem from human donors 58–79 years old [56], it can be estimated that RPE cells with 34–134 ng of accumulated A2E per 105 cells contains 7,400 and 29,000 lipofuscin granules per cell, respectively. Assuming the average diameter of a lipofuscin granule is 0.5 µm and the cuboidal shape of the RPE cell has a side length of 14 µm, these estimates give a range of 17–69% of RPE cell volume occupied by lipofuscin granules. Another estimate of RPE volume occupied by lipofuscin can be obtained from data of Eldred and Lasky, who reported an average of 400 ng (0.675 nmol) of A2E per retina from donors 40 years old and older [32]. This corresponds to about 8.7 × 109 lipofuscin granules per retina. Assuming the average diameter of a lipofuscin granule is 0.5 µm, the retinal surface is 1,000 mm2, and the RPE cells are densely packed in a monolayer 14 µm thick, the RPE volume occupied by lipofuscin accounts for 3.9%. Morphometric measurements of RPE cell volume occupied by lipofuscin gave an upper limit of 19% in donors above 80 years old [11], which is an intermediate value in comparison to values obtained based on A2E content. It needs to be kept in mind that these estimates refer to content of lipofuscin averaged over a great number of RPE cells and retinas. There is a great deal of heterogeneity in lipofuscin accumulation in different RPE cells within the same retina and even greater heterogeneity for different retinas, particularly in cases of retinal dystrophies [11, 14, 17, 52, 57]. Also, it needs to be borne in mind that exposure to light or other sources of oxidative stress results in photodegradation of A2E and possibly other chromophores contributing to the absorption of light and fluorescence of lipofuscin. The content of A2E in lipofuscin was determined in lipofuscin obtained from donors 60–70 years old with no reported pathology of the retina [36]. It remains to be determined whether the A2E content per lipofuscin granule changes with age or retinal degeneration. Therefore, while monitoring A2E by its fluorescence in vivo or quantification by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) in RPE extracts seems convenient for lipofuscin quantification, it requires further elucidation of A2E content in lipofuscin formed under specific conditions accompanying different retinal degenerations.
FACTORS AFFECTING ACCUMULATION OF RPE LIPOFUSCIN Lipofuscin accumulation in the RPE can be accelerated, as in other cells, under oxidative stress conditions or due to inhibition of lysosomal enzymes [3, 4]. RPE cells are very active phagocytes, and phagocytosed POSs appear to be the main substrate for lipofuscin formation. In addition, the phototransduction cascade involving hydrolysis and removal of isomerized visual pigment chromophore, ATR, from opsin, is a critical
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factor responsible for lipofuscin formation. The conditions under which ATR transiently accumulates in POSs accelerate lipofuscin accumulation (reviewed in [58]). Next, we discuss the roles of different factors in lipofuscin accumulation that allow proposing a hypothetical scenario for biogenesis of lipofuscin in the RPE. Phagocytosis and Autophagy Molecular composition of lipofuscin indicates that several components originate from POSs, lysosomes, and mitochondria [28–30]. In particular, proteomic analysis indicated that lipofuscin includes peptides of opsin [29]. In comparison with POSs, lipofuscin contains about three times less PE and phosphatidylserine and about seven times more free fatty acids [27]. The most unsaturated fatty acid, DHA with six double bonds, accounts for about 30–35% of total fatty acids (including acyl chains of phospholipids) in POSs, whereas in lipofuscin DHA is four to seven times less abundant than in POSs. These discrepancies in the lipid content between POSs and lipofuscin may be due to partial hydrolysis of phospholipids by lysosomal phospholipases and a contribution to the lipid content of phagolysosomes from the RPE plasma membrane and lysosomes. Moreover, unsaturated fatty acids may exhibit preferential loss in lipofuscin due to oxidation. Each RPE cell apposes about 30–50 POSs and phagocytoses daily their adjacent tips, while new POS disks are produced at the other end of POSs [59] (Fig. 1). Taking into account the daily phagocytic load of human RPE cells, accounting for about 7–10% of POS length of 120 million photoreceptors, the average length and diameter of a POS is 24 µm and 2 µm [60], respectively; the total volume of POS tips ingested during 80 years is about 8.4 ml. Thus, the volume of ingested POSs is about 600 times greater than the volume of the RPE itself. Assuming 3 mM concentration of rhodopsin and about an equal ratio of lipids to proteins in POSs, the total amount of dry mass ingested by the RPE during 80 years accounts for more than 2 mg [27]. Yet, the highest estimate of lipofuscin volume, accounting for 19% of RPE cell volume in donors above 80 years old [11], corresponds to at most 8,000 granules of 0.5 µm diameter of total dry weight of only 1.9–10.4 ng [29, 33], a tiny fraction of ingested POSs. Experiments on animals demonstrated that phagocytosis of POSs is indeed the main source of RPE lipofuscin. The accumulation of RPE lipofuscin is substantially diminished in Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) rats, with a mutation in MERTK gene coding a tyrosine kinase essential for phagocytosis of shed POSs, lack of which leads eventually to photoreceptor degeneration [61, 62]. The animals accumulate autofluorescent material derived from POSs in an area between the POSs and RPE, indicating that some fluorophores, such as the product of condensation of two molecules of ATR with PE, A2PE, can be generated directly from POSs without involvement of the RPE [32, 63]. Also, a dramatically decreased accumulation of RPE lipofuscin was observed in albino rats that had their photoreceptors destroyed shortly after birth as a result of exposure to high-intensity light [64]. Modeling of lipofuscin formation was attempted in vitro by feeding RPE cells with culture medium supplemented with isolated POSs [65–67]. This resulted in accumulation of residual bodies in the RPE cells with fluorescent properties, albeit different from lipofuscin accumulated in vivo [68].
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Interestingly, long-term culture of RPE cells, up to 2 years in the absence of POSs, leads to accumulation of fluorescence material, indicating that autophagy may also play a role in lipofuscin accumulation in the RPE [69]. The intracellular residual bodies, derived probably from autophagocytosis of intracellular organelles, such as mitochondria, exhibit fluorescence properties, but the excitation and emission spectra are distinctly different from lipofuscin granules isolated from RPE cells harvested postmortem from human donors [68]. Altogether, a substantial body of evidence indicates that RPE lipofuscin is mainly derived from incomplete lysosomal degradation of phagocytosed POSs. Molecular composition of lipofuscin and studies of RPE cells in vitro indicate that autophagy may also contribute to lipofuscin formation in the RPE. Role of Lysosomal Degradation Several lines of investigation indicated that dysfunction of lysosomes leads to accumulation of lipofuscin in the RPE. Rapid accumulation of intracellular material exhibiting autofluorescence is observed in rats and dogs on intraocular injection of an inhibitor of lysosomal proteases [70–72]. The role of dysfunction of lysosomal enzymes in lipofuscin formation is also supported by studies on transgenic mice expressing an inactive cathepsin D, an abundant RPE lysosomal enzyme involved in degradation of POS rhodopsin [73]. Mutant animals accumulate substantially greater amounts of fluorescent residual bodies within RPE cells than wild-type mice. However, it has been demonstrated that there is no age-related decline in lysosomal enzyme activities in the normal human RPE [74]. In contrast, activities of several lysosomal enzymes increase with age [75]. Therefore, lysosomal dysfunction is not likely to be a result of dysfunction of the ability of RPE cells to produce lysosomes with active enzymes, but more likely it is related to an impairment in fusion of phagosome with lysosome, inhibition of lysosomal enzymes by phagosome components, or formation of products no longer susceptible to lysosomal degradation [76–78]. Indeed, several studies indicated that lipofuscin components 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal and A2E can inhibit lysosomal enzymes either directly [78] or via inhibition of lysosomal proton pumps, which results in an increase of lysosomal pH [79–81]. Consistently, experiments on cultured RPE cells demonstrated that A2E localizes mainly in lysosomes, causes an increase of lysosomal pH, and inhibits lysosomal degradation of endogenous proteins, sulfated glycosaminoglycans, and POS phospholipids [81, 82]. Interestingly, A2E does not affect the rate of DNA degradation of phagocytosed apoptotic HL-60 cells or POS proteins [82]. Altogether, lipofuscin components, such as A2E and aldehydic products of lipid peroxidation, are likely to contribute to lipofuscin accumulation by their inhibitory effect on degradation of phagocytosed POSs. Role of Oxidative Stress It has long been suggested that free radicals and lipid peroxidation are involved in lipofuscin formation [57, 83]. The outer retina is particularly at risk of oxidative damage due to exposure to a high concentration of oxygen from the choroidal blood supply, high metabolic rate related to production of superoxide by mitochodria, and high concentration
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of polyunsaturated lipids extremely susceptible to peroxidation. Moreover, the retina is continually exposed to light and contains a number of potent photosensitizers [84]. To counteract the oxidants formed, the retina contains a number of antioxidant enzymes and abundant low molecular weight antioxidants, such as vitamin E, vitamin C, lutein, and zeaxanthin. Studies on animals in vivo and on RPE cells in vitro indicated that oxidative stress stimulates lipofuscin formation, while antioxidants reduce lipofuscin accumulation (reviewed in [1–5]). Oxidative stress in the retina induced by intraocular injection of iron ions leads to accumulation of autofluorescent granules in the rat RPE within a week following the iron injection [85]. Iron ions are potent mediators of oxidative stress due to their ability to decompose lipid hydroperoxides and hydrogen peroxide, which leads to generation of free-radical chains of lipid peroxidation and formation of an extremely reactive hydroxyl radicals. Also, knockout animas lacking ceruloplasmin and hephaestin, ferrooxidases responsible for oxidation of more reactive Fe(II) to Fe(III), exhibit accelerated lipofuscin accumulation [86]. In another set of experiments, rats fed diets with increased levels of polyunsaturated lipids but depleted of α-tocopherol and selenium accumulated yellow pigment granules with fluorescence properties. It has been suggested that increased lipofuscin formation was due to lipid peroxidation in phagocytosed POS membranes as a result of inadequate levels of antioxidants (α-tocopherol, a potent free-radical scavenger that acts as a chain breaker in lipid peroxidation) and Se-containing enzymes, glutathione peroxidases responsible for detoxification of lipid hydroperoxides. Consistently, experiments in vitro also demonstrated that improving antioxidant protection of cultured RPE cells by supplementation with carotenoids or α-tocopherol results in decreased accumulation of residual bodies on feeding cells with isolated POSs [87]. In the retina, there is constitutive expression of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and generated nitric oxide (NO) is involved in a number of physiological processes, including modulation of visual transduction and vasodilation. In addition, exposure of RPE cells to lipopolysaccharide, interferon γ, or tumor necrosis factor leads to enhanced expression of inducible NOS and increased production of NO. As a result of reaction of NO with oxygen or superoxide, highly reactive nitrogen dioxide radicals and peroxynitrite are formed, which leads to nitrative stress manifesting in lipid peroxidation and nitration of lipids and proteins [88]. However, the role of nitrative stress in the formation of RPE lipofuscin has begun to be investigated only recently [89]. Exposure of cultured RPE cells to POSs and NO under atmospheric pressure of oxygen leads to accumulation of autofluorescent inclusions in RPE cells and loss of activity of cathepsin S, indicating a potentially important role of NO in lipofuscin biogenesis [89]. Role of Phototransduction in Accumulation of RPE Lipofuscin Lipofuscin accumulation in the RPE is strongly dependent on functional visual transduction (reviewed in [58]). Isomerization of the visual pigment chromophore 11-cis retinal to ATR is the primary event on absorption of a photon by the visual pigment rhodopsin (Fig. 2). This is followed by conformational change of the protein, leading to the formation of the biochemically active state, metarhodopsin II. Metarhodopsin II triggers a biochemical cascade that leads to visual perception, while ATR remains still covalently bound to lysine in the chromophore-binding site. Usually within minutes ATR is hydrolyzed but remains noncovalently bound at the opsin “exit” site. ATR at
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Fig. 2. A Phototransduction and visual cycle. Absorption of a photon by rhodopsin (Rh) leads to ultrafast isomerization of the chromophore 11-cis retinal to ATR (all-trans retinal), which is followed by conformational changes in the protein leading to formation of a biochemically active state metarhodopsin II (MII), which activates a biochemical cascade leading to visual perception. MII binds a heterotrimeric protein transducin (T) and allows for exchange of guanosine diphosphate (GDP) nucleotide for guanosine triphosphate (GTP) in a subunit α of T. Tα-(GTP) dissociates from Tβγ and activates phosphodiesterase (PDE). Activated PDE (Tα(GTP)-PDE) catalyzes hydrolysis of cyclic nucleotide (cGMP, cyclic guanosine monophosphate). In response to decreased concentration of cGMP, cGMP-gated channels in the outer segment (OS) plasma membranes close (not shown). This results in a reduced influx of sodium and calcium cations. Sodium cations are continuously pumped out of the photoreceptors by adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-dependent Na/K pumps in the inner segments. Therefore, the closure of cGMP-gated channels leads to hyperpolarization of photoreceptor plasma membrane, which in turn results in an inhibition of synaptic secretion of glutamate—a neurotransmitter signaling absorption of photons to secondary neurons in the retina. Meta II can catalyze activation of T until it becomes phosphorylated by rhodopsin kinase (RK) and binds arrestin (Arr), which prevents further activation of T. Eventually, ATR hydrolyzes from Meta II. To regenerate rhodopsin, Arr dissociates,
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the exit site can be reduced to all-trans retinol by photoreceptor retinol dehydrogenase (prRDH) [90]. However, if a new molecule of 11-cis retinal is delivered and regenerates the dark state of rhodopsin before the reduction, the ATR is released to the POS disk membrane. The limiting step in regeneration of rhodopsin is isomerization of all-trans retinoids stored as all-trans retinyl esters in the RPE retinosomes. Factors inhibiting ATR accumulation in POSs, such as depletion of vitamin A, rearing in the dark, or dysfunction in synthesis of 11-cis retinal, result in diminished accumulation of lipofuscin. In contrast, exposure to light and the ability to rapidly regenerate photobleached visual pigments by mobilization of retinyl esters stored in the RPE for synthesis and delivery of 11-cis retinal to POSs seem to be critical for accumulation of lipofuscin. As discussed next, lipofuscin accumulation can be further accelerated by inhibiting clearance of ATR from POSs. Transient Buildup of All-trans Retinal in Photoreceptor Outer Segments as a Critical Factor for Lipofuscin Formation On photobleaching of rhodopsin in POS disks, the rate of removal of ATR hydrolyzed from apo-protein opsin is dependent on (1) the activity of prRDH (also known as RDH8), which reduces ATR to all-trans retinol, and (2) the rate of regeneration of visual pigment and activity of photoreceptor rim protein ABCR (ATP-binding cassette transporter rim protein also known as ABCA4) (Fig. 2). In case the rate of regeneration exceeds the rate of reduction, ATR is released to the lipid membrane before being reduced [90], at least in part to the inner leaflet of the disk membrane where ATR is not accessible to prRDH.
Fig. 2. (continued) phosphates (P) are removed from opsin by phosphatase, and opsin binds 11-cis retinal (11cRal) delivered from the RPE (retinal pigment epithelium), which completes the rhodopsin cycle. Hydrolyzed ATR is enzymatically reduced to all-trans retinol (atRol). Then, atRol is transported to the RPE, where it is chaperoned by CRBP (cellular retinol binding protein). atRol is also supplied from the blood, where it is chaperoned by retinol-binding protein (RBP). atRol is a substrate for LRAT (lecithin:retinol acyl transferase), which esterifies it, forming all-trans retinyl esters (atRE). AtRE are converted to 11-cis retinol (11cRol) by isomerohydrolase RPE65. This process is stimulated by RGR (retinal G protein-coupled receptor). Next, 11cRol, chaperoned by cellular retinal binding protein (CRALBP), is oxidized by retinol dehydrogenase 5 (RDH5), RDH11, and other RDHs to 11cRal. Finally, 11cRal is transported to OS (photoreceptor outer segment) disks and binds to opsin-regenerating rhodopsin. Müller cells can convert atRol to 11cRol, but only cones, not rods, can oxidize 11cRol to 11cRal. B Fate of ATR in OS disk membrane. Photoactivation of rhodopsin (Rh) leads to formation of MII, from which eventually ATR is hydrolyzed. There are two pathways leading to enzymatic ATR reduction to atRol on hydrolysis from opsin. ATR can be reduced by nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)-dependent photoreceptor dehydrogenase (prRDH; in cones by both prRDH and retSDR1) either while being bound to the opsin “exit site” or only after it is released to the inner leaflet of the disk membrane on binding to opsin of 11cRal and rhodopsin regeneration. The reduction of ATR is accelerated by ABCR (ATP-binding cassette transporter rim protein), which transports ATR complexes with PE (phosphatidylethanolamine) via Schiff base linkage (NRPE) to the outer leaflet of the disk membrane. Finally, ATR is enzymatically reduced to atRol. (Modified from [58, 90].)
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While in the POS disk membrane ATR reacts with PE, an abundant phospholipid component of disks, PE, forming a Schiff base adduct, N-retinylidene phosphatidylethanolamine (NRPE). NRPE is a substrate for a protein localized in disk rims, ABCR [91]. ABCR binds NRPE, flips it over to the cytoplasmic leaflet of the disk membrane, and releases ATR on hydrolysis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Then, ATR is believed to become accessible for prRDH-mediated reduction. As the formation of NRPE is not instantaneous, substantial concentrations of ATR may build up in the retina during exposure to high levels of visible light and efficient rhodopsin regeneration (reviewed in [58]). ATR is a toxic aldehyde that may affect proteins directly by covalent binding or indirectly by generation of reactive oxygen species. Damaging effects of ATR can be greatly increased on exposure to blue light. ATR is a potent photosensitizer that on excitation by UV or blue light photogenerates singlet oxygen and superoxide, which, if the antioxidant protection is not adequate, may oxidize photoreceptor lipids and proteins. ABCR is also susceptible to photodamage mediated by photoexcited ATR and as a result loses its ATPase (adenosine triphosphatase) activity [92]. Therefore, it may be suspected that long exposure to bright light may lead to extensive damage to ABCR proteins and trapping of large concentrations of ATR in the inner leaflet of the POS disk. As a result, ATR can form not only NRPE but also, on condensation of another ATR with NRPE, leads to the formation of ATR dimer–PE conjugate and predominantly A2PE (Fig. 3). In support of this scenario are results obtained with ABCR-deficient mice. Lack of ABCR protein in ABCR knockout mice results in an increased accumulation of ATR on photobleaching of rhodopsin, while the rate of rhodopsin regeneration is the same as in wild-type animals [93]. Knockout animals exhibit delayed dark adaptation on 5-min photobleaching of about 45% of rhodopsin, probably as a result of forming complexes between opsin and ATR, which can activate phototransduction cascade more efficiently than opsin alone. The animals exhibit substantially delayed formation of all-trans retinol and RPE retinyl esters following photobleaching in comparison to ABCR+/+ mice. The difference in retinyl esters between wild-type and knockout animals increases with greater light intensity exposure 1 h before animal sacrifice. On the other hand, knockout animals accumulate greater A2E and iso-A2E than wild-type animals when reared under a dark/light cycle, so at the age of 4– 5 months the levels of A2E and iso-A2E are at least 20 and 10 times greater, respectively, than in wild-type mice. Moreover, morphological examination of RPE revealed numerous intracellular lipofuscin-like inclusion bodies in ABCR−/− retinas [93]. Also, several derivatives of ATR have been identified in the retina/RPE of ABCR−/− mice: A2PE, ATR dimer–PE conjugate, and several degradation products of A2E [37, 43, 94, 95]. Importantly, ABCR mutations in humans lead to severe blinding diseases, such as Stargardt’s disease [96], cone–rod dystrophy [97], recessive retinitis pigmentosa [98, 99], that manifest with rapid accumulation of lipofuscin early in life followed by degeneration of the outer retina and vision loss. Heterozygous mutations of ABCR increase the risk of developing AMD [100]. Another animal model of increased accumulation of ATR in POSs is the prRDH knockout mouse. Deficiency in prRDH leads to fourfold decreased retinol dehydrogenase (RDH) activity in POSs, which results in increased levels of ATR in POSs on
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Fig. 3. Initial reactions in biosynthesis of A2E. All-trans retinal (ATR) hydrolyzed from opsin binds to a highly abundant photoreceptor outer segment (POS) phospholipid, PE (phosphatidylethanolamine), forming NRPE (N-retinylidene phosphatidylethanolamine). Binding of another molecule of ATR to NRPE is required to form A2PE. On lysosomal cleavage of A2PE in the RPE, A2E is formed the structure of A2PE is shown in the figure. LF lipofuscin, RPE retinal pigment epithelium.
photobleaching [101]. The concentration of ATR on flash bleaching about 40% rhodopsin is 2.6 times in prRDH−/− mice in comparison to wild-type mice after 15 min dark. The ratio of ATR in prRDH−/− and prRDH+/+ mice increases to 10 after 30 min in the dark following 66% bleaching. Consistently, the dark adaptation measured by electroretinography is substantially slower in knockout animals than in wild-type animals. Knockout animals exhibit inhibited synthesis of all-trans retinol and all-trans retinyl esters, and when reared in a 12 h light/12 h dark cycle for 7–9 months accumulate fourfold greater amounts of A2E than wild-type animals. Interestingly, a deletion of gene encoding RDH12, normally localized in photoreceptor inner segments and contributing to the reduction of ATR and possibly other toxic aldehydes, also leads to increased A2E accumulation [102]. The whole retinas and isolated POSs from RDH12−/− mice exhibit only slight, statistically insignificant inhibition of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)-dependent RDH activity when compared to wild-type mice. However, levels of both ATR and 11-cis retinal are significantly elevated after 30 min of dark adaptation following a 3-min bleach of about 35% of rhodopsin. The difference in 11-cis retinal recovery is even greater on 90% rhodopsin bleaching, corresponding to half-lives of 2 h and 3 h for RDH12−/− and
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RDH12+/+ mice, respectively. The mechanism by which lack of RDH12 in photoreceptor inner segments affects the rate of 11-cis retinal synthesis still has not been elucidated. Nevertheless, the resulting faster rate of rhodopsin regeneration causes a faster rate of ATR removal from the opsin exit site and therefore greater accumulation of ATR in disk membranes during constant irradiation. This is probably the main reason for twofold increased levels of A2E in RDH12 knockout mice in comparison with wild-type mice. Inhibition of the Retinoid Cycle Inhibits Lipofuscin Accumulation Regeneration of rhodopsin, which is the source of ATR on exposure to light, requires synthesis of 11-cis retinal in the RPE and its delivery to POS disks. The multipstep process involves several enzymes and transport proteins (Fig. 2A) (reviewed in [58, 103]). Synthesis of 11-cis retinal is limited by the rate of mobilization of all-trans retinyl esters synthesized by lecithin:retinol acyl transferase (LRAT) and stored in the RPE retinosomes [104–106]. Normally, retinyl esters present in the human RPE/choroid account for 2.5 mol equiv of rhodopsin [107]. Thus, dietary deprivation of vitamin A, which depletes stores of retinoids in the retina, may be expected to inhibit rhodopsin regeneration and, subsequently, lipofuscin accumulation. Indeed, there are several lines of evidence indicating that dietary availability of vitamin A (all-trans retinol or all-trans retinyl palmitate) plays a major role in accumulation of lipofuscin in the RPE [4, 108]. Rats fed a diet depleted in vitamin A and its precursors exhibit diminished RPE fluorescence in comparison to rats on a normal diet, even if the animals were also depleted from vitamin E or injected with the lysosomal enzyme inhibitor leupeptin [3, 109]. Even intraocular injection of iron ions, which usually leads to rapid accumulation of autofluorescent material in the RPE, does not lead to a similar effect under vitamin A deficiency [85]. It needs to be added that also ultrastructural studies confirmed a substantially decreased accumulation of lipofuscinlike residual bodies in the RPE of rats depleted from vitamin A. Moreover, vitamin A deficiency leads to a decrease in number and size of phagosomes and therefore a decrease in phagosome volume per RPE cell. As a result of dietary depletion of vitamin A, the concentration of rhodopsin is decreased, even though the opsin concentration remains the same as in animals on a normal diet. Depletion of vitamin A in the serum, and subsequently in the retina, can be also achieved by administration of N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)retinamide (HPR; also known as fenretinide) [110]. HPR or its metabolite N-(4-methoxyphenyl)retinamide (MPR) compete with dietary retinol for binding with retinol-binding protein (RBP). In contrast to the RBP–retinol complex, complexes of retinol with HPR or MPR do not bind to transthyretin, a necessary step to retain retinol in the blood by prevention of its glomerular filtration into the urine. Daily administration of HPR for 28 days to ABCR−/− and wildtype mice resulted in up to a 75% dose-dependent depletion of serum levels of retinol. Consequently, the rhodopsin concentration in HPR-treated dark-adapted animals is about 33% less, and HPR-treated, light-adapted animals have about 50% reduced 11-cis retinal, ATR, all-trans retinol, all-trans retinol esters, and 11-cis retinol contents in comparison to the vehicle-treated group. As expected, the depletion of vitamin A led to substantial inhibition in accumulation of the condensation products of two molecules of ATR with PE, A2PE-H2 and its metabolite A2E.
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To synthesize 11-cis retinal, all-trans retinyl esters need to be isomerized by RPE65 to the 11-cis form and hydrolyzed, producing 11-cis retinol [111–113] (Fig. 2). The isomerohydrolase activity is substantially increased during constant exposure to light [114]. Also, the retinal G protein-coupled receptor (RGR), a protein colocalized in RPE microsomes together with other proteins involved in conversion of all-trans retinyl esters into 11-cis retinal, seems to play a stimulatory role in synthesis of rhodopsin chromophore [114–116]. Isomerization of all-trans retinyl esters is inhibited by its product 11-cis retinol [117, 118] unless it is bound to its chaperone, the cellular retinal-binding protein (CRALBP) [119, 120]. Next, 11-cis retinol is oxidized to 11-cis retinal, which is also chaperoned by CRALBP. Enzymes involved in the oxidation include RDH5, RDH11, and possibly some other enzymes as 11-cis retinol is still synthesized in double-knockout RDH5−/−, RDH11−/− mice [121]. Alternatively, 11-cis retinol becomes a substrate for LRAT to form an 11-cis retinyl ester, which can be hydrolyzed later by 11-cis retinyl ester hydrolase present in the RPE plasma membrane [122]. RPE65 knockout animals accumulate large amounts of all-trans retinyl esters in their RPE but are unable to synthesize 11-cis retinal and therefore to synthesize visual pigments [123]. RPE65−/− mice at 12 months of age still exhibited normal retinal structure, including the morphology of their POSs, and had about 65% photoreceptors in comparison to knockout mice. However, as a consequence of lack of rhodopsin regeneration, the knockout animals exhibited reduced lipofuscin-like autofluorescence by over 91% and 26% reduced total lipofuscin and melanosomes contents in comparison to the wildtype mice. The following experiments comparing albino RPE65−/− and RPE65+/+ mice demonstrated that both groups of animals accumulate residual bodies in the RPE on treatment with leupeptin [124]. However, in wild-type mice it was related to a dramatic increase in lipofuscin-like fluorescence, while no fluorescence increase took place in the RPE of the knockout animals. Also, the activity of RPE65 influences lipofuscin accumulation. BALB/cByJ mice expressing an amino acid variant in RPE65 with methionine at residue 450 exhibit inhibited regeneration of 11-cis retinal and subsequently accumulate over twice lower levels of A2E and its isomers than C57BL/6J mice with leucine at residue 450 [125]. Substitution of leucine for methionine in RPE65 of ABCR knockout mice also leads to a substantial, about threefold, decrease in A2E accumulation. There are several retinoid analogues that act as inhibitors of the retinoid cycle. Inhibition of 11-cis retinal synthesis can be achieved by 13-cis retinoic acid (also known as isotretinoin or Accutane as a drug used in treatment of acne), a competitive inhibitor of 11cis retinol dehydrogenase (11cRDH) and possibly RPE65 [94, 126]. Treatment with 13-cis retinoic acid results in accumulation of both all-trans and 11-cis retinyl esters and delayed regeneration of rhodopsin. As expected, the synthesis of A2PE-H2, A2E, and A2E oxiranes and accumulation of residual bodies in the RPE is dramatically inhibited in ABCR−/− mice on constant supplementation with 13-cis retinoic acid over a period of 1 month. Other inhibitors of 11-cis retinal synthesis include farnesyl-containing isoprenoid ketone, abbreviated as TDT (13,17,21-trimethyldocosa-12,16,20-trien-11-one), and amide TDH (3,7,11-trimethyldodeca-2,6,10-trienoic acid hexadecylamide) [127]. Both TDT and TDH bind to RPE65 in vitro and substantially inhibit isomerization in vivo,
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which leads to accumulation of elevated levels of all-trans retinyl esters. Intraperitoneal injection of TDT or TDH into Sprague-Dawley rats results in inhibition of 11-cis retinal synthesis by 79% for TDT and 55% for TDH on exposure to light bleaching of about 90% of rhodopsin. Under the same conditions, 13-cis retinoic acid inhibits 11-cis retinal synthesis by 78%. The inhibitory effects are smaller in Balb/c mice, for which TDT, TDH, and 13-cis retinoic acid induce only 24%, 35%, and 33% inhibition, respectively. Biweekly treatment of ABCR−/− mice for a period up to 2 months with TDT, TDH, or vehicle (dimethyl sulfoxide, DMSO) resulted in substantially reduced, up to 85%, levels of A2E in treated groups in comparison to the control. Notably, there was no increase in A2E level during the treatment period with TDT. Clearly, the accumulation of lipofuscin can be slowed by reducing the release of ATR from opsin by inhibiting the synthesis of 11-cis retinal. Inhibition of 11-cis retinal synthesis can be achieved either by depletion of all-trans retinyl ester stores caused by reduced levels of all-trans retinol in plasma or by inhibition of isomerization of all-trans retinyl esters or oxidation of 11-cis retinol. Role of Exposure of the Retina to Light Light is an essential factor for isomerization of rhodopsin chromophore 11-cis retinal to ATR and its subsequent hydrolysis and release. Moreover, exposure of the retina to high fluxes of light inhibits prRDH, while photoexcited ATR can inhibit ABCR, thus potentially causing delayed clearance of ATR from POSs [92, 128]. As mentioned, ATR is a potent photosensitizer. Therefore, the exposure of the retina to UV or blue light imposes oxidative stress to the retina. Indeed, there is a large body of evidence showing that the exposure to excessive fluxes of light induces oxidative stress in the retina, which leads to lipid peroxidation and, at high irradiance levels, to death of photoreceptor and RPE cells (reviewed in [58]). Susceptibility of photoreceptors to photodamage is strongly dependent on the efficiency of the retinoid cycle, which determines the transient levels of ATR in POSs. It needs to be noted that there are several mechanisms in the retina allowing adaptation to different levels of environmental light. Probably the most important mechanism of long-term adaptation to increased intensity of environmental light involves downregulation of rhodopsin synthesis and increased ubiquitin-mediated rhodopsin degradation within photoreceptor inner segments [129, 130]. As a result, the opsin content in newly formed disks is adjusted so the average number of absorbed photons per day remains constant, independently of the light intensities at which the animals are reared. It takes about 3 weeks for the rat retina to reach a new plateau level of rhodopsin concentration on increasing the level of light at which the animals are reared. Moreover, rearing animals in bright light results in an increase in the cholesterol content and a decrease in polyunsaturated lipid content, such as DHA [131, 132]. Lipid environment in POS disks strongly affects the ratio of formation of biochemically active metarhodopsin II and biochemically inactive storage form of rhodopsin, metarhodopsin III (reviewed in [58]). Thus, it may be speculated that the adaptive changes in the POS membrane lipid composition in response to rearing in bright light serve as another protective mechanism by providing conditions facilitating formation of metarhodopsin III
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with covalently bound ATR, therefore diminishing ATR release. A substantial depletion of DHA in rats distinctly decreases the regeneration rate of rhodopsin and prevents white light-induced retinal injury. Long-term adaptation to the environmental light also includes increased concentrations of low-molecular-weight antioxidants in the retina [132]. These adaptive mechanisms to environmental light are effective in preventing lightinduced damage to the retina (reviewed in [58]). Rats kept in the dark for 2 weeks before the exposure to light exhibit extensive retinal injury, while rats kept in cyclic light exhibit very few, if any, signs of retinal damage. Comparison of susceptibility to retinal photodamage of rats maintained at two levels of cyclic light indicates that the damage threshold can be further increased by rearing animals in a bright light environment. Considering the role of light in ATR accumulation and oxidative damage, it is not surprising that light plays a major role in accumulation of lipofuscin. Indeed, topographical distribution of lipofuscin in the RPE corresponds to the distribution of the irradiance levels in the retina [133]. Consistently, lipofuscin accumulation in animals is greatly dependent on the levels of light to which the animals are exposed [109, 134]. A markedly increased lipofuscin accumulation was observed in Japanese quails after single or double 18-h exposure to high-intensity white light (3,000–3,200 lux) [134]. However, long-term rearing of Fisher 344 albino rats in a light/dark cycle (30–90 lux) results in 30–36% and 24–30% decreases in accumulation of residual bodies and lipofuscin-like fluorescence, respectively, in the RPE in comparison to rats reared in the dark over a period of 6–15 months [109], suggesting that light may induce lipofuscin photodegradation. On the other hand, rearing animals in the dark slows accumulation of lipofuscin in animals with dysfunction of ATR removal. This effect is truly dramatic in ABCR−/− mice, which accumulate lipofuscin at a concentration about 20 times greater than wild-type animals when reared at light/dark cycle, but the accumulation is slowed to levels observed in wild-type animals when reared in the dark [55]. Similarly, prRDH−/− mice, which exhibit increased lipofuscin accumulation when raised in a 12 h light/12 h dark cycle, have significantly reduced levels of A2E in their retinas when raised in the dark [101]. Also, experiments in vitro indicated that light plays a role in lipofuscin formation. Feeding cultured RPE cells with POSs peroxidized by exposure to UV light resulted in about 50 times greater accumulation of fluorescent pigment than that observed in cells fed native POSs [135]. It needs to be stressed, however, that UV light does not reach the retina of adult humans [136], and therefore this model is limited to processes that may occur only in young children or persons without intraocular lenses to block UV light. Other Factors Contributing to Accelerated Accumulation of RPE Lipofuscin There are several human retinal degeneration and animal models exhibiting an increased lipofuscin accumulation for which its dependence on retinoid cycle, lysosomal degradation, and oxidative stress is less clear than in the cases discussed. Namely, increased accumulation of lipofuscin caused by mutation in ELOVL4 occurs in Stargardt’s disease type STDG3 patients, caused by mutations in hBEST1 coding bestrophin-1 in Best’s vitelliform macular dystrophy patients, and in transgenic animal
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models of these diseases [137, 138]. Also, β5 integrin knockout mice [139], animals on a high-fat diet [140], transgenic mice expressing prokineticin 1 (also known as endocrinegland-derived vascular endothelial growth factor [VEGF]) in the retina [141], animals deficient in monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1, also known as Ccl-2) or its cognate C-C chemokine receptor-2 (Ccr-2) [142–144], and senescence-accelerated mice [145] accumulate elevated levels of lipofuscin in comparison to age-matched control animals. Importantly, as mentioned, the progressive accumulation of lipofuscin is a characteristic feature of aging in both humans and animals [11, 12]. At present, it can only be speculated which mechanisms are involved in each of these conditions that can be responsible for incomplete degradation of POSs in the RPE. Further studies are required to verify or refute the speculations presented next. Bestrophin 1 is localized in the basolateral plasma membrane of the RPE and is thought to act as a regulatory part of a Ca2+ channel or a Ca2+-dependant Cl− channel [146–150]. The ionic fluxes, calcium in particular, play an important modulatory role in the endosomal–lysosomal pathway and in oxidative status of the cell [151]. Thus, dysfunction in ion channels may impose oxidative stress or affect lysosomal trafficking or function. ELOVL4 is highly expressed in both rods and cones, and its mutations were identified in patients suffering from an autosomal dominant form of Stargardt’s disease, STDG3 [137]. ELOVL4 is predicted to be an enzyme involved in elongation of long-chain fatty acids, and this prediction is supported by clinical data showing that the severity of STDG3 can be alleviated by dietary supplements of eicosapentaenoate and DHA. Transgenic mice expressing a mutant form of ELOVL4 develop similar features in the retina as in human Stargardt’s disease, and the severity of retinal degeneration, including mismanaged disks in POSs, accumulation of lipofuscin with A2E, photoreceptor cell loss, and RPE atrophy, correlates with the level of the expression of the mutant protein. Interestingly, mutant animals show increased undigested phagosomes in the RPE until substantial photoreceptor loss. Transgenic ELOVL4 mice at the age of 2 months accumulated about 72 pmol per eye of A2E and about 75 pmol per eye of other A2E isomers, whereas A2E in control littermates was undetectable. Remarkably, the rates of accumulation of A2E, especially its isomers, are much greater in transgenic ELOVL4 mice than in ABCR−/− mice. It can only be speculated that the clustered disks in POSs impair trafficking of retinoids and antioxidants, as well as transport of hydrolyzed oxidized fatty acids and molecular repair of oxidized lipids and proteins. The presence of oxidized molecules in phagosomes may impair their phagolysosomal degradation, and phagosomes, still persisting in the RPE during the light phase in the 12 h light/12 h light cycle, may be exposed to further light-induced ATR release and subsequent damage. This speculation is consistent with the results obtained on β5 integrin knockout mice, which also accumulate an increased amount of autofluorescent inclusion bodies in the RPE in comparison to wild-type mice [139]. The lack of β5 integrin eliminates the daily rhythm of POS phagocytosis in the knockout animals. Consequently, there is no peak in phagosome number in the early morning followed by a relatively small number of phagosomes later during the day as in wild-type animals. In contrast, the β5−/− mice exhibit more phagosomes than β5+/+ mice outside the peak period.
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The high-fat diet rich in ω-6 fatty acids results in upregulation of proinflammatory pathways and increased oxidative and nitrative stress [152]. While the retina is rich in ω-3 fatty acid DHA, which exhibits an antiapoptotic and anti-inflammatory action [153, 154], the systemic increase in oxidative stress may lead to systemic depletion of antioxidants, including those in the retina. Thus, increased accumulation of RPE lipofuscin in rats on high-fat diet [140] might be related to an increased oxidative stress in the retina. Transgenic mice expressing prokineticin 1 in the retina develop an increased choroidal vascular bed and 2.4-fold increased accumulation of A2E [141]. Thus, it may be speculated that the increased blood supply, and therefore supply of oxygen, is the main cause of increased oxidative stress in their retinas. MCP-1 and Ccr-2 proteins are involved in chemoattraction of phagocytes [142–144]. It may be speculated that deficiency in clearance of extracellular debris accumulated between the RPE and Bruch’s membrane may allow accumulation of molecules with abilities to activate the complement. In case of failure of complement regulatory proteins, such as complement factor H, the activated components exert potent proinflammatory signaling, including stimulation of NO synthesis, or lead to the formation of the membrane attack complex, which can lead to cell lysis [155]. Inflammation is inherently related to increased oxidative stress, which can compromise RPE function, including lysosomal degradation. The senescence-accelerated mice were developed from AKR/J mouse strains, which consist of 11 strains exhibiting shortened life span and different features of senescence [145]. One of these strains exhibits rapidly progressing changes in the retina, including lipofuscin accumulation in the RPE. While it is still unclear which genes are responsible for accelerated senescence in this strain, there are several transgenic animals with dysfunctional genes coding antioxidant enzymes, such as cytoplasmic Cu-Zn superoxide dismutase, which exhibit features of accelerated senescence. Thus, it might be speculated that also in this case the accelerated senescence is a result of dysfunction of antioxidant mechanisms particularly important for the retina. Accumulation of oxidative damage and subsequent cellular dysfunction seem to underlie almost all theories of aging [156]. Considering high metabolism and conditions that facilitate oxidative stress, it is amazing that most cells in the retina can perform their function well throughout lifetime. Altogether, while unproven, the involvement of oxidative stress in all cases leading to lipofuscin accumulation in the RPE cannot be excluded. A Hypothetical Scenario of Biogenesis of RPE Lipofuscin Based on studies in vitro and animal models discussed, a scenario for RPE lipofuscin biogenesis can be suggested that combines both the oxidative damage hypothesis proposed by Feeney-Burns [57] and biogenesis of A2E [3, 55, 63, 157, 158]. In this scenario, ATR plays a key role as a precursor of A2E and, more importantly, as an initiator of oxidative damage that leads to formation of secondary products, which further propagate the vicious cycle of oxidative damage and formation of lipofuscin (Fig. 4). Transient accumulation of ATR in POSs is the most likely source of oxidative stress in the retina. Initiation of phototransduction by exposure of the retina to light is the
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Fig. 4. A hypothetical scenario leading to the formation of lipofuscin (LF) in the RPE (retinal pigment epithelium). Accumulation of ATR (all-trans retinal) in photoreceptor OS (outer segment) as a result of photobleaching of visual pigments imposes a risk of oxidative stress, particularly during exposure to light, when both singlet oxygen and superoxide are generated. Unless counteracted by efficient antioxidant and repair mechanisms, reactive oxygen species lead to damage to lipids and proteins, followed by enzyme dysfunction and formation of products not susceptible to lysosomal degradation. As a result, phagocytosed tips of OS cannot be completely digested in phagolysosomes and form residual bodies called lipofuscin. Once formed, LF has the potential to impose further threats to the RPE, which include LF-mediated oxidative damage that causes RPE dysfunction and cytotoxicity or triggers pro-inflammatory and angiogenic signaling, potentially leading to retinal degenerations. ABCR (ATP-binding cassette transporter rim protein).
necessary factor to isomerize rhodopsin chromophore and generate ATR. ATR hydrolyzed from rhodopsin can bind to proteins or produce reactive oxygen species, such as singlet oxygen and superoxide radical, particularly on photoexcitation (reviewed in [58]). Unless counteracted by efficient antioxidant defenses and repair mechanisms, ATR can damage lipids and proteins, including ABCR. Loss of ATPase activity of ABCR leads to further increase in ATR accumulation. In the worst-case scenario, when ABCR and photoreceptor RDH are inactive and rhodopsin is rapidly regenerated on photobleaching under constant light by mobilization of all retinyl esters accounting for 2.5 mol equiv of rhodopsin, the concentrations of ATR hydrolyzed from opsin in POSs can reach 10.5 mM. Formation of A2PE, ATR dimer–PE and A2E, products of condensation of two ATR molecules with PE, serves as evidence that high concentrations of ATR are indeed transiently accumulated in the POS. The importance of ATR in oxidative damage is underscored by experimental data indicating that this is the major factor responsible for light-induced damage to the retina (reviewed in [58]). It has also been demonstrated that the availability of vitamin A is
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necessary for an increased accumulation of lipofuscin in the rat RPE on treatment with iron ions [85]. In the earlier experiments mentioned, following intraocular injection of iron ions, the rats were maintained for 1 week in a cycle of 12 h light/12 h dark. Note that the major pathway of Fe-mediated lipid peroxidation is based on Fe ion-mediated decomposition of lipid hydroperoxides [88]. Under the conditions employed, ATR could therefore act as an initiator of the damage by generating singlet oxygen, which in turn undergoes addition to unsaturated double bonds of lipids, forming lipid hydroperoxides. Iron ions could then potentiate the damage by decomposition of lipid hydroperoxides, each of them generating a chain of free-radical-type lipid peroxidation. In addition, retinoids may reduce oxidized Fe(III) and therefore increase its ability to induce damage to lipids and enable decomposition of hydrogen peroxide with generation of extremely reactive hydroxyl radicals [159]. Note that binding of ATR to PE dramatically reduces reactivity and toxicity of free ATR [160]. Thus, it may be speculated that the increased levels of PE in Stargardt’s disease patients and ABCR−/− mice may serve as a protective mechanism against ATR reactivity and toxicity. The ATR–PE adduct NRPE can react with another ATR molecule, forming A2PE [3, 55, 63, 157, 158] (Fig. 3). On phagocytosis of POSs and fusion with lysosomes in the RPE, A2PE is hydrolyzed, forming A2E. Reactive oxygen species produced by ATR may lead to lipid peroxidation and protein oxidation. Lipid hydroperoxides formed, unless detoxified by glutathione peroxidases, decompose, triggering new chains of lipid peroxidation [88]. As a result of decomposition of lipid hydroperoxides, secondary products of lipid peroxidation are formed, including reactive aldehydes such as extensively investigated malondialdehyde and 4-hydroxynonenal [161, 162]. POSs contain high concentrations of polyunsaturated lipids, including DHA with six unsaturated double bonds, and therefore are extremely susceptible to peroxidation. Nonenzymatic oxidation of DHA leads to the formation of many products, including CEP and γ-keto-aldehydes, which are much more reactive with proteins than malondialdehyde and 4-hydroxynonenal [30, 163–165]. Phagocytosis itself is accompanied by an increase in oxidative stress [166–168], which may be particularly harmful to the POSs already exposed to oxidative stress and therefore depleted from antioxidants. Thus, phagocytosis may exacerbate the oxidative damage in phagocytosed POSs. Also, the precursor of A2E, which forms in POSs as a result of condensation of two molecules of ATR with PE, A2PE is susceptible to oxidation [95]. However, only a fraction of A2PE seems to be cleaved and accumulate as A2E in the RPE of experimental mice, suggesting that it may have become oxidized [95, 110]. Alternatively, the relatively high amounts of A2PE detected in retinal extracts may be due to their spontaneous synthesis during the isolation procedures. Oxidative modification of phagosomal membrane may impair its fusion with lysosomes. Moreover, binding of lipid peroxidation products to lysosomal enzymes can lead to loss of their enzymatic activity. It may be argued that transient loss of lysosomal enzyme activity is not sufficient to cause accumulation of nondegradable lipofuscin as the material accumulated due to leupeptin-induced inhibition of proteolysis in the rat RPE is gradually degraded within the following 3 months [169]. However, oxidation may further propagate in the phagolysosome, leading to formation of new lipid oxidation products with the ability to inactivate lysosomal enzymes from newly fused lysosomes. In addition, A2E inhibits the lysosomal ATP-dependent proton pump and therefore may lead to inactivation
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of lysosomal enzymes as a result of increased pH. Moreover, oxidized proteins may form cross-links, which render them nonsusceptible to lysosomal degradation. Altogether, accumulation of ATR in POS membranes is needed as a source of oxidative damage of POSs that leads to incomplete lysosomal degradation of partially oxidized material. A2E can be used as a marker to indicate that ATR was transiently accumulated in the POSs and therefore is a possible dysfunction in ATR clearance. EFFECTS OF LIPOFUSCIN ON RPE FUNCTION AND VIABILITY All human diseases related to accelerated accumulation of lipofuscin and their animal models are also related to subsequent degeneration and atrophy of the RPE and photoreceptors. However, it is not clear whether lipofuscin contributes to or is just a hallmark of progressing degeneration. While the physiological consequences of lipofuscin accumulation in the human RPE remain largely unknown, there is a growing body of circumstantial evidence suggesting that lipofuscin accumulation can be detrimental to the RPE and subsequently to the surrounding tissues (Fig. 4). First, age-related lipofuscin accumulation in the RPE correlates with loss of underlying photoreceptor cells [16]. It has been speculated that it may be related to a threshold level of lipofuscin that when exceeded causes dysfunction of the RPE and subsequent photoreceptor death. It has also been suggested that this scenario underlies the formation of atrophic areas in the retina such as those observed in the atrophic form of AMD [170]. Interestingly, the spatial topography, age relationship, and racial distributions of lipofuscin exhibit remarkable similarity to patterns of degeneration seen in AMD [12]. However, while some follow-up studies supported this hypothesis, others argued for lipofuscin being just a marker of progression of the atrophy but not necessarily a causative factor [23, 170, 171]. Second, rapid accumulation of lipofuscin is observed early in life in Stargardt’s macular dystrophy, Best’s vitelliform macular dystrophy, and some cases of retinitis pigmentosa, which is followed by degeneration of photoreceptors and vision loss [18–22]. However, it is not clear whether lipofuscin accumulation per se is the causal factor for disease progression. Animal models of Stargardt’s disease (ABCR−/− and transgenic mutant ELOVL mice) exhibit relatively slow degeneration of photoreceptors and RPE despite huge concentrations of A2E in their RPE [93, 137]. Third, studies of lipofuscin properties in vitro (ability to photosensitize generation of reactive oxygen species and induce oxidation of intra- and extragranular proteins and lipids, cytotoxicity, presence of several components of potential angiogenic or proinflammatory factors) provide a basis to postulate that excessive levels of this age pigment could compromise essential RPE functions and even contribute to the pathogenesis of AMD, the leading cause of blindness in people older than 60 years in developed countries. Next, we discuss these properties of lipofuscin in more detail. Photoreactivity of RPE Lipofuscin Studies in vitro proved that lipofuscin exhibits photosensitizing properties. Aerobic irradiation of purified lipofuscin granules with short-wavelength visible light led to
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generation of reactive oxygen species, including singlet oxygen, superoxide radical, hydrogen peroxide, lipid hydroperoxides, and lipid-derived aldehydes (reviewed in [58]). It has also been demonstrated that lipofuscin mediates photoinduced oxidation of extragranular lipids and proteins. Photoinduced reduction of oxygen to superoxide and hydrogen peroxide is only a minor process for lipofuscin-dependent oxygen utilization, accounting for less than 3% of oxygen used, while most oxygen is used for oxidation of lipofuscin components, which include abundant polyunsaturated fatty acids. The major chromophores responsible for photoreactivity of lipofuscin remain unknown. Most studies of photochemical properties were performed on fractions of lipofuscin soluble in organic solvents (SLF). The percentage of absorbed photons by SLF that are utilized for excitation of molecular oxygen to the reactive singlet state (quantum yield of singlet oxygen generation) depends on the excitation wavelength. About 8% of absorbed photons are used for singlet oxygen generation when lipofuscin extract solubilized in air-saturated benzene is irradiated with 355-nm light. Excitation of lipofuscin extract with blue light of 420-, 430-, and 440-nm wavelength leads to utilization of about 5% of absorbed photons for generation of singlet oxygen. This difference in quantum yields for different excitation wavelengths indicates that there are different photosensitizers contributing to absorption at 355 nm and blue light or the ratio of photosensitizers to other chromophores varies at different wavelengths. A2E is one component of SLF. Based on photochemical properties of A2E and its content in lipofuscin, it is clear that A2E provides only a minor contribution to lipofuscin photoreactivity (reviewed in [58, 172]). First, based on A2E content in SLF and absorption coefficients, it is evident that A2E contributes only about 1/120 to the absorption of visible light (Fig. 5) [33, 36]. Second, considering the quantum yields of singlet oxygen generation and contribution of A2E to the absorption of visible light by lipofuscin, it can be estimated that A2E contributes less than 1 singlet oxygen molecule to more than 300 photogenerated by lipofuscin. Third, the wavelength dependence for photoinduced oxygen uptake by A2E in β-oleoyl-γ-palmitoyl-L-α-phosphatidylcholine liposomes, which matches the absorption spectrum of A2E, is substantially different from the wavelength dependence measured for lipofuscin granules or lipofuscin extracts, proving that A2E is not a major contributor to aerobic photoreactivity of lipofuscin (Fig. 5). While the wavelength dependence of photooxidation induced by lipofuscin granules or their chloroform-soluble and -insoluble extracts does not resemble any of known retinal chromophores (Fig. 5), it resembles absorption spectra of the oxidation and degradation products of both DHA [173] and A2E [39], exhibiting a monotonic increase in absorbance with decreasing wavelength. Degradation products of A2E include numerous aldehydes [44]. While to our knowledge there are no reports on the photochemical properties of these mixtures, it may be speculated that these degradation products exhibit photosensitizing properties, which may contribute to lipofuscin photoreactivity and further photoinduced degradation of lipofuscin components. Oxidized DHA includes products absorbing blue light that photosensitize generation of singlet oxygen (quantum yield of 24%) and superoxide and further photooxidation of the mixture [173]. The wavelength dependence of photooxidation of oxidized DHA
Fig. 5. A The calculated absorption spectra of all-trans retinal (ATR), chloroform-soluble components of lipofuscin (SLF), and A2E in the outer retina, outer segment (OS), and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Absorption spectra of 3.8 mM ATR accumulated in perifovea are based on the extinction coefficient of ATR of 48,000 M−1cm−1 and a thickness of the OS layer of 31.2 µm (60). Absorption spectra of SLF in the RPE are based on (1) absorption spectra of measured dry weight of these components solubilized in benzene (33); (2) the content of chloroform-soluble components of lipofuscin per lipofuscin granule, 0.093 pg/granule; (3) an estimated number of granules of 7,966 per RPE cell where LF occupies 19% of cell volume (11), and a lipofuscin volume is calculated based on an average diameter of lipofuscin granule of 0.5 µm; and (4) thickness of the RPE layer of 14 µm. Absorption spectra of A2E are based on content of A2E in LF granule of 7.8 × 10−20 mol/granule (36) and other assumptions as above. This leads to an averaged A2E concentration in the RPE of 0.224 mM. The integrated absorption of the visible light (> 390 nm) of LF-soluble components is 120 times greater than for A2E. Inset: Absorption spectrum of A2E after blowing out the ordinate axis. It needs to be kept in mind that the calculations of the expected absorption of light by lipofuscin extracts and A2E refer to chromophores in solutions. Under physiological conditions, all chromophores are encapsulated within lipofuscin granules; therefore, the absorption cross section at the RPE may be substantially different from that in solution. Wavelength dependence of initial rates of light-induced oxygen uptake normalized to equal number of incident photons (action spectra) for suspension of LF granules (B), insoluble (ILF) and soluble (SLF) components of lipofuscin (C) and A2E in liposomes containing unsaturated lipids (D). Note the rate of photooxidation increases with decreasing wavelength for LF, SLF, and ILF, while for A2E it matches its absorption spectrum. (Modified from [33, 217].)
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resembles the wavelength dependence of lipofuscin photooxidation. Thus, due to photochemical properties of oxidized DHA and its high abundance of DHA in POSs, the precursor material of lipofuscin, it may be speculated that the degradation products of DHA are more likely than the degradation products of A2E to be mainly responsible for mediating photoreactivity of lipofuscin. Importantly, the soluble components of lipofuscin account only for half or less of the total dry mass of lipofuscin granules. The remaining components of lipofuscin also absorb light and exhibit photoreactivity similar to SLF. Moreover, their contribution to overall reactivity of lipofuscin increases with age and is responsible for an age-related increase in photoreactivity of lipofuscin granules [33]. With age, there is progressive accumulation of chromophores in the lens, filtering out all the UV and, later in life, also blue and even partly green light, therefore diminishing the probability of photoexcitation of ATR [136] and, subsequently, photooxidative stress mediated by ATR. Lipofuscin, however, still efficiently absorbs longer-wavelength blue and green light, which can still induce photosensitized generation of singlet oxygen and photooxidation [174, 175] (Fig. 5). In summary, aging increases the risk of lipofuscin-dependent oxidative stress in the outer retina due to age-related accumulation of lipofuscin and an increase in aerobic photoreactivity of a single lipofuscin granule. Toxicity of RPE Lipofuscin Significantly, it has been shown that susceptibility of human RPE cells to lightinduced oxidation increases with age and exhibits similar wavelength dependence of photooxidation as lipofuscin [175]. The phototoxic potential of retinal lipofuscin has been demonstrated in cultured human RPE cells fed lipofuscin granules and exposed to either blue-green light (390–550 nm; 2.8 mW/cm2) or yellow-red light (550–800 nm; 2.8 mW/cm2) [36]. Only cells that were fed lipofuscin granules and exposed to 390- to 550-nm light for 12 h (dose of 121 J/cm2) or more exhibited significant morphological changes, loss of lysosomal integrity, enhanced peroxidation of lipids, and greatly reduced survival. Notably, RPE cells in this experiment were exposed to only 300 lipofuscin granules per cell, and part of the granules was phagocytosed. Lipofuscin accumulation in vivo can greatly exceed that value. As mentioned, based on morphometric study of macular RPE from donors 81 to 90 years old, lipofuscin can occupy as much as 19% of cell volume, which corresponds to almost 8,000 granules per cell [11]. In the following experiments, under conditions of sublethal exposure of cultured RPE cells to lipofuscin and blue-green light, it was demonstrated that lipofuscin inhibits several antioxidant and lysosomal enzymes in the dark, and the effect is exacerbated during exposure to light [176, 177]. The phototoxicity of lipofuscin to RPE cells in culture cannot be explained by the action of A2E. Lipofuscin exerted its toxic effects to the RPE cell in vitro, with the content of A2E in cells at most 13 ng per million cells [36], so it was at least two orders of magnitude lower than that required to elicit detectable damaging effects mediated by A2E in the dark [56] and 17 times lower than that required to elicit A2E-mediated phototoxicity induced by 60-s exposure to blue light of 7.5 W/cm2 irradiance (dose of 450 J/cm2) [178].
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In low concentrations, A2E was shown to actually protect against UV light-induced DNA damage in RPE cells in vitro [179]. In experiments performed by Roberts and colleagues [179], RPE cells were incubated for 2 h in culture medium without or with A2E, after which the cells were washed and exposed to UV light. Cells preincubated in the presence of 5 µM A2E were significantly protected against DNA damage in comparison to the control cells. On the other hand, A2E at high concentration can exert several deleterious effects on cells in the dark and mediate blue-light-induced damage to the RPE cells in vitro (reviewed by [58, 172, 180]). A2E was shown to cause membrane permeabilization, inhibit lysosomal ATPase activity, inhibit cytochrome c oxidase and decrease mitochondrial activity, and induce release of proapoptotic proteins from mitochondria, leading eventually to apoptosis. A2E has been shown to act as a competitive inhibitor of organic anion-transporting protein (OATP) present at the apical microvilli of the rat RPE and to a lesser degree in small retinal vessels. OATP, which is also expressed in the brain and liver, transports amphiphilic compounds across the plasma membrane in a sodiumindependent manner, and in the retina is suspected to be involved in retinoid transport. Most studies on A2E toxicity were done on cells in culture that were exposed to A2E provided as a solution. Under physiological conditions, A2E is believed to be present mainly within the lipofuscin granule, and therefore its toxic action in vitro when it was delivered in solution cannot be extrapolated directly to the situation in vivo. Encapsulation of A2E within the lipofuscin granule, where it accounts for only 0.019–0.024% dry weight, is likely to prevent A2E from exerting its deleterious effects on mitochondria, DNA, and transport proteins. Similar to its precursor ATR, A2E is very susceptible to oxidation. As a result, a variety of epoxides, cyclic peroxides, furanoid oxides, and carbonyl products are formed, and several of these products have been identified in human RPE postmortem, suggesting that they are formed in vivo. It has been shown that products of A2E oxidation delivered in solution to cultured RPE cells can induce oxidative damage to DNA and cytotoxicity. However, being formed within the lipofuscin granule, their toxicity under physiological conditions remains to be shown. As mentioned, ATR plays an essential role in the accumulation of A2E and lipofuscin; however, it was not detected as a lipofuscin component. It may be speculated that retinals and retinols also form epoxides in the retina, but in contrast to A2E, they may more easily diffuse out of the lipofuscin granule and damage cellular components. Interestingly, it seems that retinoids and their derivatives are not essential to propagate photooxidative damage once extensive oxidation of POSs has taken place. Oxidation of isolated POSs by UV light, which induces rapid degradation of all retinoids accompanied by generation of reactive species derived from retinoids and oxygen, and feeding it to cultured RPE cells results in accumulation of autofluorescent material [135, 181, 182]. As a result, the efficiency of phagocytosis decreases, and cells become more susceptible to blue-light-induced toxicity. As mentioned, lipofuscin contains abundant polyunsaturated lipids, oxidation of which results in the formation of toxic 4-hydroxy-nonenal and malondialdehyde, as well as DHA oxidation products of photosensitizing properties. Consistently, our data indicate that oxidized DHA, an abundant component of POSs, exhibits not only toxic properties to cultured RPE cells in the dark, but also its toxicity substantially increases on exposure to blue light [173].
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It is clear that at least in vitro lipofuscin can impose photooxidative stress on the RPE cells, inactivate antioxidant and lysosomal enzymes, enhance lipid peroxidation, and cause lysosomal leakage and loss of cell viability. Although the exact mechanism of lipofuscin-dependent cytotoxicity in the RPE is not known, it is likely that oxidative stress, mediated by the photoexcited lipofuscin, could play an important role. Effects of Lipofuscin Components and Oxidative Stress in the RPE on Proinflammatory and Angiogenic Signaling As discussed, lipofuscin may impose oxidative stress on the RPE. It has been demonstrated on several cell types, including RPE, that oxidative stress can induce proinflammatory and angiogenic signaling [183–185]. For example, a component of lipofuscin, A2E and hydrogen peroxide, a product of irradiation of lipofuscin with light, induces upregulation of a potent proinflammatory factor, cyclooxygenase-2 in ARPE-19 cells, a spontaneously immortalized human RPE cell line [186]. Moreover, cultured ARPE-19 cells under oxidative stress induced by exposure to blue light activate the complement cascade in the human serum overlying the cells, as observed by monitoring the cleavage products of complement component C3, which are known to trigger inflammatory responses [187]. The activation of complement is further increased if cells are exposed to light in the presence of A2E. Moreover, two oxidation products of A2E have been identified, peroxy-A2E and furano-A2E, that lead to a significantly increased level of C3 cleavage products, iC3b. At the same time, the level of iC3b in serum exposed to A2E only remains at the same level as in empty control wells. It is important to determine whether oxidation products of ATR analogous to those of peroxy-A2E and furano-A2E also exhibit the ability of complement activation. These products are expected to be more hydrophilic than peroxy-A2E and furano-A2E and, in contrast to A2E and many A2E oxidation products, not anchored in the lipid membrane. This would facilitate their diffusion out of the POS or lipofuscin granule to reach the choroid. Phagocytosis of oxidized POSs by cultured RPE induces 2.8- and 3.2-fold increased expression of proinflammatory cytokines interleukin 8 (IL-8; also known as the neutrophil chemotactic factor) and MCP-1, respectively, in comparison to cells fed naïve POS [185]. Indeed, IL-8 and MCP-1 are potent chemoattractants for phagocytes and are elevated in the vitreous of patients with retinal neovascularization. Exposure of cultured ARPE-19 cells to oxidative stress induced by tert-butyl hydroperoxide or dl-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine results in a substantial upregulation of gene expression of two isoforms of VEGF, VEGF-A and VEGF-C, and secretion of VEGF-A and VEGF-C proteins [183, 184]. Also, lipofuscin components 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal and A2E/light upregulate VEGF expression [188–191]. VEGF is a potent angiogenic factor that promotes choroidal neovascularization [192]. Also another component of lipofuscin, the CEP–protein adduct, has been found to stimulate angiogenesis in the chick embryo and rat cornea and in a mouse model of laser-induced chorioretinal neovascularization [30, 193]. Interestingly, CEP–protein adducts do not upregulate VEGF in ARPE19 cells in vitro, and administration of antiVEGF antibodies only partly blocks CEP–protein adduct-induced angiogenesis in vivo, while it completely blocks angiogenesis induced by VEGF. These results suggest an involvement of an additional, VEGF-independent, angiogenesis pathway.
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As the RPE is a major source of angiogenic and antiangiogenic factors, dysregulation of the balance between them can contribute to the development of choroidal neovascularization of the retina [192]. In summary, oxidative stress induced by lipofuscin, and certain components of lipofuscin in particular, may contribute to eliciting proinflammatory and angiogenic responses. It is particularly important because AMD is related to chronic low-level inflammation characterized by the presence of inflammatory markers (C-reactive proteins) and—in its so-called wet form—with choroidal neovascularization of the retina [155, 192, 194]. APPROACHES TO DIMINISH LIPOFUSCIN ACCUMULATION OR LIPOFUSCIN-INDUCED DAMAGE Accumulated lipofuscin can be viewed as a proof that RPE cells were exposed to oxidative stress, and once accumulated, lipofuscin can further propagate oxidative damage, in particular when it is excited with short-wavelength visible light. Lipofuscin in the RPE may induce damage to the retina not only directly but also indirectly by inducing proinflammatory and angiogenic signaling, leading to retinal degeneration. Therefore, it is essential to minimize lipofuscin formation and to prevent damage induced by lipofuscin already present. To achieve this, the key element is to minimize ATR accumulation in POS disks and to provide adequate antioxidant protection. ATR accumulation and subsequent lipofuscin accumulation can be successfully diminished by diminishing the exposure to light, by diminishing stores of retinoids in the RPE by depletion of vitamin A, or by pharmacological inhibition of enzymes involved in conversion of all-trans retinyl esters into 11-cis retinal. Depletion of vitamin A, achieved either by dietary depletion or by HPR treatment, needs to be carefully monitored to avoid undesirable effects related to deficiency of its metabolite all-trans retinoic acid—a vital regulator of gene expression and essential factor for maintaining the integrity of the skin and mucous membranes as well as a regulatory factor in the immune system [195]. HRP at concentrations tested in numerous cancer trials induces delayed dark adaptation but otherwise is safe and well tolerated [110]. As mentioned, 13-cis retinoic acid, TDT, and TDH are effective inhibitors of the retinoid cycle and subsequent lipofuscin accumulation. However, as 13-cis retinoic acid acts as a competitive inhibitor, it needs to be present in a high concentration, which can cause teratogenicity and systemic toxicity. The long-term effects of TDT and TDH are unknown. Other inhibitors of isomerization of all-trans retinyl esters are all-trans retinylamine and its isomers and derivatives [196–198]. In addition to direct inhibition of isomerization, all-trans retinylamine is a substrate for LRAT and undergoes reversible acylation to form N-retinylamides [197]. As a result, all-trans retinylamine is a more potent inhibitor of 11-cis retinal synthesis than HPR or 13-cis retinoic acid, when compared at the same doses, and its action is sustained over a period of several days after a single injection. Treatment with all-trans retinylamine effectively prevents light-induced damage to the retina [198]. Therefore, it may be expected that all-trans retinylamine will be effective in prevention of lipofuscin accumulation.
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N-Retinylamine may be metabolized through retinol and retinal into retinoic acid [198]. Importantly, when compared with retinol treatment, only a trace elevation of potentially toxic all-trans retinoic acid is detected. Moreover, N-retinylamine interacts only at micromolar concentrations with retinoic acid receptor and does not activate retinoid X receptor [196]. Yet, treatment with N-retinylamine results in massive changes in gene expression in the liver and retina, similar to those induced by HPR, albeit less dramatic than those induced by 13-cis retinoic acid. Therefore, a thorough study of potential toxicity is required before recommendation of N-retinylamine as a potential prophylactic treatment. Also, there are potential risks related to chronic inhibition of isomerization. The minor drawback of inhibition of 11-cis retinal synthesis is delayed dark adaptation. More important, dysfunction of proteins involved in synthesis of 11-cis retinal, such as RPE65, RDH5, RPE65, LRAT, and CRALBP, results in early-onset photoreceptor degenerations and mild-to-severe loss of vision [103]. It seems that avoiding exposures of the retina to bright short-wavelength light is the simplest preventive measure against ATR accumulation and subsequent oxidative damage mediated by ATR and lipofuscin. Inserting yellow intraocular lenses after cataract surgery can mimic protection offered by the natural lens in the elderly patients [199]. Alternatively, yellow or amber sunglasses may offer the same or even better protection against overexposure to blue light. However, it needs to be remembered that blue light photoactivates melanopsin (maximum at 480 nm) in ganglion cells, which plays an important role in pupillary responses to changing light levels and in setting circadian rhythms [200]. Therefore, chronic filtering out all blue light may have undesirable systemic effects. Certainly, filtering out infrared and short-wavelength light in ophthalmic instruments can decrease the risk of retinal damage during ocular surgery or ophthalmic examination [201, 202], and transient inhibition of the synthesis of 11-cis retinal may offer further protection. As mentioned, the retina is equipped with effective defense mechanisms that, despite harsh conditions putting it at risk of oxidative damage, allow the retina to perform well its function in most cases throughout lifetime. Also, long-term adaptation to the environmental light levels plays an important role in modulating the susceptibility to photooxidative damage and includes decreased concentration of rhodopsin, changes in lipid composition of POSs, and increased concentration of low-molecular antioxidants. To enable this protective mechanism to operate, an adequate dietary intake of antioxidant vitamins and micronutrients is necessary. However, it needs to be pointed out that experiments on animals demonstrated that lifelong exposure to light causes retinal degeneration, with its severity correlating with the intensity of light at which the animals are reared [203]. Moreover, rats reared even at dim cyclic light (∼20–30 lux) exhibit an increasing susceptibility to retinal photodamage with aging, while rats reared in the dark are equally susceptible to light-induced damage at different ages. This suggests that chronic exposure to light results in a gradual decline of efficiency of the defense mechanisms. The retina contains abundant antioxidants that scavenge reactive oxygen species or quench excited states of photosensitizers and singlet oxygen. The retinal antioxidants include low molecular weight antioxidants synthesized endogenously, such as lipoic
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acid and ubiquinone, and of dietary origin (vitamin E, vitamin C, lutein, and zeaxanthin). The retina expresses a number of antioxidant enzymes. Some of the enzymes are directly responsible for decomposition of reactive oxygen species, such as superoxide dismutase, catalase, and glutathione peroxidase, which decompose superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and lipid hydroperoxides. Other enzymes are responsible for detoxification and removal of toxic products or repair of damaged proteins. For instance, glutathione transferase conjugates secondary products of lipid peroxidation to glutathione, and these adducts can be subsequently excreted from the cell [204]. Several studies in vivo and in vitro have demonstrated that antioxidant protection of the retina can be further improved via antioxidant supplementation or upregulation of antioxidant enzymes [128, 205–209]. For example, loss of photoreceptor RDH activity in the rat retina on exposure to intensive green light may be prevented with a synthetic antioxidant, 1,3-dimethylthiourea [128]. A powerful way to increase the retinal resistance to oxidative stress is exposure to phytochemicals, such as common dietary components (resveratrol, sulforaphane, catechins, flavonoids, allium, and curcumin), which activate cell survival signaling and transcription pathways and inhibit proinflammatory signaling [210, 211]. In particular, sulforaphane, highly abundant in broccoli sprouts, stimulates NRF2-dependent expression of antioxidant and detoxification enzymes such as glutathione, thoredoxin, and NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase and effectively protects RPE cells in vitro and the retina in vivo against photooxidative damage [208, 212, 213]. Last but not least, the retina contains a large concentration of DHA that can, itself or after enzymatic oxidation, effectively inhibit or counteract proapoptotic and inflammatory signaling [214–216]. CONCLUSIONS Phototransduction is necessary for visual perception, but it is inherently related to a release of ATR. There is a great deal of evidence implicating ATR released from opsin as a mediator of acute photodamage to the retina as well as accumulation of lipofuscin in the RPE. Once formed, lipofuscin has the potential to impose further threats to the RPE, which include lipofuscin-mediated oxidative damage, and initiation of signaling pathways, potentially leading to the activation of complement and angiogenesis and therefore contributing to the development of atrophic and neovascular forms of AMD. Therefore, to avoid the risk of oxidative stress and lipofuscin formation, preventive measures against ATR accumulation should be taken, including avoiding overexposure of the retina to bright light and, if necessary, pharmacological intervention inhibiting 11-cis retinal synthesis. As ATR accumulation may be particularly damaging during exposure to light, understanding the signaling pathways responsible for mobilization of all-trans retinyl esters under light adaptation may provide a powerful strategy for prophylactic treatment. With age, the transmission of the short-wavelength light to the retina decreases. However, as both the lipofuscin concentration in the RPE and the photoreactivity of the lipofuscin granule increase with age, the risk of photooxidative damage mediated by lipofuscin remains. To counteract the oxidative stress, minimization of exposure to short-wavelength light and upregulation of antioxidant and detoxifying
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21 A Nonspecific System Provides Nonphotic Information for the Biological Clock Marian H. Lewandowski CONTENTS Introduction Nonphotic Information Nonspecific Systems Intergeniculate Leaflet of the Thalamus Conclusions References
INTRODUCTION Rhythmicity is a key property of all living matter, starting with unicellular organisms and ending with such complex organisms as humans. All the time, numberless structures and functions of the organism undergo rhythmic changes (of seconds, minutes, and hours; circadian; seasonal). These alterations are of great adaptive significance to the organism. They permit behavioral patterns and physiological processes of the organism to be optimally synchronized with the cyclically changing environmental conditions. In recent years, a growing interest in biological rhythms, especially in their mechanism, has been an effect of not only their endogenous origin and the discovery of genetic basis, but—above all—also of the understanding of their great significance for the proper functioning of the organism. One of the first symptoms of functional disturbances (illnesses) in a living organism is a change in the rhythmicity of its physiological processes and behavioral patterns, while interference with the rhythmic processes may be very dangerous and cause disturbances in the functioning of human organism. Therefore, the understanding of the mechanism regulating rhythmic processes, the elements of this mechanism, their reciprocal functional relations, as well as the influence of external factors on its functioning not only presents a challenge to chronobiologists, but also requires specialist knowledge on the part of physicians, pharmacologists, and psychologists, that is, all those in everyday contact with ill and healthy persons. Such information is also valuable to every one of us who listens intently to one’s own organism and wants to live in harmony with it. From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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The discovery of the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCNs) of the anterior hypothalamus, the main neuronal element building up the mechanism of mammalian biological clock, at the beginning of the 1970s [1] was undoubtedly a giant step in chronobiological research. A direct connection between ganglion cells of the retina and the SCN via the retinohypothalamic tract (RHT) supported the notion of a significant role of light as an external synchronizer (zeitgeber, time donor) of mammalian biological clock [2, 3]. NONPHOTIC INFORMATION However, light is not the only external stimulus that synchronizes the functioning of mammalian biological clock. Also other, nonphotic information has substantial influence on its work [4]. It is of particular significance to higher organisms, including first of all humans, for whom the cyclically changing light/darkness or ambient temperature are not the only factors affecting the normal course of rhythmic processes. Of equal importance as a stimulus synchronizing rhythmic processes is all nonphotic information, which under certain conditions may exert even a more powerful effect than light [5]. In social animals, including mammals above all, there is a strong tendency to synchronize the behavior of an individual with that of other group members. This is particularly important and clearly visible in primates, including humans first, for whom the social instructions developed by way of evolution have become dominant over physicochemical stimuli in the regulation of their behavior [6]. The contemporary lifestyle strongly emphasizes this tendency by showing how far light, present in our everyday activities (shift work, intercontinental flights, etc.), diverges from the solar cycle of day and night, often supplying the biological clock with contradictory and incorrect information about time. A vast body of evidence indicates that synchronization of the biological clock may also take place in the absence of light. Persons kept under permanent poor lighting in specially isolated living quarters or during the polar night show a free-running rhythm, characteristic of the so-called permanent light conditions. In such circumstances, cognitive stimuli themselves and the information about the passing time are not sufficient to change this rhythm. However, the imposition of definite behavioral patterns or the maintenance of regular contacts with the remaining group members may synchronize a free-running rhythm to the circadian rhythm. A similar mechanism can be observed in blind persons, whose acquired permanent behavioral patterns inhibit generation of a free-running rhythm by synchronizing their biological clock to the circadian rhythm. The disturbance of customary everyday behaviors or their elimination as well as deprivation of other social signals may have a serious negative effect on our well-being. A change in mood is often an effect of sudden, unexpected, mainly negative, nonphotic stimuli on the circadian mechanism of the biological clock. Due to their force and negative character, these stimuli can mask the current synchronizing effect of less-potent nonphotic information (synchronizers), thereby causing desynchronization of rhythmic processes. The disturbance of circadian rhythms that frequently accompanies depression may also be connected with behavioral dysfunction, including locomotor ones or changes in customary behaviors, which hinder the availability of social stimuli and thus their synchronizing influence. Nonphotic communication is of particular importance
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between mother and fetus or a newborn. It prepares and optimizes its later behaviors and activities for circadian light conditions [7]. These examples permit the following conclusion: Of importance equal to photic information in man is the direct influence of strictly determined changes and behavioral activity patterns generated by nonphotic stimuli. This is a key factor synchronizing biological rhythms. NONSPECIFIC SYSTEMS A characteristic feature of the central nervous system is its distinct division into two autonomously separate but functionally strictly related systems. The first consists of specific pathways along which there flow centripetal sensory information and centrifugal motor input. These systems are characterized by the selectivity of the flowing information, which indicates that only information specific to a given projection (e.g., optic to the visual cortex or photic to elements of the mechanism of biological clock, including the SCN above all) flows along a definite path. The other system contains nonspecific pathways along which no specific sensory information flows from a particular reception zone or a sense organ to a specific area of the cerebral cortex. Anatomically, they form greatly “disseminated,” diffusible projections with terminals sited in many brain areas, also including the neuronal elements of the biological clock. The activity of sources of these systems causes a general excitation of the brain, the so-called arousal reaction. This arousal, with an electrophysiological picture that is represented by desynchronization of the activity of cortical neurons, makes the information flowing along specific pathways to be well “understood” by the appropriate areas of the brain, mainly the cerebral cortex. Hence, the nonspecific systems prepare the brain for the reception and adequate reaction to stimuli of diverse modality, coming in from specific systems. Only proper “cooperation” of the two systems guarantees normal brain activity—in the context not only of the cortical facilitation of sensory information transmission along nervous pathways but also of their participation in the mechanism of numerous important physiological processes, including the mechanism of mammalian biological clock. Nonphotic stimuli such as behavioral arousal that induces hyperactivity and sleep deprivation, food shortage, as well as such social interactions as, for example, matingoriented behaviors, have no specific projections of their own in the brain. A physiological result of their influence on human organism may be and is activation of nonspecific systems and a change in human brain arousal [7], which also elevate the physical activity of man [4]. They also modulate the work of neuronal elements of the mechanism of the mammalian biological clock, in particular those receiving direct photic information from ganglion cells of the retina. Ascending Reticular-Activating System In 1949, Moruzzi and Magoun [8] demonstrated the indispensability of the reticular formation of the brain stem to the maintenance of cortical activity and behavioral arousal, giving that projection the name ascending reticular-activating system (ARAS). The ascending nonspecific projections of the reticular formation reach brain cortical areas by the dorsal pathway via the thalamus and by the ventral pathway via the basal
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Fig. 1. The sagittal section through the rat brain illustrating the ascending reticular-activating system (ARAS). BF basal forebrain, IGL intergeniculate leaflet, LC locus coeruleus, LDT laterodorsal tegmental nuleus, PPT penduculopontine tegmental nucleus, RN raphe nuclei, SCN suprachiasmatic nuclei, TH thalamus, TMN tuberomammillary nucleus, VTA/SN ventral tegmental area/substantia nigra.
forebrain and the hypothalamus, while neurons of the descending projection of the reticular formation come up to peripheral muscles through activation of motor neurons of the medulla (Fig. 1). The main neurotransmitter of the diffusible thalamocortical projection and some neurons of the basal forebrain is glutamate (GLU); its activity is modified by such neuromodulators of the brain stem as noradrenaline of the locus coeruleus, dopamine of the substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area, serotonin of the raphe nuclei, acetylcholine of pontomesencephalic neurons, or histamine of tuberomammillary neurons. The majority of these projections also have their terminals in the neuronal elements of the mammalian biological clock, receiving information directly or indirectly via basal nuclei of the forebrain [9]. The dominating and most significant projection for the clock activity is the serotoninergic projection from the raphe nuclei, often defined as a nonphotic projection [10]. Orexin/Hypocretin Projection At the end of the 1990s, a group of researchers from San Diego, headed by Gregory Sutcliffe, discovered in the hypothalamic area a peptide controlling appetite and regulating body weight. In earlier studies, rats with lesioned median hypothalamus showed obesity, while those with lesion of the lateral hypothalamus displayed anorexia [11]. The above-mentioned peptide was named hypocretin (Hctr) after the site of its hypothalamic localization and the structural resemblance to the gut hormone secretin [12]. At the same time, in their search for orphan receptor ligands, Yanagisawa’s research group from Texas found two peptides binding to those receptors, orexin A and orexin B. The name orexin (OX) is derived from the Greek word for appetite; it was introduced after an increased appetite had been observed following administration of that peptide into
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the lateral ventricle of rat brain. It shortly turned out that hypocretin and orexin were the same compound participating in the regulation of not only food intake, but also behaviors and behavioral states of the organism, including regulation of the sleep-andwakefulness rhythm. Its concentration changes according to the day-and-night rhythm, reaching its maximum in the waking state and during rapid-eye movement (REM) sleep and the minimum during slow-wave sleep [13]. The blockade of orexin synthesis via degeneration of orexin neurons or genetic mutations causes narcolepsy in animals and humans [14]. To date, two orexin/hypocretin peptides, OX-A (Hctr-1) and OX-B (Hctr-2), have been recognized. They bind to two different metabotropic receptors, OX-R1 and OX-R2. OX-A has high affinity for both these receptors, while OX-B shows considerably greater affinity for the latter receptor (type 2) [15]. The peptide under description is synthesized mainly by a small group of cells of the posterior lateral hypothalamus [16]. A tiny number of small Hctr neurons were also observed in other brain regions: the lateral part of the amygdala, the anterolateral area of the bed nucleus and lateral ventricle [17], as well as in olfactory neurons [18]. Axons of hypocretin neurons, mainly those localized within the hypothalamic area, innervate numerous regions of the brain. The richest projections reach the locus coeruleus and raphe nuclei, which have descending fibers that reach motor neurons, controlling muscle tone, while the ascending fibers that innervate the forebrain are involved in sensory integration. Other sites that are strongly innervated by orexin fibers are the source of cholinergic projection of the brain stem and basal nuclei. The cholinergic projection of these areas is responsible for cortical activation, the result of which is the wakeful brain. The orexin projection is in charge of coordination of the activity of arousing cholinergic projections with the motor activity of the organism. The histaminergic cells of the posterior and other hypothalamic nuclei, which are engaged in the so-called forebrain wakefulness, are also under strict control of the orexin system [19]. The orexin projection is also in control of the dopaminergic neurons involved in reward processes and in the mechanism of wakefulness. Weaker projections innervate regions of the dorsal and ventral roots of the medulla oblongata, of motor neurons and limbic areas of the brainstem, as well as of the cerebral cortex [20] (Fig. 2). In the majority of cases, the orexin projection is stimulatory; this also refers to γ-aminobutyric acid-ergic (GABAergic) neurons of the pars reticulata substantia nigra or the septal nucleus innervating the hippocampus. Regarding the stimulatory action of the orexin projection, of paramount importance is the fact that it has no terminals of its own on neurons of specific thalamic pathways transmitting sensory information to the cerebral cortex [21]. This is further proof helping to classify this system as a nonspecific projection of the brain. The direct postsynaptic stimulatory action of orexin often depends on the effect of its simultaneous activation of other fibers that may have their terminals on the stimulated synapse. This happens, for example, in the case of serotonergic and noradrenergic cells that simultaneously receive direct orexin stimulation and indirect inhibition originating with GABAergic cells, also stimulated by orexin. Hence, the influence of the direct stimulatory action of orexin depends on indirect modulating effects and does not ever have to be of a stimulating nature. Such modulating action
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Fig. 2. The sagittal section through the rat brain shows the key projections of hypocretin (orexin) neurons (Hctr) from the lateral hypothalamus to the main components of the brain structures. See Fig. 1 caption for definitions of abbreviations. (After [20].)
that intensifies weak signals and inhibits strong ones is also a characteristic feature of nonspecific systems. The modulating effect of orexin projection on neuronal activity was also confirmed by the results of in vitro studies. The orexin-induced stimulation of orexin neurons in hypothalamic sections stems indirectly from the enhanced activity of glutaminergic cells adjacent to orexin ones but is not a direct effect on orexin cells [22]. The mechanism of inhibitory feedback can also be observed between the orexin system and the noradrenergic and serotoninergic ones. Orexin directly stimulates these two projections, which may attenuate its action on a feedback basis, via an inhibitory influence on the glutaminergic neurons present in the vicinity of the orexin projection. Also, the histaminergic projection originating with the protuberance of nuclei of the mammillary body exerts an inhibitory influence on orexin neurons via GABA release since histamine itself has a small effect on these neurons [22, 23]. Studies have shown that orexin release is endogenous and depends on the presence of the main generator of the mammalian biological clock: the SCNs of the hypothalamus [24]. The presence of OR-A and OR-B and OX-R1 receptors in the human retina seems particularly noteworthy [25] as this may suggest its modulatory role in the interaction among ganglionic cells of the retina, which transfer photic information to the SCN of the hypothalamus. Considering the presence of orexin OX-R1 receptors and OXcontaining fibers in the vicinity of the SCNs [25], it is proposed that this system may have a modulatory influence on the neuronal activity of the whole mechanism of mammalian biological clock. However, the unique role of orexin seems to be connected with its involvement—mediation of the transfer of nonphotic information to the intergeniculate leaflet (IGL) of the thalamus, the other (besides the SCN) extremely important neuronal element of the mechanism of the mammalian biological clock.
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INTERGENICULATE LEAFLET OF THE THALAMUS The IGL of the thalamus is the other (in addition to the SCN) structurally important element of the mechanism of mammalian biological clock. Anatomy The IGL belongs to the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) complex of the thalamus, an extremely important and interesting structure of the optic pathway. It is located between the dorsal lateral geniculate (DLG) and ventral lateral geniculate (VLG) parts of the lateral geniculate body. For a long time, the IGL was indistinguishable from the rest of the lateral geniculate body and was classified as in its ventral part. Only immunohistochemical and autoradiographic methods helped to demonstrate its complete anatomical identity and to define the limits of its occurrence and its connections with other brain structures [26, 27] (Fig. 3). The IGL is composed of small and medium-size multipolar interneurons with a dendritic zone that is limited to the area occupied by this structure, over which it differs anatomically from the remainder of the lateral geniculate body. This structure is clearly identifiable in rodents, whereas its homologs have so far been barely recognized in other species. In cats, such a homolog is the medial part of the ventral LGN, while in monkeys and humans it is the preginiculate nucleus [28]. The IGL receives strong innervation from retinal ganglionic cells of both eyes, branching off the RHT pathway running to the SCN. The projection to the contralaterally situated IGL is twice as large
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Fig. 3. The coronal section through the rat brain illustrating (left) the localization of the intergeniculate leaflet (IGL). A photomicrograph (right) of a rat brain coronal section across the geniculate complex with dark labeling of neuropeptide Y (NPY) immunoreactive neurons within the IGL area. DLG dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus, IGL intergeniculate leaflet, VLG ventral lateral geniculate nucleus.
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as that to the IGL situated ipsilaterally [29]. The above-mentioned leaflet stretches along the whole horizontal length of the LGN, occupying a section of about 2 mm in the rat and 2.2 mm in the hamster [27]. The majority of leaflet neurons reach the ventrolateral area of the SCN, bypassing—via the geniculohypothalamic tract (GHT)—neurons that form the RHT. The body of anatomic evidence showing the connection between the IGL and many other brain areas, especially those involved in the process of seeing, has been growing [30–34]. These relationships are generally bilateral and often reciprocal, being clear proof of a functional connection between the IGL and structures participating in the process of seeing, representing mainly the visuomotor function. This phenomenon was first investigated in 1994 by Morin [35], who confirmed it by additional proof, based mostly on his own anatomical studies published in an extremely interesting review, called most accurately, “The Circadian Visual System, 2005” [36]. It is noteworthy that there also exists a reciprocal bilateral connection between the two leaflets via the supraoptic commissure, which is limited to the IGL only, and therein to a population of neurons that do not project to the SCN. The role of this bilateral connection between the leaflets via the geniculogeniculate pathway is not entirely clear. It is thus assumed, although not yet conclusively proven, that both leaflets are reciprocally synchronized by means of this connection [37]. This synchronization seems to be particularly important with respect to the potential involvement of the IGL in the process of seeing, which requires synchronic activity on the part of all elements forming the visual system for the normal perception of an image. Possibly, the reciprocal connection between these two leaflets is another example of the integratory activity of brain. The Pharmacology of the IGL The total number of nerve cells forming the IGL ranges between 1,800 and 2,000 [27]. They are mostly GABAergic neurons that constitute a basic population of cells building up the neuronal mechanism of mammalian biological clock [38]. The pharmacological property by which the IGL differs from the remainder of the LGN is the presence of neuropeptide Y (NPY) (Fig. 3), which can be found mostly among GABAergic neurons projecting to the SCN [27, 39, 40]. Thus, NPY is regarded as the main transmitter of nonphotic information from the IGL to the SCN. Another neuropeptide present in the IGL is enkephalin (ENK), which in the majority of cases participates in the projection to the IGL situated opposite it. Also, neurotensin, which occurs in the vicinity of the majority of neurons with NPY, is a pharmacological marker of IGL neurons. Regarding the role of nonphotic information in the regulation of the mechanism of the biological clock, another very important IGL neuropeptide is relaxin 3. The extraordinarily rich nerve fibers containing this neuropeptide are present in numerous brain structures, yet above all in the IGL, being definitely less abundant in the SCN [41]. Relaxin probably participates in the modulation of behavioral patterns by adapting animals to environmental stressful conditions, which may constitute another nonphotic factor affecting the mechanism of the biological clock. The involvement of relaxin in the control of a visuomotor response has also been postulated [41], which in turn may confirm the engagement of the circadian system, above all the IGL, in visual processes.
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Chronobiology A vast body of anatomical evidence but above all the results of physiological and behavioral studies confirmed the involvement of the IGL in the regulation of biological rhythms. Electric stimulation of the IGL, or such nonphotic information as benzodiazepine treatment or novel wheel activity, produces a shift in the rhythm phase during the subjective day and a reduction in the expression of Period genes in the SCN [42], while light affects the circadian system during the subjective night, simultaneously bringing about an increase in the expression of the Period gene in the SCN. Electric lesion of both the IGLs always causes desynchronization of the rhythm of mouse locomotor activity [43]. The last effect may be explained by the lack of nonphotic synchronization in the circadian system after IGL lesion [44]. The observation that IGL lesion does not disturb the course of circadian rhythms in standard laboratory conditions under a specific permanent light regime (12 h of light/12 h of darkness) is of utmost importance. With limited access to other nonphotic stimuli, the strong light/darkness stimulus— always administered at the same time intervals—is a dominating signal that synchronizes rhythmic processes. However, it should be borne in mind that laboratory regimens are distant from the real conditions in which the majority of organisms live, above all humans. Therefore, the presence and significance of the structure that receives and integrates nonphotic information with photic information are of paramount importance. It is the IGL that fulfills this task. The Electrophysiology of the IGL The IGL neurons reveal an extremely interesting pattern of electric activity, characteristic only of this structure of the whole LGN complex. They generate action potentials in rhythmically repeated firing bursts with a constant interburst interval lasting several hours, defined as isoperiodic oscillations (Fig. 4). The mean time in which IGL cells change the level of their activity amounts to 124 ± 7 s [45]. Interestingly, such a pattern of activity is revealed by leaflet neurons only and is lacking in the dorsal and ventral parts of the LGN. On the other hand, these oscillations can be observed in the SCN of the hypothalamus [46, 47] and in the activity of cells of the pineal gland [48], to which the IGL has an additional projection in rats [49] and in
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Fig. 4. Firing rate histogram showing rhythmic slow bursting activity (isoperiodic, ultradian oscillation) of intergeniculate leaflet (IGL) neurons. Bin size 1 s.
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Mongolian gerbils [50]. The same pattern of cellular activity in the two most important structures (SCN and IGL) of the neuronal mechanism of mammalian biological clock permits an assumption that it constitutes a natural, extremely important basal rhythm characteristic of the work of not only these two structures, but also the whole mechanism of the mammalian biological clock. The absence of such oscillations in an in vitro preparation may suggest that they are of exogenous origin [51]. On the basis of the experiments conducted so far, in all probability it may be concluded that a photic signal from the retina is necessary for their development. Like the blockade of sodium conduction by means of TTX (tetrodotoxin citrate) administration to the eyeball, switching off the light inhibits the pattern of the oscillatory activity of IGL neurons [45, 52]. In this activity, mainly GABAergic neurons are involved; the blockade of their receptors leads to temporary disappearance of the oscillatory activity of the IGL [53]. It has also been ascertained that a reciprocal connection between both leaflets is not necessary for the occurrence of oscillatory activity in the opposite leaflet. The lesion or pharmacological blockade of one leaflet does not affect the oscillatory activity of the other [54]. Electric stimulation of the dorsal raphe nuclei—the main source of the serotoninergic projection to the IGL—causes a temporary decrease in the level of the oscillatory activity of neurons, while electric lesion of this projection results in a pronounced increase in this activity [55]. Our most recent studies with lesioned terminals of serotoninergic fibers in the IGL have confirmed the direct, distinct, modulatory role of the 5 hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) projection from the dorsal raphe nuclei in the oscillatory activity of IGL neurons [56]. A similar modulating effect is also observed in the case of two other nonspecific projections of the brain: cholinergic from the laterodorsal tegmental nuclei and noradrenergic from the locus coeruleus. Electrophysiological in vivo studies into the rat circadian system have shown an inhibitory effect of electric stimulation of the nonspecific projections of the brain stem on the potential induced in the IGL [57]. However, the influence of these two projections on the oscillatory activity of IGL neurons is not as apparent as that of the serotoninergic projection, which plays a dominating role in the mechanism of the mammalian biological clock. All the same, the crucial question about the role and significance of these short (rapid) oscillations for the functioning of the mammalian biological clock still remains unanswered. The physiological importance and connection of this ultradial rhythmicity of IGL and SCN neurons with long, commonly observed, and recorded circadian rhythms need to be elucidated. It is not easy to give an answer to this question at the present stage of knowledge. First, one should reflect on the issue whether this type of activity is limited exclusively to the mechanism of the biological clock. A similar activity, recorded by us lately in the pretectum (OPT) [58], permits us to assume that it may also be engaged in visual processes, in particular in visuomotor functions. This would provide us with another line of evidence for a close connection between the visual processes and regulation of biological rhythms and might account for the anatomical localization of the IGL in the structure involved in the process of seeing. However, the presence of oscillatory activity in SCN neurons—a structure engaged in the mechanism of the biological clock only—makes the involvement of oscillations of this type exclusively in visual processes questionable. One of the hypotheses (fairly universal, in my opinion) that explain the role of this rapid neuronal
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activity of the IGL predicts its possible engagement in the mechanism of release of NPY or orexins as well as in the pulsatory secretion of other neurohormones in the vicinity of the SCNs. Interestingly, only the eruptive activity of neurons is capable of facilitating the release of these macromolecular compounds from neuronal terminals. IGL as an Integrator of Photic and Nonphotic Information Both light and nonphotic nuclei are main synchronizers of the mechanism of the mammalian biological clock. Their interdependence and reciprocal connections are most clearly visible in environmental (extralaboratory) conditions. The neuronal element of the mechanism of the biological clock that integrates stimuli of either type is the IGL, while the orexin projection is probably a chemical transmitter of nonphotic information from nonspecific systems of the brain. The presence of terminals of OX-A fibers on the membrane of bodies of neurons with NPY in the IGL, in particular on those displaying gene c-Fos expression induced by locomotor activity (regarded as one of the more important nonphotic stimuli) [59–61], supports the above hypotheses. NPY, with neurons that richly innervate the SCN, is a transmitter of nonphotic information to this structure. The reciprocal integration of photic and nonphotic stimuli probably takes place on a molecular level via influence on the expression of Period genes in SCN neurons. In the light phase (in the daytime), a photic stimulus itself is not capable of changing the rhythm phase because the transcription of the gene Pre is already maximal in these light conditions. Only a nonphotic stimulus can lower gene Pre transcription in the light phase. Such lowering would enable a photic stimulus to exert an effect; it will try to inhibit the decrease in gene Period expression evoked by a nonphotic stimulus [62]. Orexin also modulates GLU release and stimulates GABAergic neurons (reviewed in [20]), the two main neurotransmitters of the biological clock. A direct effect of orexin on glutaminergic SCN cells seems unlikely as its receptors have been found in the vicinity of the SCN but not in the SCN itself. On the other hand, regulation of GLU secretion on the IGL level appears feasible on the assumption that GLU is a chemical transmitter of photic information to the IGL [63, 64]. All the above data give support to the hypothesis that the orexin system provides feedback between the mechanism of the mammalian biological clock determining circadian rhythms and the state of an organism’s activity. CONCLUSIONS The mechanism of the mammalian biological clock has two main oscillators: the SCN of the hypothalamus and the IGL of the thalamus. They form a closed, commonly working, synchronizing circadian system. The rhythmic work of this system is modulated by photic and nonphotic stimuli (Fig. 5). In humans, nonphotic stimuli are of greater importance for the system activity than is light. In contrast to light with a source, intensity of effect, and other parameters that can be precisely determined, nonphotic effects are difficult to precisely define as they belong to a group of stimuli that activate nonspecific systems of the brain, causing an arousal reaction that is transferred to the IGL, where photic stimuli are integrated with nonphotic ones.
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Fig. 5. The sagittal section through the rat brain shows the rough wiring between the main neuronal elements of the mammalian biological clock and the source of photic and nonphotic inputs. BF basal forebrain, GHT geniculohypothalamic tract, Hctr hypocretin, IGL intergeniculate leaflet, LC locus coeruleus, LDT laterodorsal tegmental nuleus, PPT penduculopontine tegmental nucleus, RHT retinohypothalamic tract, RN raphe nuclei, SCN suprachiasmatic nuclei, OPT optic tract.
A thorough knowledge of the mechanism of the circadian system synchronizing mammalian biological rhythms, precise identification of nonphotic effects, and knowledge of the neurobiological mechanism of their interactions are all of utmost importance for the understanding of many circadian dysfunctions that are the cause of the malfunctioning of the human organism. From a long-term perspective, the postulates presented—with the cooperation of pharmacologists—would permit possible interference in the work of the whole system, particularly improvement in the functioning of nonspecific cerebral systems that are a pivotal functional element of this system. Studies into the above-mentioned system would also stimulate development of new, not only pharmacological, but also behavioral therapeutic methods, permitting more efficient prevention of adverse states caused by functional disturbances to the circadian system that synchronizes biological rhythms in humans. This presents an interesting challenge not only to neurophysiologists, but also to psychologists, psychiatrists, and all the researchers who comprehensively analyze human organism. REFERENCES 1. Weaver, D. (1998) The suprachiasmatic nucleus: a 25-year retrospective. J. Biol. Rhythms 13, 100–112. 2. Moore, R. Y., Lenn, N. J. (1972) A retinohypothalamic projection in the rat. J. Comp. Neurol. 146, 1–14. 3. Rea, M. A. (1998) Photic entrainment of circadian rhythms in rodents. Chronobiol. Int. 5, 395–423. 4. Mrosovsky, N. (1996) Locomotor activity and non-photic influences on circadian clocks. Biol. Rev. Camb. Philos. Soc. 71, 343–372.
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5. Rietveld, W. J. (1996) General introduction to chronobiology. Braz. J. Med. Biol. Res. 29, 63–70. 6. Mistlberger, R. E., Skene, D. J. (2004) Social influences on mammalian circadian rhythms: animal and human studies. Biol. Rev. 79, 533–556. 7. Hasting, M. H., Duffield, G. E., Smith, E. J. D., Maywood, E. S., Ebling, F. J. P. (1998) Entrainment of the circadian system of mammals by nonphotic cues. Chronobiol. Int. 15, 425–445. 8. Moruzzi, G., Magoun, H. W. (1949) Brain stem reticular formation and activation of the EEG. Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol. 1, 455–473. 9. Vrang, N., Mrosovsky, N., Mikkelsen, J. D. (2003) Afferent projections to the hamster intergeniculate leaflet demonstrated by retrograde and anterograde tracing. Brain Res. Bull. 59, 267–288. 10. Mistlberger, R. E., Antle, M. C., Glass J. D., Miller, J. D. (2000) Behavioral and serotonergic regulation of circadian rhythms. Biol. Rhythm Res. 31, 240–283. 11. Levitt, D.R., Teitelbaum, P. (1975) Somnolence, akinesia, and sensory activation of motivated behavior in the lateral hypothalamic syndrome. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 72, 2819–2823. 12. De Lecea, L., Kilduff, T., Peyron, C., Gao, X. B., Foye, P. E., Danielson, P. E., Fukuhara, C., Battenberg, E. L., Gautvik, V. T., Bartlett, F. S. II., Frankel, W. N., van den Pol, A. N., Bloom, F. E., Gautvik, K. M., Sutcliffe, J. G. (1998) The hypocretins: Hypothalamus-specific peptides with neuroexcitatory activity. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 95, 322–327. 13. Mileykovskiy, B. Y., Kiyashchenko, L. I., Siegel, J. M. (2005) Behavioral correlates of activity in identified hypocretin/orexin neurons. Neuron 46, 787–798. 14. Ripley, B., Overeem, S., Fujiki, N., Nevsimalova, S., Uchino, M., Yesavage, J., Di Monto, D., Dohi, K., Melberg, A., Lammers, G. J., et al. (2001) CSF hypocretin/orexin levels in narcolepsy and other neurological conditions. Neurology 57, 2253–2258. 15. Sakurai, T., Amemiya, A., Ishii, M., Matsuzaki, I., Chemelli, R. M., Tanaka, H., Williams, S. C., Richardson, J. A., Kozlowski, G. P., Wilson, S., Arch, J. R., Buckingham, R. E., Haynes, A. C., Carr, S. A., Annan, R. S., McNulty, D. E., Liu, W. S., Terrett, J. A., Elshourbagy, N. A., Bergsama, D. J., Yanagisawa, M. (1998) Orexins and orexin receptors: a family of hypothalamic neuropeptides and G protein-coupled receptors that regulate feeding behavior. Cell 92, 573–585. 16. Peyron, C., Tighe, D. K., van den Pol, A.N., de Lecea, L., Heller, H. C., Sutcliffe, J. G., Kilduff, T. S. (1998) Neurons containing hypocretin (orexin) project to multiple neuronal systems. J. Neurosci. 18, 9996–10015. 17. Ciriello, J., Rosas-Arellano, M. P., Solano-Flores, L. P., de Oliveira, C. V. (2003) Identification of neurons containing orexin-B (hypocretin-2) immunoreactivity in limbic structures. Brain Res. 967, 123–131. 18. Caillol, M., Aioun, J., Baly, C., Persuy, M. A., Salesse, R. (2003) Localization of orexin and their receptors in the rat olfactory system: possible modulation of olfactory perception by neuropeptide synthetized centrally or locally. Brain Res. 960, 48–61. 19. Nambu, T., Sakurai, T., Mizukami, K., Hosoya, Y., Yanagisawa, M., Goto, K. (1999) Distribution of orexin neurons in the adult rat brain. Brain Res. 827, 243–260. 20. Siegel, J.M. (2004) Hypocretin (orexin): role in normal behavior and neuropathology. Annu. Rev. Psychol. 55, 125–148. 21. Bayer, L., Eggermann, E., Saint-Mleux, B., Machard, D., Jones, B. E. (2002) Selective action of orexin (hypocretin) on nonspecific thalamocortical projection neurons. J. Neurosci. 22, 7835–7839.
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22. Li, Y., Gao, X. B., Sakurai, T., van den Pol, A. N. (2002) Hypocretin/orexin excites hypocretin neurons via a local glutamate neurons – a potential mechanism for orchestrating the hypothalamic arousal system. Neuron 36, 1169–1181. 23. Yamanaka, A., Muraki, Y., Tsujino, N., Goto, K., Samurai, T. (2003) Regulation of orexin neurons by the monoaminergic and cholinergic systems. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 303, 120–129. 24. Zhang, S., Zeitzer, J. M., Yoshida, Y., Wisor, J. P., Nishino, S., Edgar, D. M., Mignot, E. (2004) Lesions of the suprachiasmatic nucleus eliminate the daily rhythm of hypocretin-1 release. Sleep 27, 619–627. 25. Savaskan, E., Müller-Spahn, F., Meier, F., Wirz-Justice, A., Meyer, P. (2004) Orexin and their receptors in the human retina. Pathobiology 71, 211–216. 26. Hickey, T. L., Spear, P. D. (1976) Retinogeniculate projections in hooded and albino rats. Exp. Brain Res. 24, 523–529. 27. Moore, R. Y., Card, J. P. (1994) Intergeniculate leaflet: an anatomically and functionally distinct subdivision of the lateral geniculate complex. J. Comp. Neurol. 344, 403–430. 28. Moore, R. Y. (1989) The geniculohypothalamic tract in monkey and man. Brain Res. 486, 190–194. 29. Morin, L. P., Blanchard, J. H., Provencio, I. (2003) Retinal ganglion cell projections to the hamster suprachiasmatic nucleus, intergeniculate leaflet, and visual midbrain: bifurcation and melanopsin immunoreactivity. J. Comp. Neurol. 465, 401–416. 30. Harrington, M. E. (1997) The ventral lateral geniculate nucleus and the intergeniculate leaflet: interrelated structures in the visual and circadian systems. Neurosci. Biobehav. Rev. 21, 705–727. 31. Moore, R. Y., Weis, R., Moga, M. M. (2000) Efferent projections of the intergeniculate leaflet and the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus in the rat. J. Comp. Neurol. 420, 398–418. 32. Morin, L., Blanchard J. H. (2001) Neuromodulator content of hamster intergeniculate leaflet neurons and their projection to the suprachiasmatic nucleus or visual midbrain. J. Comp. Neurol. 437, 79–90. 33. Vrang, N., Mrosovsky, N., Mikkelsen, J. D. (2003) Afferent projections to the hamster intergeniculate leaflet demonstrated by retrograde and anterograde tracing. Brain Res. Bull. 59, 267–288. 34. Horowitz, S. S., Blanchard, J. H., Morin, L.P. (2004) Intergeniculate leaflet and ventral lateral geniculate nucleus afferent connections: An anatomical substrate for functional input from the vestibule-visuomotor system. J. Comp. Neurol. 474, 227–245. 35. Morin, L. P. (1994) The circadian visual system. Brain Res. Rev. 67, 102–127. 36. Morin, L. P., Allen, C. N. (2006) The circadian visual system, 2005. Brain Res. Rev. 51, 1–60. 37. Mikkelsen, J. D. (1992) The organization of the crossed geniculogeniculate pathway of the rat: a Phaseolus vulgaris–leucoagglutinin study. Neuroscience 48, 953–962. 38. Moore, R. Y., Speh, J. C. (1993) GABA is the principal neurotransmitter of the circadian system. Neurosci Lett. 150, 112–116. 39. Morin, L. P., Blanchard, J. (1995) Organization of the hamster intergeniculate leaflet: NPY and ENK projections to the suprachiasmatic nucleus, intergeniculate leaflet and posterior limitans nucleus. Vis. Neurosci. 12, 57–67. 40. Janik, D., Mikkelsen, J. D., Mrosovsky, N. (1995) Cellular colocalization of Fos and neuropeptide Y in the intergeniculate leaflet after nonphotic phase-shifting events. Brain Res. 698, 137–145.
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22 The Circadian Clock: Physiology, Genes, and Disease Michael C. Antle CONTENTS Introduction Entrainment Anatomy Clock Genes Human Implications Summary References
INTRODUCTION Most organisms on Earth live in cyclic environments created by the rotation of our planet around its axis. Daily environmental changes include geophysical variables such as light levels, temperature, barometric pressure, and relative humidity as well as biotic variables such as availability of food and presence of predators. To meet these predictable daily challenges, life has evolved a temporal organization regulated by an endogenous biological clock. This biological clock controls daily rhythms in both behavior and physiology. Even when housed in environments lacking temporal cues, organisms will continue to exhibit daily oscillations in their behavior and physiology, with periods close to, but not necessarily equal to, 24 h. As such, these endogenously generated oscillations are termed circadian rhythms, from the Latin circa “about” and dies “daily,” referring literally to any oscillation that repeats itself about daily. The circadian system has become a model system for understanding neural and molecular control of physiological and behavioral rhythms and has been implicated in a number of human sleep disorders. Circadian Rhythms in Physiology and Behavior The careful temporal coordination of physiological processes is essential for optimal functioning of our bodies [1]. For example, the physiological state required for seeking food (activation of the sympathetic nervous system) is quite different from that required for digesting food (activation of the parasympathetic nervous system), and the physiological From: Ophthalmology Research: Visual Transduction and Non-Visual Light Perception Edited by: J. Tombran-Tink and C. J. Barnstable © Humana Press, Totowa, NJ
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Fig. 1. A sample wheel-running record from a mouse. Each horizontal row represents the data from 1 day, with subsequent days plotted below previous days. The height of the black vertical lines in each row is proportional to the amount of wheel-running produced by the mouse in that 6-min bin. The animal is initially housed in a lighting cycle of 12 h light and 12 h dark. Note that the animal’s activity is initiated around the same time every day, just after the lights go out. Next, the animal is put into constant darkness. Note that while the animal maintains a daily pattern of activity, it now wakes up a little earlier each day, and it exhibits a free-running period of about 23.5 h. Finally, on the 12th day of darkness, the animal is exposed to a light pulse late in its subjective night (circle). This produces a phase advance in its activity onset, which can be visualized by fitting two regression lines to the activity onsets: one line on the days prior to the light pulse to predict the expected activity onset in the absence of a treatment (dark gray line) and another line on the days following the light pulse to determine the actual phase of the clock (white line). By comparing the horizontal distance between the two regression lines on the day after the light pulse, it is possible to quantify the magnitude of the phase shift. (Unpublished lab archive data; a color version is available on the accompanying CD.)
state of the body during sleep, including decreasing body temperature and secretion of melatonin and growth hormone, is distinct from each of the previous examples. Most physiological parameters exhibit daily oscillations. Prominent examples include body temperature, hormone secretions, and blood pressure. Behavioral parameters, such as locomotor activity (Fig. 1), also exhibit daily oscillations. The timing of sleep and wake onset and the timing of meals are also important examples of behaviors that demonstrate daily oscillations, but rhythms in human performance have also been noted. Reaction time is optimal in the late afternoon to early evening (4–8 p.m., and poorest in the early morning (4–8 a.m.) [2]. Search speed, reasoning speed, dexterity, and vigilance all exhibit poorest performance between 5 and 9 a.m., with a secondary trough occasionally observed in the early afternoon [3]. Performance on a memory task can also be influenced by a circadian rhythm [4]. Circadian Rhythms in Visual Function Visual performance and physiology exhibit circadian rhythms as well. In rats, there is a burst of rod outer segment disk shedding that coincides with the onset of light, but this rhythm persists for a number of days even in rats housed in constant darkness, suggesting that it is controlled by an endogenous clock rather than simply being a response to light exposure [5]. The axial length of the human eye changes by as much as 40 µm over the course of the day [6]. Intraocular pressure changes over the course of the day, with pressure high during the night, peaking near the end of the night, and lowest during the evening [7]. While this rhythm is largely affected by posture (higher when the person is
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supine) [7, 8], it may also be influenced by the flow of aqueous humor, which is lowest during the night (~1.3 µl/min) and highest during the day (~3 µl/min) [9]. The amplitude of the pupillary reflex can change over the course of the day [10]. Electroretinogram responses to stroboscopic flashes exhibit a circadian rhythm in the latency to the peak of the b-wave, with increasing latency throughout the night [11]. A circadian rhythm is observed in the electrooculogram produced by tracking moving objects, with maximal peak-to-peak amplitude in the late morning [11]. Performance on visual tasks also exhibits circadian rhythms in both acuity and sensitivity [11–14]. ENTRAINMENT While circadian oscillations in physiology and behavior are endogenously generated and regulated, they must be synchronized with the external geophysical and biotic cycles to serve an adaptive function. This is accomplished through entrainment, a process by which an external cue exerts period and phase control over a rhythm such that the endogenous period is adjusted to match that of the external environment (i.e., 24 h). The timing of the organism’s rhythms in relation to timing of events in the environment are also adjusted, such that nocturnal organisms are active at night, and diurnal organisms are active during the day. By controlling both the period and phase of the rhythms, entrainment ensures that physiological events occur at the proper times, and that it is possible to anticipate cyclic challenges. While many cues can provide time information to the circadian system and thus serve as zeitgebers (from the German zeit “time” and geber “giver”), not every cue has an impact on the circadian system in the same manner or to the same degree. Light is the dominant zeitgeber responsible for entrainment of circadian rhythmicity in most organisms. An intact retina and optic nerve are necessary for light to exert control over the mammalian circadian system [15–17] (although one claim to the contrary exists [18]). Light exposure early in the night will delay the phase of rhythms such that they occur later in subsequent cycles. Light exposure late in the night has the opposite effect and will advance the phase of rhythms [19] (Fig. 1). Light during the daytime has little effect on circadian rhythmicity. Through daily delay and advance adjustments, the endogenous circadian pacemaker has its period adjusted such that it equals that of the applied zeitgeber. Other cues serve as zeitgebers as well. These include dark pulses [20], exercise [21, 22], and sleep deprivation [23]. These nonphotic stimuli produce large phase advances during the midday and small delays late in the night but have little effect during the early night. A common feature of these zeitgebers is that they increase activity or wakefulness at a time of the day when the organism is generally inactive or asleep [23, 24]. While these phase shifts are independent of those produced by light exposure through the retina, there are interactions between the two zeitgeber systems. Exercise during a light pulse attenuates the resulting photic phase shift [25], possibly by inhibiting neurotransmitter release from retinal ganglion cells [25, 26]. Alternatively, housing animals in constant light for a number of days prior to a nonphotic pulse potentiates the resulting phase shift [27].
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ANATOMY The Suprachiasmatic Nucleus An accumulation of convergent evidence over the past 35 years has led to the conclusion that the master mammalian circadian pacemaker is located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). This is a richly retinorecipient bilateral structure located at the base of the hypothalamus, adjacent to the third ventricle. SCN lesions abolish circadian rhythms in behavior and physiology [28, 29]. Transplants of fetal SCN to SCN-lesioned animals restores rhythmicity that exhibits the period characteristic of the donor, not the SCNlesioned host [30]. When cultured in vitro, individual SCN cells are able to maintain a circadian rhythm in their rate of spontaneous action potential generation [31]. While it appears that essentially every neuron in the SCN uses γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) as a small molecule neurotransmitter [32], the SCN is actually a heterogeneous structure in terms of anatomy and function [33]. While it is difficult to delineate the myriad subregions of the SCN [34], the SCN has classically been subdivided into a ventrolateral “core” and a dorsomedial “shell.” These subdivisions were initially based on the heavily ventrolateral [35] pattern of retinal innervation and have been recapitulated with both phenotypic and functional heterogeneity [33]. Cells in the core receive retinal input, express the immediate early gene c-fos following a phase-shifting light pulse [36], and increase their firing rate during a light pulse [37] but do not exhibit an endogenous rhythm of electrical activity [38] or clock gene expression (see the section on clock genes). The core contains a number of different cell groups as defined by their peptidergic content, including cells containing vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), substance P, gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP), and calbindin (CalB) [33] (Fig. 2). In many cases, cells in the SCN core colocalize two or three of these peptides [39]. Much of what we know about the phenotypic heterogeneity of the SCN comes from examination of the Syrian hamster [33], and although there are some species differences, the peptidergic organization of the human SCN is quite similar to that observed in the hamster [40]. By contrast, cells in the SCN shell receive sparse retinal input [34], do not immediately respond with gene expression following a phase-shifting light pulse [41, 42], and do not change their firing rate during a light pulse [37] but do exhibit endogenous circadian rhythms in gene expression [41, 43]. The role of the SCN core appears to be to receive signals from the retina and relay them to the SCN shell. Retinal ganglion cells synapse onto cells containing CalB and GRP [44, 45]. These cell phenotypes occupy the region of the SCN with the heaviest retinal innervation [46]. VIP and GRP cells express c-fos after an animal has been exposed to a phase-shifting light pulse [47]. Application of VIP or GRP to the SCN in vivo and in vitro produces phase shifts of behavioral rhythms comparable to those observed following presentation of a light pulse (i.e., delays early in the night, advances late in the night [33, 48–52]). GRP receptors appear to occupy the shell region of the SCN [53]. These data indicate that certain cell phenotypes in the SCN core receive and respond to photic signals and produce signals that are able to mimic the effects of light. The core projects to cells in the shell but not vice versa [54]. Cells in the SCN core project heavily to regions outside the SCN as well, including the lateral septum, the ventrolateral preoptic area, the periventricular nucleus of the thalamus, the anterior portion of the periventricular
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Fig. 2. Sample photomicrographs depicting the location and the heterogeneity of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). Upper left A low-power nissl-stained coronal section through the anterior hypothalamus. The SCN on one side is outlined and is at the base of the third ventricle (3V), just dorsal to the optic chiasm (OX). The rest of the panels show the peptidergic phenotypes within the SCN detected using immunofluorescence. Depicted are calbindin-D28K (CalB), vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), vasopressin (VP), substance P (SP), and gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP). (Unpublished lab archive data; scale bars are 200 µm long.)
nucleus of the hypothalamus, the subperiventricular zone, the periaquaductal gray, and the intergeniculate leaflet (IGL) [54]. The SCN shell contains cells that are endogenously rhythmic. This conclusion is largely based on examination of clock gene expression patterns (see clock genes section), either using in situ hybridization or in vitro organotypic SCN cultures prepared from transgenic animals in which clock gene promoters drive the expression of either green fluorescent protein or luciferase. These cells do not respond immediately with gene expression [42] or increased firing rates [37] following a light pulse. This region is delineated by cells containing vasopressin, a peptide that is produced [43] and released [55] with a circadian rhythm. Cells in the shell project heavily to some of the same areas as the core as well as to the medial preoptic area, anterior hypothalamic area, the supraoptic nucleus, the dorsomedial nucleus of the hypothalamus, and the arcuate nucleus [54]. While the core and shell regions are useful as organizing concepts for understanding the heterogeneity of the SCN, they do not fully capture the complex organization of the SCN [34, 46]. By way of example, a third component of the SCN has been identified based on functional responses. This dorsolateral component of the SCN exhibits an antiphase oscillation in the phosphorylation of the extracellular signal-responsive kinases I/II (ERK). During the day, cells in the SCN shell contain the phosphorylated form of ERK (pERK). During the night, there is no pERK in the shell, but it is present in a distinct dorsolateral group of SCN cells [56]. Both of these patterns persist in timefree conditions, suggesting that they are not driven by the light–dark cycle but rather
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represent endogenously generated circadian rhythms. What is unique about the rhythmic ERK phosphorylation in the dorsolateral cells is that this oscillation requires innervation by the eye; enucleated animals no longer exhibit subjective night ERK phosphorylation in their dorsolateral SCN cells [56]. These cells are also involved in the photic phaseshifting pathway as microinjections of GRP selectively induce gene expression in these dorsolateral cells [49]. Inputs to the SCN The SCN receives input from a variety of sources, with about 40 brain areas providing monosynaptic input [57], expanding to around 100–140 brain areas when polysynaptic inputs are considered [58]. The three most prominent inputs to the SCN are the retinohypothalamic tract (RHT), the geniculohypothalamic tract (GHT), and serotonergic innervation from the midbrain raphe. The RHT originates in melanopsin-containing intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells [46]. The RHT projects to the ventrolateral SCN and uses glutamate as its primary neurotransmitter. The neuropeptides substance P and pituitary adenylate cyclaseactivating polypeptide have also been implicated in relaying information from retinal ganglion cells to the SCN [46]. NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) produces photic phase shifts when applied to the SCN in vivo [59], and glutamate antagonists (both NMDA and non-NMDA antagonists) inhibit c-fos expression following a light pulse [60]. The second prominent source of SCN afferents is the IGL, which gives rise to the GHT. The IGL is a retinorecipient structure. It receives binocular input without apparent topographical organization [61]. The IGL also receives a variety of other inputs, including serotonergic input from the dorsal raphe [46]. IGL cells that innervate the SCN contain GABA and various neuropeptides, including neuropeptide Y (NPY), enkephalin, and neurotensin [46, 61]. The IGL appears to modulate both photic and nonphotic influences on the circadian system. Phase delays to light are enhanced in IGL-lesioned animals, while phase advances are attenuated [62]. Constant bright light normally lengthens a nocturnal animal’s endogenous period, an effect that is abolished in IGL-lesioned animals [62]. The IGL is also an integral component for nonphotic phase shifts. The IGL is the only source of NPY for the SCN, and injections of NPY to the SCN produce phase shifts similar to those produced by wheel confinement [63]. Lesions of the IGL prevent entrainment by enforced activity [64]. The third prominent region that inputs to the circadian system is the raphe complex. The median raphe innervates the SCN, while the dorsal raphe innervates the IGL. The prominent neurotransmitter of these structures is serotonin, although not all raphe projections are serotonergic [65]. The dorsal raphe is a retinorecipient structure [66, 67] and likely receives inputs from and sends outputs to the median raphe [68], thereby providing two more polysynaptic routes by which photic information can reach the SCN. In fact, some serotonergic drugs active at the serotonin 2C receptor have been reported to mimic photic phase shifts [69]. The serotonergic input from the raphe complex has been implicated in two major circadian functions. The first is modulation of nonphotic entrainment [70]. The evidence supporting serotonin’s role in nonphotic phase shifts is not as consistent as the evidence for NPY’s role in the same phenomenon [70]. Serotonin’s second role is to regulate photic input to the SCN [71]. Serotonin
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appears to attenuate neurotransmitter release from the RHT, but it may also be working postsynaptically [71]. Neurotoxic lesions of serotonergic input to the SCN can have a prominent effect on organization of behavioral rhythms. Animals have larger photic phase shifts, longer circadian periods under constant light, and an early phase of activity onset in a light–dark cycle [46, 72]. More extensive lesions of the serotonergic system can also affect the duration of the active phase [72]. Peripheral Oscillators A Clock in the Eye The discovery of oscillatory tissue outside the SCN has caused much excitement in the circadian rhythms field over the last decade. The first circadian oscillator to be discovered outside the SCN in mammals was in the retina [73]. The hamster retina tolerates culturing at 27°C, with the cultures being viable for a number of days. These retinal cultures release melatonin with a circadian rhythm, and this melatonin rhythm can still be entrained by a light–dark cycle [73]. Furthermore, the period of this rhythm is also affected by the tau mutation, resulting in a period of about 20 h [73]. A circadian rhythm in dopamine release has also been noted in the mouse retina and appears to depend on melatonin [74]. This circadian clock in the retina may mediate some of the circadian rhythms noted earlier in visual function and physiology to achieve optimal retinal functioning. Some of these functions may be controlled directly by the retinal clock, others may be controlled by one of the clock’s outputs (such as melatonin or dopamine), and still other functions may be controlled by the SCN. It is important to note that the human and primate retinas lack the final enzyme in the melatonin synthesis pathway (hydroxyindol O-methyltransferase) and therefore can only produce melatonin’s precursor, N-acetylserotonin, which may act as a signaling molecule in retinas lacking melatonin [75]. Melatonin appears to be released from photoreceptors in Xenopus and possibly the rat, while dopamine is released from amacrine and innerplexiform cells in mice [75]. Various genes driving the circadian clock (see clock genes section) are rhythmically expressed in a subset of retinal cells, specifically in both the inner nuclear layer and ganglion cell layer cells [76]. Amacrine cells containing dopamine, calbindin and/or calretinin, express clock genes, suggesting that these cells may contain autonomous circadian clocks [76]. In addition, bipolar cells and horizontal cells have been shown to express clock genes [77]. There is disagreement over whether cholinergic amacrine cells express clock genes [76, 77], but because only a small percentage of bipolar and cholinergic amacrine cells express clock genes, this may simply be a detection issue [77]. Oscillators Outside the Nervous System The identification of the genes underlying the intracellular circadian clock permitted the development of various tools to investigate clock gene expression, both within and beyond the SCN. Besides conventional approaches such as in situ hybridization, northern blot, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR), various novel approaches were developed
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using transgenic animals that used the promoters of different clock genes to drive the expression of reporters such as luciferase and green fluorescent protein. All of these approaches have led to the observation that clock genes are expressed outside the SCN [78] and indeed outside the brain [79]. Furthermore, clock gene expression is rhythmic in many of these tissues, including the liver, testes, and skeletal muscles [79]. It is possible that oscillations in gene expression in these peripheral tissues require the SCN as animals with SCN lesions do not exhibit circadian oscillations in gene expression in their liver [80]. This could be due to the loss of a daily organizing signal from the SCN, which maintains synchrony among the individual oscillating cells in these peripheral tissues. Cultured lung, skeletal muscle, liver, and SCN cells all exhibit circadian rhythms in gene expression as determined by real-time fluorescent reporters from a luciferase transgene driven by a promoter for one of the clock genes [81]. Even cultured fibroblasts can exhibit a circadian rhythm in gene expression if they are treated with a serum shock [82]. In all of these cultures, except for those of the SCN, oscillations decrease in amplitude and eventually extinguish after a number of cycles [81, 82]. This is believed to occur because, while each individual cell in these cultures continues to oscillate, synchrony among these oscillating cells is gradually lost [82–84]. Rhythmicity in these peripheral organs likely helps coordinate the diverse biochemical tasks carried out by these organs, such that incompatible biochemical reactions occur at different times, and metabolic reactions with high energetic demands are limited to only those times of the day when they are necessary [85]. CLOCK GENES The last decade or so has witnessed an explosion in our understanding of the molecular underpinnings of the mammalian circadian system, with the discovery of at least nine clock genes [1]. Our understanding of how these genes interact to yield the molecular circadian clock continues to evolve as recent findings have forced the field to reconsider the roles played by two of these genes [86, 87]. We now know that the circadian clock ticks at the level of single cells [31], and that this clock is a product of interlocked positive and negative transcription–translation feedback loops. While a genetic basis for circadian rhythmicity had long been suspected due to period mutants in fruit flies and Syrian hamsters as well as strain differences in period in mice, it was not until 1994 that the first clock gene was cloned in mammals. Clock was identified using a forward genetic approach by which colonies of mice were exposed to the mutagen ethylnitrosourea (ENU) and then screened for circadian rhythm abnormalities [88]. This gene is autosomal semidominant, causing lengthening of the circadian period from 23.3 h in wild-type animals, to 24.4 h in heterozygous animals, and to 27.2 h in homozygous animals. Homozygous Clock mutant animals quickly become arrhythmic in constant conditions. This gene codes for a basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factor that contains a PAS dimerization domain (after the first three proteins found to contain such a domain: PER-ARNT-SIM; PER for period, ARNT for aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator and SIM for single-minded protein). Clock dimerizes with BMAL1 (also known as MOP3) and together they act as positive regulators of genes that contain an Ebox (the DNA sequence CACGTG) in their promoter [89] (Fig. 3). Both of these genes
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Fig. 3. Schematic of the autoregulatory transcription–translation feedback loops that underlie the intracellular circadian clock. During the day, CLOCK/BMAL1 dimer drives the transcription of the Period, Cryptochrome, and Rev-erbα genes. The messenger RNA accumulates and is translated into proteins. PER and CRY proteins dimerize, and casein kinase 1ε phosphorylates PER proteins. In the late day to early night, the PER/CRY complex translocates to the nucleus (possibly with CK1ε), where it inhibits the activity of CLOCK and BMAL1 at E-boxes, thus terminating transcription. Transcription is reinitiated when the levels of PER and CRY proteins drop too low to continue to inhibit the activity of CLOCK and BMAL1. The auxiliary loop of rhythmic Rev-erbα production regulates the rhythmic production of BMAL1.
are highly conserved across phyla, and homologs have been found in a range of species, including Drosophila, in which BMAL1 is known as cycle. E-boxes regulate the expression of other clock genes as well as so-called clock-controlled genes such as vasopressin. It should be noted that while mutations of the clock gene impair the circadian clock, deletion of this gene has no effect on circadian rhythmicity [86]. The reasons for this are not
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currently known, but it is possible that another bHLH protein may dimerize with BMAL1 only when CLOCK protein, mutant or otherwise, is completely absent. The negative limb of the transcription–translation feedback loop is mediated by three Period and two Cryptochrome genes. All these genes have E-boxes in their promoters. The mammalian period gene Period1 (Per1) was first identified using a homology screen based on the sequence cloned for the Drosophila Period gene [90]. Two other homologs (Per2 and Per3) have since been discovered [79, 91, 92]. The peak levels of the messenger RNA (mRNA) for these genes are observed during the midday, with peak protein levels lagging behind by about 6 h. Mutations in either Per1 or Per2 alter various circadian properties. Per2 mutants have an abnormally short circadian period that degrades into arrhythmicity [93] and have attenuated phase delays to light [94]. Per1 mutants exhibit either shorter [94] or longer [95] periods and smaller phase advance [94]. When Per1 is constitutively expressed in transgenic rats, the period lengthens, and phase shifts to light are attenuated [96]. The Cryptochrome genes Cry1 and Cry2 were identified due to their homology with the blue light photoreceptor for the circadian systems of plants and flies. The peak levels of the mRNA for these genes are also observed during the midday. Disruption of these genes also results in period alterations, with longer periods observed when Cry2 is deleted and shorter periods observed when Cry1 is deleted [88, 97]. Animals lacking both Cry1 and Cry2 are completely arrhythmic when housed in constant darkness [88, 97]. The period and cryptochrome proteins are believed to dimerize and then translocate to the nucleus. Once in the nucleus, these complexes suppress the activity of CLOCK and BMAL1, thus terminating transcription of E-box-related genes. This suppression is largely attributed to the CRY proteins [98]. The leading hypothesis is that the CLOCK and BMAL1 are constitutively bound to the E-box, and that their presence leads to histone acetylation and thus chromatin remodeling that then permits RNA polymerase to bind to the promoter and initiate transcription of the gene. CRY is thought to inhibit the histone acetylation, which leads to chromatin changes that obscure the RNA polymerase promoter and prevent transcription of the gene [99]. As the Period and Cryptochrome genes are regulated by E-boxes, this negative-feedback loop has the effect of turning off the expression of these genes. The rhythmic expression in the SCN of the clock genes Per1 and Per2 as well as the clock-controlled gene vasopressin follows a specific spatiotemporal pattern and does not occur simultaneously in every cell [43, 100]. Expression is initiated early in the day in the dorsomedial SCN, spreads ventrally over the course of the day, and then recedes back to the dorsomedial SCN by the end of the day. Such rhythmic expression appears to be largely restricted to the SCN shell [41]. The circadian system also has a secondary loop that regulates the expression of BMAL1. The expression of the BMAL1 gene is regulated by a ROR (retinoid-related orphan receptor) promoter sequence. Two groups of proteins compete for the ROR sequence to regulate BMAL1 expression, namely, the ROR and Rev-erb families of proteins [101]. Specifically, the RORα isoform activate expression, while Rev-erbα isoform inhibits expression. Rev-erbα is itself regulated by an E-box and is expressed rhythmically, in phase with the Period and Cryptochrome genes and in antiphase to BMAL1 [101].
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One complete cycle of the transcription–translation feedback loop takes approximately 24 h. The rate of the these transcription–translation feedback loops that underlie the circadian clock are regulated by the casein kinase 1 family [102]. The first mammalian period mutation to be identified was the tau mutant hamster [103], a mutation subsequently mapped to the casein kinase 1ε (CK1ε) gene [102]. Hamsters that are heterozygous for this mutation have periods of approximately 22.2 h, while those that are homozygous for the mutation have periods of approximately 20.2 h [103]. CK1ε phosphorylates the period proteins, which alter their rates of translocation to the nucleus as well as their degradation rates. The tau mutation was initially thought to lead to decreased CK1ε-mediated phosphorylation of the PERIOD proteins, leading to premature peaks in PER1 and PER2 protein levels and in turn giving way to premature inhibition of CLOCK:BMAL1 activity [102]. This has been challenged by the observation that the tau mutation may actually increase phosphorylation of PER1 and PER2 and may lead to more rapid translocation to the nucleus or decreased degradation [87]. The expression of the Per1 and Per2 genes can also be regulated by input from the retina [79, 91, 92]. This induced expression is mediated by cAMP response element (CRE) elements in Per1 and Per2 promoters, which is regulated by the cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) response element-binding protein (CREB). Light pulses that phase shift the circadian clock phosphorylate CREB [104]. The initial induced expression of Per1 and Per2 occurs primarily in the SCN core and most prominently in the region of CalB cells [41]. Following a delay, some Per1 and Per2 expression is observed in the SCN shell. The pattern of this expression is related to the direction of the phase shift that is produced by the same light pulse. Only phase-delaying light leads to Per2 expression in the shell, while only phase-advancing light leads to Per1 expression in the shell [42]. Per1 and Per2 expression are essential components of the photic response; when their expression is prevented by microinjecting antisense oligonucleotides for these two genes into the SCN, phase shifts to light are attenuated or blocked [105]. The rest of the clock genes, including Per3, do not change their expression following exposure to phase-shifting light pulses. Manipulations that mimic light pulses also lead to increased expression of Period genes. The retina communicates with the SCN through glutamate release. NMDA microinjections to the SCN during the night produce phase shifts similar to those produced by light exposure at the same phases [59] and induce Per1 and Per2 expression [106]. Application of VIP to the SCN in vitro shifts the rhythm of electrical firing rates in a phase-dependent manner, such that early night application delays the phase of the peak firing rate, while application late in the night advances the peak to an earlier time. Such shifts in vitro are associated with increased Per1 and Per2 expression [107]. Microinjections of GRP to the SCN in vivo produce phase shifts in locomotor behavior comparable to those produced by light [52] and induce Per1 and Per2 expression in a discrete group of dorsolateral SCN cells [49]. While photic manipulations lead to an increased expression of Per1 and Per2, nonphotic manipulations have the opposite effect. Nonphotic manipulations, such as exercise and sleep deprivation, have their maximal effect at the same phase as peak rhythmic Per1 and Per2 expression (i.e., midday). These manipulations are associated with rapid downregulation of Per1 and Per2 [108]. In fact, decreasing Per1 expression
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directly by microinjecting Per1 antisense oligonucleotides to the SCN leads to nonphotic phase shifts [109]. HUMAN IMPLICATIONS People differ in their preferred sleep patterns. Some people are “night owls” who like to stay up late and sleep in if possible, while other people are “morning larks” who prefer to go to sleep early and wake up early. Such patterns are often developmental; the night owl pattern is frequently observed during adolescence, while the morning lark pattern is more common in the elderly [110]. This developmental pattern has been attributed to a change in the period of the circadian clock over the life span [110]. In some people, these patterns can be quite extreme, leading to the clinical diagnoses of either advanced or delayed sleep phase syndrome (ASPS or DSPS, respectively). In ASPS, the patient typically initiates sleep around 7:30 p.m., waking up around 4:30 a.m., while in DSPS, sleep often starts between 2 and 6 a.m. In some cases, these syndromes appear to be heritable. Given that mutations in clock genes can alter properties of the circadian clock in animals, is it possible that these human sleep disorders may be due to polymorphisms in clock genes? A mutation in the human Per2 gene has been identified in one group with heritable ASPS [111]. This mutation affects the binding site on the Per2 protein for CK1ε, the enzyme that is altered in the tau mutant hamster [102]. Like humans with ASPS, the tau mutant hamster also has an advanced circadian phase when entrained [103]. A mutation in the related enzyme CK1δ in humans has also been associated with ASPS [112]. DSPS can also be heritable and is associated with a polymorphism in the human Per3 gene [113] in some cases and a missense mutation in the CK1ε gene in other cases [114]. Both of these disorders can be managed to a limited degree with timed light exposure [115]. Early-morning bright light can help with DSPS, while ASPS can be treated with evening light. SUMMARY The circadian system is an ideal model for understanding neural regulation of complex behavioral and physiological phenomena at the level of the tissue, the cell, and the molecule. The study of the circadian system is relevant not only to understanding daily changes in behavior and physiology but also for optimizing therapeutic regimens that may have a circadian rhythm (so-called chronopharmacology). Furthermore, the study of the circadian system is important for understanding human diseases that may exhibit daily fluctuations in symptoms, or that may result from an aberration in the circadian system itself, as is observed in ASPS and DSPS. REFERENCES 1. Hastings, M. H., Reddy, A. B., Maywood, E. S. (2003). A clockwork web: circadian timing in brain and periphery, in health and disease. Nat Rev Neurosci 4, 649–661. 2. Wright, K. P., Jr., Hull, J. T., Czeisler, C. A. (2002). Relationship between alertness, performance, and body temperature in humans. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 283, R1370–R1377.
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Index
10° viewing fields 336 11-cis retinal 69, 88, 92, 146, 175 11-cis retinol dehydrogenase (11cRDH) 396, 435 2° brightness-matching luminous efficiency function 338 2° photopic viewing conditions 336 2° viewing fields 335 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal 428 5 hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) 474 A A2E see N-retinylidene-N-retinylethanolamine A2E/iso-A2E 426 A2E-phosphatidyletholamine (A2-PE) 393, 397 Achromatopsia 237, 243, 245 Adenosine diphosphate (ADP) ribosylation 152 Adenosine 204 Advanced glycation endproducts (AGE) 412 Advanced sleep phase syndrome (ASPS) 492 Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) 81, 395 Akt/P13K 47 All-trans retinal (ATR) 69, 92, 146, 175, 424 All-trans retinol 69, 88 Amacrine cells 6, 22, 36,39,293 AMPA receptors 293 AMPA 289 Amygdala 469 Anchoring INAD 274 APB (L-2-amino-4 phosphononbutyric acid) 377 Apoprotein E (apoE) 396 Aqueous humor 5 Arachidoneate 424 Arousal reaction 467
ARPE-19 79 Arr2 275 Arrestin 175 Ascending reticular-activating system (ARAS) 467 Astigmatism 5 Atonal 37 ATP-binding cassette transporter (ABCR) 234, 279, 393, 396, 431 B Best’s disease 423 Best’s vitelliform macular dystrophy 437 Bestrophin-1 437 bHLH genes 39 Bipolar cells 6, 10, 22, 36, 39, 207,360 Bipolar-to-ganglion cell synapses 292 Blind spot 9 Blood-retinal barrier 68 Blue-cone monochromacy 319 Blue-green spectrum 344 BMAL1 22, 488 Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) 21 Bruch’s membrane 68 bZIP 262 C Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) 132, 236 Cadherin-based adherens junctions 68 Calbindin (CalB) 202, 484 Calcium 144, 197, 225, 227 Calcium-binding protein (CaBP) 202 Calcium-induced calcium release (CICR) 207 Calcium-recoverin 147 Calmodulin 143 Calpains 210 Calpastatin 211
501
502 cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) 142 Casein kinase 1ε (CK1ε) 491 Caspase 1 211 Caspase cascade 210 Catabolite activator protein (CAP) 231 Catalase 414 CBF-1 21 CBF3 21 Ccr-2 439 CD36 78 Cellular retinal-binding protein (CRALBP) 435 CEP-protein 447 Channel-exchanger complex 279 Chondroitinase ABC 71 Choriocapillaris 395 Choroid 96 Chromatic channels 331, 344 Chx10 41, 107, 112 Ciliary muscles 3 Ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) 47 Cilium 226 Circadian rhythms 74 CK1δ 492 CLF/CLC 48 CLOCK 490 CNTF receptor (CNTFRα) 47 Cobblestone 406 Color blind 289 Color vision 251, 307, 365 Color-matching functions (CMFs) 309, 313 Color-sensitive opsin 252, 255, 262 COMP1 108, 112 Complement factor H (CFH) 396 Complete achromatopsia 319 Cone photoreceptor 6, 36, 261, 268, 353 dystrophy 237 fundamentals 311 monochromacies 308, 319 photopigment 365 pigment polymorphisms 343 pigment spectra 355 signal pathways 359 spectral sensitivities 307, 310, 313 threshold 329 Cone-based vision 361 Cone rod homeobox gene (Crx) 40, 49, 90, 103, 261 Cone-rod break 319
Index Cone-rod dystrophy (CORD2) 98 Congenital color vision deficiencies 314 Congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB) 185, 377, 382, Connecting cilium 144 Cornea 3 Cortical 395 CRALBP 449 CRE 491 CREB 491 Critical flicker fusion CFF 332 Crx see Cone rod homeobox Crx-binding element (CBE) 104 Cry2 490 Cryptochrome genes Cry1 490 c-Src 132 Cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) 141 Cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) 181 Cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) 141, 225, 269 Cyclic guanosine monophosphate -gated cation channels 132, 141, 225, 243, 269, 277, 367 Cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) phosphodiesterase 130, 141 Cyclic guanosine monophosphate-dependent protein kinases (PKGs) 141 CYP26 21 D Dark current 227 D-cis diltiazem 212 Deuteranomaly 316 Deuteranopia 315 Diacylglycerol 143, 424 Dichromacy 308 Directional sensitivity 344 Directional-selective ganglion cells 293, 300 Discs-large protein (hDlg) 271 Disk shedding 75 dl-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine 447 Discs large gene (Dlg) 271 Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) 45, 424, 427 Dopamine 204, 468 Dorsal lateral geniculate (DLG) 471 Dorsal rim area (DRA) 253 Drusen 404, 415
Index Deep sleep phase syndrome (DSPS) 492 DTL (Dawson-Trick-Litzkow) 376 E Enhanced S-cone syndrome (ECSC) 44 Electroretinogram (ERG) 319, 357 Ellipsoid 144 ELOVL4 437 Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) 199, 236 Enhanced S-cone syndrome (ESCS) 43 Enkephalin (ENK) 472, 486 Entrainment 483 Eph A3 21 Ephrin B1 21 Ephrin B2 21 Epidermal growth factor (EGF) 46, 257 Experimental autoimmune uveitis (EAU) 88 External limiting membrane (ELM) 68 Extracellular receptor kinase (ERK) 236 Eye-specific protein kinase C (ePKC) 271 Ezrin 70 F FAK (focal adhesion kinase) 79, 81 FGF8 21 Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) 133, 212 Focal oscillatory potentials (fOPs) 375 Fodrin 210 Forebrain wakefulness 469 Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) 180 Fovea 6, 17, 333, 391 Foveal and parafoveal cones 333 development 20, 26 hypoplasia 27 location 20 pit formation 27 pit 24, 28 Foveola 391 Foxd1 21 Foxg1 21 Frizzled transmembrane receptors 46 Frizzled-4 46 Fundus autofluorescence 415 Fundus flavimaculatis 415 Fundus 404 Furano-A2E 447
503 G G protein activation 277 G protein molecule 307 G protein-coupled receptor kinase 1 (GRK1) 127 coupled receptors 251 coupled signaling pathways 267 receptor-protein rhodopsin 307 GABA (γ-aminobutyric acid) 204, 377 GABA aminotransferase 386 GABAA receptor 295 GABAC receptor-mediated presynaptic inhibition 294 GABAC receptors 295 GABAergic lateral inhibition 295, 298 GABAergic L-IPSCs 295 Ganglion cell excitatory responses 292 Ganglion cell layer (GCL) 4, 17, 107 Ganglion cells 6, 18, 90 GAP (guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase) accelerating protein 131 Gap junctional connections 212, 299 GARP (glutamine acid-rich protein) 229, 245, 279 Gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) 484 Gate chloride channels 298 GC-activating proteins (GCAPs) 147 Geniculohypothalamic tract (GHT) 486 GH6 21 Glial cells 13 Glutamate 204, 475 receptors 292 release 291 transporters 204, 292 Glutathione peroxidase (GPX) 414 Glycine 47, 298 Glycine receptor α2 (GlyRa2) 47 Glycinergic amacrine cells 299 Goldman-Favre syndrome 43 Gp130 47 Gq protein 269 GRK7 130 Guanosine diphosphate (GDP) 227 Guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase) 146, 278 Guanosine triphosphate (GTP) 142, 227 Guanylate cyclase (GC) 141, 209, 228 Guanylate cyclase-activating protein (GCAP) 209, 228
504 H Helix-loop-helix (bHLH) 488 Heterochromatic brightness matching (HBM) 332 Heterochromatic flicker photometry (HFP) 332 Heterochromatic modulation photometry (HMP) 332 High-gain phosphorylation 129 Horizontal cells 6, 22, 36, 90 Human color-sensitive opsins 260 Hybrid LM or ML cone photopigment opsin genes 316 Hydrophobic interference 186 Hydroxyl radical (OH•) 413 Hyperopia 5 Hypocretin (Hctr) 468 Hypoxia 208 I Intergeniculate leaflet (IGL) 471 INAD (inactivation no afterpotential D) 268, 271, Inflammatory phagocytosis 78 Inner nuclear layer (INL) 4, 17, 39, 40, 49 Inner plexiform layer (IPL) 4, 287,289 Inner segment (IS) 4, 7, 68, 198 Inositol triphosphate (IP3) 199, 269 Insulin 204, 259 Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) 132, 235 Intergeniculate leaflet (IGL) 470, 485 Interleukin 6 (IL-6) 47 Interleukin 8 (IL-8) 447 Interphotoreceptor matrix (IPM) 67, 70, 88 Interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP) 69, 73, 87, 90, 94, 100, 110, 114 Interphotoreceptor space (IPS) 87 Intradiskal domain 183 Intrinsically photosensitive ganglion cells 300 Iodopsin 74 Ionotropic GABA receptors 295 IP3 see Inositol triphosphate Iris 5 Ischemia 211 J JAK 47, 49
Index K Krüppel-like factor 15 (KLF15) 106 L L/M cones 43 L-and M-cone spectral sensitivities 312 Lateral Geniculate nucleus (LGN) 471 Lateral paths 11 Lawrence-Moon-Biedl syndrome 415 L-cis Diltiazem 212 L-cone see long-wavelength sensitive cone Lens pigment 313 Lens 3 LIF 47 LIFRβ 47 Light adaptation 144, 159 Light/dark cycle 437 Lipid peroxidation 409, 412, 443 Lipid-derived aldehydes 443 Lipofuscin 393, 421 Lipophilic granules 421 L-IPSCs 295 Locus coeruleus 468 Locus control region (LCR) 257 Long-wavelength sensitive cone (L cone) 18, 312, 380 L-opsin gene 369 Love spot 253 LRAT 448 LRP6 46 L-type calcium channels 291 Luminance pathway 332 Luminous efficiency functions 330 Lumirhodopsin 177 Lutein 18 M M cones see Medium-wavelength sensitive cone M/L pigments 359 Macula leutea 17 Macula 18 Macular pigment 314, 341 Maf transcription factor family 41 M-cone opsin 49, 356 MDB 332 Medium-wavelength sensitive cone (M-cone) 18, 355, 380
Index Meis1 113 Melanin 422 Melanocortin MC1R receptor 183 Melanolipofuscin 422 MERTK 73, 80, 427 Mesopic (rod-cone) luminous efficiency functions 339 Metarhodopsin 127, 146, 307 mfERGs (multifocal electroretinogram) 377, 385 mfOPs 375 mGluR receptors 206 Microphthalmia transcription factor 41, 72 Microvillar membrane 275 Midget ganglion cells 299 Mitf see microphthalmia transcription factor Mitochondria 144, 199 Mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporters 202 Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) 393, 409 Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) 47, 132 MOK2 107 Monochromacies 308, 319 Monochromats 310 Monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1) 438, 439, 447 Mouse cone pigments 355 Müller cells 13, 22, 36, 48, 68, 107 Multifocal oscillatory porential (fOP) 377, 382 Mutagen ethylnitrosourea (ENU) 488 Myopia 5 Myosin NINAC (neither inactivation no afterpotential C) 271 N N-(4-hydroxyphenyl) retinamide (HPR) 396, 434 Na/Ca-K exchanger 279 Na+/K+,Ca2+ exchanger 227 Narrow-field amacrine cell 293 Neofunctionalization 96 Nerve fiber layer 4, 89 Neural retina leucine zipper (Nrl) 23, 41, 50, 90, 102, 114, 262 Neural-cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) 72 Neuraminidase 71 Neuro D 37, 39, 49 Neuropeptide Y (NPY) 486
505 Neuropoeitin 48 Neurotensin 486 Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) 433 Night blindness 134 Nitric oxide (NO) 204, 206, 228,429 Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) 413, 429 NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) 486 NMDA receptors 293 NO see nitric oxide Nocturnal 483 Nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR) 385 Noradrenaline 468 Neuropeptide Y (NPY) 472, 475 Nr2E 49 Nr2E3 23, 43, 45, 262 N-retinylamides 448 N-retinylidene phosphatidylethanolamine (NRPE) 432, 441 N-Retinylidene-N-retinylethanolamine (A2E) 393, 409 NRF2 450 Nrl see Neural retina leucine zipper Nuclear DNA (nDNA) 409 Nuclear receptors 43 Nucleoside 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphates (cNMPs) 229 O Ocular retardation mouse mutant 107 OFF bipolar cell 11, 18 OFF sublaminae 291 Oguchi disease 129 Ommatidia 252 ON and OFF bipolar cells 289 ON and OFF sublaminae 291 ON bipolar cells 11 ON sublaminae 291 ONL 41, 101, 105,107 OPL 288 Opsin 7,47,77,81,251,427 Opsin degradation 175 Opsin kinase see Rhodopsin kinase Optic disk 9 Optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) 362 Orexin (OX) 468 Organic anion-transporting protein (OATP) 446
506 Otx1 41 Otx2 39, 103,113 Otx5b 41 Outer nuclear layer (ONL) 4, 40, 88 Outer plexiform layer (OPL) 4, 287 Outer segment see Photoreceptor outer segment P p561ck 132 Parallel bipolar cell-signaling pathways 299 Parallel ganglion cell output pathways 299 Parvalbumin 202 Pax2 21, 113 Pax6 22, 27, 41, 261 Pbx 113 PDE6 see Cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) phosphodiesterase PDZ domains 271 PER1 491 PER2 490 Per3 490 Peripheral vision 171 Peripherin 234, 279 Periphery 333 Permeability transition pore 209 Peroxy-A2E 447 Peroxynitrites (ONOO•) 413 Phagocytosis 75. 77, 427 Phosducin 132 Phosphatidylcholine 424 Phosphatidylethanolamine 424 Phosphatidylinositol 424 Phosphatidylserine 424 Phosphodiesterase (PDE) see also Cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) phosphodiesterase 8, 227, 269 Phosphodiesterase β subunit 209 Phosphoinositol signaling pathway 269 Phosphoinositol-bis-phosphate (PIP2) 269 Photoisomerization 69, 145 Photophobia 237, 243 Photopic brightness-matching function 340 Photopic luminous efficiency functions 334 Photopic vision 334, 395 Photopigment optical density 314, 332, 342 Photopigment variability 316 Photoreception 5, 268
Index Photoreceptor 4, 68, 73, 81, 89, 197, 225, 243, 252 Photoreceptor differentiation 48 Photoreceptor guanylate cyclase (GC) 130 Photoreceptor ion channels 269 Photoreceptor layer 6 Photoreceptor membrane 278 Photoreceptor- Müller cell junctions 68 Photoreceptor outer segment 4, 7, 67, 73, 77, 80, 92, 197, 268, 424 Photoreceptor retinol dehydrogenase (prRDH) 431 Photoreceptor rim protein see ATP-binding cassette transporter (ABCR) Photoresponse 144 Phototransduction 7, 69, 74, 267, 278, 307 Phototransduction proteins 275 Pigment dispersion 415 Pingelapese blindness 245 Plasma membrane Ca2+ adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) transporters (PMCAs) 202 PLCβ 271 Pleiotrophin 48 PNA 354 Poly ADP ribose polymerase (PARP) 210 POS see Photoreceptor outer segment Postsynaptic excitatory postsynaptic current (EPSC) 208 Prenyl-binding protein (PrBP/δ) 158 Prep1 113 Preretinal screening 332 Presbyopia 4 Presynaptic inhibition 294 Prokineticin 1 439 Protan and deutan defects 315 Protanomaly 316 Protanopia 315 Protein kinase A (PKA) 132 Protein kinase C (PKC) 130, 236 Protein oxidation (protein carbonyl formation) 409 Protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) 133 Protein phosphatase A (PPA) 175 Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) 235 prRDH 432 PSD95 271 Pupil 5
Index Q QRX homeobox gene 41 R Radial glia 212 Retinaldehyde dehydrogenase (RALDH) 21 Rapid-eye movement (REM) 469 Rax-L 41 RBP3 112 Rd7 43 Reactive oxygen species (ROS) 209, 403 Receptor tyrosine kinase Mer (MerTK) 79 Recoverin 48, 129, 147, 202 Red cone monochromats 319 Red-green deficiencies 315 Refractive index 3 Relevant light specification (photometry) 330 Ret1/PCE I 114 Retinal blood vessels 26 Retinal capillary network 18 Retinal chromophore 145 Retinal detachment 208 Retinal G protein-coupled receptor (RGR) 435 Retinal ganglion cells 12, 22, 36 Retinal histogenesis 36 Retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) 4, 7, 39, 46, 67, 77, 87, 92, 96, 175 Retinal progenitor cells (RPCs) 36, 37, 44, 47, 212 Retinal β-ionone ring 183 Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) 81, 129, 182, 208, 237, 367, 415, 423 Retinohypothalamic tract (RHT) 466, 471, 486 Retinoic acid receptors (RARs) 43, 45 Retinoic acid 45, 88 Retinoid 45, 69, 87, 91,143 Retinoid binding proteins 88 Retinoid orphan receptor beta (RORβ) 43 Retinoid related orphan receptor β (RORβ) 359 Retinoid X receptors (RXRs) 43 Retinol 425 Retinol acyl transferase (LRAT) 434 Retinol dehydrogenase (RDH) 432 RDH5 435, 449 RDH11 435 RDH12 433
507 Retinol-binding protein (RBP) 434 Retinyl palmitate 425 Rh5 253 Rh6 253 Rhabdomere 252, 268 Rhodopsin kinase (RK) 125, 158, 175 Rhodopsin 8, 37, 42, 46,69, 102, 126, 171, 228, 252, 268, 367 Rhythm 466 Rod dark adaptation 129 Rod monochromacy 320 Rod monochromats 308 Rod photoreceptor 6, 22, 36, 90, 261, 353, 392 development 35, 40, 46, 49 spectral sensitivity 333 threshold 329 Rod-based signals 360 Rod-cone luminous efficiency functions 333 Rod-cone self-cancellation 339 Rod-free zone 22 ROR (retinoid-related orphan receptor) 490 RORβ 43 RPE65 72, 396, 449 RPE-J 79 Rx 41, 101 Rx-L 41 RXR 43, 45, 113 Ryanodine 199 S S/UV pigments 359 Sarcoplasmic-endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase (SERCA) 199 Sclera 3 Suprachiasmatic Nucleus (SCN) 470, 484 S-cone see Short-wavelength-sensitive cone S-cone monochromats 312 S-cone ON bipolars 360 S-cone opsin 45, 49 S-cone spectral sensitivity 310, 312 Scotopic luminous efficiency 332 Scotopic vision 171, 334, 395 Scotopic-to-photopic transition 339 Serotonin 486 Short-wavelength-sensitive cones (S-cones) 18, 42, 44, 310, 358 Signal-responsive kinases I/II (ERK) 485
508 Singlet oxygen 443 Site-directed cysteine mutagenesis 180 SOHo-1 21 Somatostatin 204 Spalt gene complex (sal) 257 Spatial and temporal sensitivity 364 Specific matching or detection tasks 331 Spectral distribution 333 Spectral luminous efficiency 331 Spectral sensitivity 330, 363 Spillover transmission 294 Stargardt’s disease 423 STAT3 48 STDG3 437 Steric hindrance 186 Subfunction partitioning 96 Sulfhydryl modification 180 Superoxide anion (O2•) 413 Superoxide dismutase (SOD) 410 Superoxide radical 443 Suppressor of cytokine signaling 3 (SOCS3) 49 Suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCNs) 466 Sustained (X) fashion 299 Sustained and transient response stratification 291 SWS1 family 356 Synaptic ribbons 292 T Taurine 47 Tbx5 21 TDH (3,7,11-trimethyldodeca-2,6,10-trienoic acid hexadecylamide) 435 TDT (13,17.21-trimethyldocosa-12,16, 20-trien-11-one) 435 Tert-butyl hydroperoxide 447 Testicular hyaluronidase 71 tetrodotoxin (TTX) 379, 474 Thyroid hormone receptor (TRβ2) 43, 46. 49. 262, 359 Toll-like receptor 4 78 Transcription factor Orthodenticle (Otd) 258 Transcription factor Rx 100 Transducin 8, 127, 144 Transient (Y) fashion 299 Transient receptor potential (TRP) 210
Index Transient receptor potential canonical (TRPC) 200 Trichromacy 308 Trichromatic color theory 310 Tritan defects 318 Tritanopia 318 TRP channel 271, 276 TRP protein family 269 TRP/TRPL channels 251 TRP-INAD interaction 274, 276 Tyrosine phosphatase SHP 133 U Ultraviolet-visible (UV/Vis) spectrophotometry 180 Univariance 308, 333 UV and M opsins 358 UV-sensitive cones 355 V V*(λ) 336 V10 (λ) 336 Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) 409, 438 Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) 484 Vasopressin V2R receptor 183 VAX 22 Vax2 21 Ventral lateral geniculate (VLG) 471 Verapamil 212 VERIS 375 Vigabatrin 386 Visual acuity 332 Visual cycle 69, 88 Visual effectiveness 331 Visual field 243 Visual G protein transducin 275, 269 Visual perception 226 Vitamin A 45, 91 Vitiligo mice 72 Vitreous 5 Voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (VGCCs) 202 Vsx1 41 W Wide-field amacrine cells 293 Wnt-inhibitory factor (WIF-1) 46 Wnts 46
Index X X-ray crystallography 179 Y y ommatidia 253 Z Zeaxanthin 18, 397 ZO-1 271 α-helix 232
509 α-transducin 307 αvβ5 integrin 72, 79 β5 integrin 73, 81 β-adrenergic receptor 181 b-catenin 46 β-oleoyl-γ-palmitoyl-L-αphosphatidylcholine 443 γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) 47, 293, 469, 484 ω-conotoxin 205