Molecular and functional characterization of native HCN1 channels in rabbit retinal rod photoreceptors
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2002
Abstract:
Gating of voltage-dependent conductances in retinal photoreceptors is the
first step of a process leading to the enhancement of the temporal
performance of the visual system. The molecular components underlying
voltage-dependent gating in rods are presently poorly defined. In the
present work we have investigated the isoform composition and the
functional characteristics of hyperpolarisation-activated cyclic
nucleotide-gated channels (HCN) in rabbit rods. Using immunocytochemistry
we show the expression in the inner segment and cell body of the isoform 1
(HCN1). Electrophysiological investigations show that hyperpolarisation-
activated currents (Ih) can be measured only from the cell regions where
HCN1 is expressed. Half-activation voltage (-75.0 ± 0.3 mV) and kinetics
(t1/2 of 101 ± 8 ms at -110 mV and 20 °C) of the Ih in rods are similar to
those of the macroscopic current carried by homomeric rabbit HCN1 channels
expressed in HEK 293 cells. The homomeric nature of HCN1 channels in rods
is compatible with the observation that cAMP induces a small shift (2.3 ±
0.8 mV) in the half-activation voltage of Ih. In addition, the observation
that within the physiological range of membrane potentials, cAMP does not
significantly affect the gain of the current-to-voltage conversion, may
reflect the need to protect the first step in the processing of visual
signals from changes in cAMP turnover.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
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