TY - CHAP
T1 - Calcium homeostasis in fly photoreceptor cells
AU - Oberwinkler, J
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - In fly photoreceptor cells, two processes dominate the Ca2+ homeostasis: light-induced Ca2+ influx through members of the TRP family of ion channels, and Ca2+ extrusion by Na+/Ca2+ exchange.Ca2+ release from intracellular stores is quantitatively insignificant. Both, the light-activated channels and the Ca2+-extruding exchangers are located in or close to the rhabdomeric microvilli, small protrusions of the plasma membrane. The microvilli also contain the molecular machinery necessary for generating quantum bumps, short electrical responses caused by the absorption of a single photon. Due to this anatomical arrangement, the light-induced Ca2+ influx results in two separate Ca2+ signals that have different functions: a global, homogeneous increase of the Ca2+ concentration in the cell body, and rapid but large amplitude Ca2+ transients in the microvilli. The global rise of the Ca2+ concentration mediates light adaptation, via regulatory actions on the phototransduction cascade, the voltage-gated K+ channels and small pigment granules controlling the light intensity. The local Ca2+ transients in the microvilli are responsible for shaping the quantum bumps into fast, all-or-nothing events. They achieve this by facilitating strongly the phototransduction cascade at early stages of the light response and subsequently inhibiting it. Many molecular targets of these feedback mechanisms have been identified and characterized due to the availability of numerous Drosophila mutant showing defects in the phototransduction.
AB - In fly photoreceptor cells, two processes dominate the Ca2+ homeostasis: light-induced Ca2+ influx through members of the TRP family of ion channels, and Ca2+ extrusion by Na+/Ca2+ exchange.Ca2+ release from intracellular stores is quantitatively insignificant. Both, the light-activated channels and the Ca2+-extruding exchangers are located in or close to the rhabdomeric microvilli, small protrusions of the plasma membrane. The microvilli also contain the molecular machinery necessary for generating quantum bumps, short electrical responses caused by the absorption of a single photon. Due to this anatomical arrangement, the light-induced Ca2+ influx results in two separate Ca2+ signals that have different functions: a global, homogeneous increase of the Ca2+ concentration in the cell body, and rapid but large amplitude Ca2+ transients in the microvilli. The global rise of the Ca2+ concentration mediates light adaptation, via regulatory actions on the phototransduction cascade, the voltage-gated K+ channels and small pigment granules controlling the light intensity. The local Ca2+ transients in the microvilli are responsible for shaping the quantum bumps into fast, all-or-nothing events. They achieve this by facilitating strongly the phototransduction cascade at early stages of the light response and subsequently inhibiting it. Many molecular targets of these feedback mechanisms have been identified and characterized due to the availability of numerous Drosophila mutant showing defects in the phototransduction.
KW - LIGHT-SENSITIVE CHANNELS
KW - PROTEIN-KINASE-C
KW - HONEY-BEE DRONE
KW - LIMULUS VENTRAL PHOTORECEPTORS
KW - PDZ-DOMAIN PROTEIN
KW - OMMOCHROME PIGMENT GRANULES
KW - DROSOPHILA-NINAC KINASE
KW - CAPACITATIVE CA2+ ENTRY
KW - ADAPTING-BUMP MODEL
KW - RHODOPSIN IN-VIVO
M3 - Chapter
T3 - ADVANCES IN EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
SP - 539
EP - 583
BT - PHOTORECEPTORS AND CALCIUM
PB - Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers
CY - NEW YORK
ER -