 |
| Volume 8, Number 1, Article 10, Pages 1-10 |
doi:10.1167/8.1.10 |
http://journalofvision.org/8/1/10/ |
ISSN 1534-7362 |
The loss of the PDE6 deactivating enzyme, RGS9, results in precocious light adaptation at low light levels
Andrew Stockman |
Institute of Ophthalmology, University College London,
London, UK |
|
Hannah E. Smithson |
Department of Psychology, Durham University,
Durham, UK |
|
Andrew R. Webster |
Moorfields Eye Hospital,
London, UK |
|
Graham E. Holder |
Moorfields Eye Hospital,
London, UK |
|
Naheed A. Rana |
MRC Epidemiology Unit, Strangeways Research Laboratory,
Wort's Causeway, Cambridge, UK |
|
Caterina Ripamonti |
Institute of Ophthalmology, University College London,
London, UK |
|
Lindsay T. Sharpe |
Institute of Ophthalmology, University College London,
London, UK |
|
Abstract
The GTPase activating protein, RGS9-1, is vital for the deactivation and regulation of the phototransduction cascade (C. K. Chen et al., 2000; C. W. Cowan, R. N. Fariss, I. Sokal, K. Palczewski, & T. G. Wensel, 1998; W. He, C. W. Cowan, & T. G. Wensel, 1998; A. L. Lyubarsky et al., 2001). Its loss through genetic defects in humans has been linked to a slow recovery to changes in illumination (K. M. Nishiguchi et al., 2004). Such a deficit is to be expected because RGS9-1 normally speeds up the deactivation of the activated phosphodiesterase effector molecule, PDE6*, and thus accelerates the turning off of the visual response. Paradoxically, however, we find that the cone response in an observer lacking RGS9-1 is faster at lower light levels than it is in a normal observer. Though surprising, this result is nonetheless consistent with molecular models of light adaptation (e.g., E. N. Pugh, S. Nikonov, & T. D. Lamb, 1999), which predict that the excess of PDE6* resulting from the loss of RGS9-1 will shorten the visual integration time and speed up the visual response at inappropriately low light levels. The gain in speed caused by the superfluity of PDE6* at lower light levels compensates for the loss caused by its slow deactivation; thus quickening the response relative to that in the normal. As the light level is increased and the PDE6* concentration in the normal rises relative to that in the observer lacking RGS9-1, the temporal advantage of the latter is soon lost, leaving only the deficit due to delayed deactivation.
|
|