Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 15, 6586-6591, Copyright © 1995 by Society for Neuroscience
Inhibitors of cyclic-GMP phosphodiesterase alter excitation of Limulus ventral photoreceptors in Ca(2+)-dependent fashion
EC Johnson and PM O'Day
Department of Physiology, Marshall University School of Medicine, Huntington, West Virginia 25755-9340, USA.
We have examined the hypothesis that Ca(2+)-dependent cyclic-GMP metabolism
may play a role in visual transduction in Limulus photoreceptors. Although
phosphoinositide hydrolysis is central to phototransduction and
phosphoinositide-dependent Ca(2+)-mobilization seems to be required for
transduction, the subsequent steps leading to ion channel gating (the
immediate cause of excitation) are not understood. Channels normally opened
in response to light can be opened in excised membrane patches by cGMP but
not by Ca2+, suggesting that cGMP acts as a channel ligand in excitation.
Using phosphodiesterase inhibitors, we investigated whether changes in cGMP
metabolism could affect excitation. We report that zaprinast and IBMX
increased the amplitudes and retarded the kinetics of physiological light
responses. These effects were maximal for brightest stimuli. The effects
were markedly enhanced in low Ca2+ conditions. In contrast, excitation
induced by direct IP3-injection and by direct Ca(2+)-injection were
inhibited. These observations suggest that PI-induced excitation is
dependent on cGMP metabolism in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner, and they support
the possibility that transduction involves modification of cGMP metabolism
by Ca(2+)-release resulting from phosphoinositide hydrolysis.