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The Journal of Neuroscience, October 15, 1999, 19(20):8799-8807
Modulation of the Light Response by cAMP in
Drosophila Photoreceptors
Sylwester
Chyb1, 2,
Wulf
Hevers3,
Michael
Forte4,
William J.
Wolfgang4,
Zvi
Selinger5, and
Roger C.
Hardie1, 3
Departments of 1 Anatomy, 2 Biochemistry,
and 3 Zoology, Cambridge University, Cambridge CB2 3DY,
United Kingdom, 4 Oregon Health Sciences University, Vollum
Institute, Portland, Oregon 97201, and 5 Department of
Biological Chemistry, Institute of Life Sciences, Hebrew University,
Jerusalem, 91904, Israel
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ABSTRACT |
Phototransduction in Drosophila is mediated by a
G-protein-coupled phospholipase C transduction cascade in which each
absorbed photon generates a discrete electrical event, the quantum
bump. In whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings, cAMP, as well as
its nonhydrolyzable and membrane-permeant analogs 8-bromo-cAMP
(8-Br-cAMP) and dibutyryl-cAMP, slowed down the macroscopic light
response by increasing quantum bump latency, without changes in bump
amplitude or duration. In contrast, cGMP or 8-Br-cGMP had no effect on
light response amplitude or kinetics. None of the cyclic nucleotides
activated any channels in the plasma membrane. The effects of cAMP were
mimicked by application of the non-specific phosphodiesterase inhibitor
IBMX and the adenylyl cyclase activator forskolin; zaprinast, a
specific cGMP-phosphodiesterase inhibitor, was ineffective. Bump
latency was also increased by targeted expression of either an
activated Gs subunit, which increased endogenous
adenylyl cyclase activity, or an activated catalytic protein kinase A
(PKA) subunit. The action of IBMX was blocked by pretreatment with the
PKA inhibitor H-89. The effects of cAMP were abolished in mutants of
the ninaC gene, suggesting this nonconventional myosin
as a possible target for PKA-mediated phosphorylation. Dopamine (10 µM) and octopamine (100 µM) mimicked the
effects of cAMP. These results indicate the existence of a G-protein-coupled adenylyl cyclase pathway in Drosophila
photoreceptors, which modulates the phospholipase C-based
phototransduction cascade.
Key words:
phototransduction; neuromodulation; TRP; photoreceptor; dopamine; calcium; cross-talk; adenylyl cyclase; phospholipase C
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INTRODUCTION |
Phototransduction in vertebrate and
invertebrate photoreceptors is believed to be mediated by a dedicated
G-protein-coupled signaling pathway. For example, in
Drosophila, which is a widely studied model for invertebrate
phototransduction (for review, see Hardie and Minke, 1995 ; Zuker, 1996 ;
Scott and Zuker, 1998b ), a Gq-protein-coupled
phospholipase C (PLC) is obligatory for excitation (Bloomquist et al.,
1988 ; Minke and Selinger, 1992 ). Similarly, in vertebrates, excitation
appears to be quantitatively accounted for by activation of transducin
and phosphodiesterase (PDE) (Lamb and Pugh, 1992 ; Lamb, 1996 ).
Nevertheless, reflecting the situation in the majority of cell types,
both vertebrate and invertebrate photoreceptors contain biochemical
machinery associated with other signal transduction pathways. For
example, rod outer segments contain a light-activated
phosphoinositide-specific PLC (Ferreira and Pak, 1994 ; Jiang et al.,
1996 ) and a soluble guanylyl cyclase (Koch et al., 1994 ). However, the
roles of these signaling pathways in photoreceptor function and their
potential for cross-talk with the phototransduction cascade remain
primarily obscure.
The best documented example of cross-talk within photoreceptors is in
the Limulus lateral eye in which sensitivity to light is
under control of a circadian rhythm. Octopamine, released by CNS
efferents (Battelle et al., 1982 ), leads to structural changes in the
retina and to biochemical changes, resulting in increased gain, lower
noise, and more rapid dark adaptation (for review, see Barlow, 1987 ;
Battelle, 1991 ). Most probably, the effects are mediated by a
G-protein-coupled adenylyl cyclase pathway (Kaupp et al., 1982 ), and
recently, an unconventional myosin III showing homology to the
Drosophila NINAC protein was implicated as a phosphoprotein in this pathway (Battelle et al., 1998 ).
To our knowledge, in neither Drosophila nor other insects
have there been reports of cAMP involvement in photoreceptor function outside of development (Strutt et al., 1995 ); however, a number of
reports have suggested that cGMP may play a role in transduction. Thus,
a cGMP-gated channel is expressed in Drosophila eyes
(Baumann et al., 1994 ), along with a soluble guanylate cyclase
(Yoshikawa et al., 1993 ; disputed by Liu et al., 1995 ), and cGMP has
been reported to activate the migration of pigment granules in housefly photoreceptors (Hanyu and Franceschini, 1993 ). Nitric oxide, possibly released from second-order interneurons, has been reported to raise
photoreceptor cGMP levels in locusts (Bicker and Schmachtenberg, 1997 ).
Although, in Drosophila, such an action appears to be
restricted to pupal stages and has been implicated in axonal
pathfinding (Gibbs and Truman, 1998 ), Bacigalupo et al. (1995) reported
that a membrane-permeant cGMP analog activated an inward current in Drosophila photoreceptors, suggesting a role in excitation
or modulation. In the present study, we have investigated the possible involvement of cyclic nucleotides in Drosophila
photoreceptors, using a variety of pharmacological and genetic
approaches. We found that cGMP neither activated any channels nor had
any effect on light responses; however, cAMP significantly slowed the
kinetics of phototransduction. This effect could be mimicked
pharmacologically or genetically via stimulation of
Gs, adenylyl cyclase, and protein kinase A (PKA).
Finally, the cAMP-induced effects were blocked in ninaC
mutants, suggesting that the NINAC protein may play a key role in
mediating modulation of the PLC-based phototransduction cascade.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Flies were reared at 25°C in the dark. All experiments were
performed on newly eclosed (<2 hr) adults of Drosophila
melanogaster. Wild-type (WT) flies were Oregon R (OR) on a white
(w) eye background. As described previously, a construct
encoding an activated Gs subunit
(Gs *) was made by substitution of leucine 215 with glutamine 215 in the Drosophila
Gs sequence. With this substitution, the subunit binds GTP but is unable to hydrolyze it, resulting in
maintained maximal activity (Quan et al., 1991 ; Wolfgang et al., 1996 ).
This construct was targeted to the photoreceptors using the Rh1 opsin
promoter. The full genotype of these flies was as follows: cn;
P[ Rh1-Gs *],
ry506 (hereafter referred to as
Gs *). The progenitor stock,
cn;ry506,es,
was used for controls.
To target expression of activated PKA catalytic subunits (PKAact) to
photoreceptors, we used the UAS-Gal4 system (Brand and Perrimon, 1993 ).
Flies expressing Gal4 under control of the opsin (Rh1) promoter
(provided by C. Desplan, Rockefeller University, New York, NY)
were crossed to two independent UAS-PKAact lines (PKAact1 and
PKAact2 obtained from D. Kalderon,
Columbia University, New York, NY). Other strains used included
the following: trpCM (transient
receptor potential), a functionally null allele of the gene encoding
the light-sensitive TRP channel (Cosens and Manning, 1969 ; Reuss
et al., 1997 ); trpl302
(trp-like), a null allele of the second class of
light-sensitive channel (Niemeyer et al., 1996 );
ninaCP235 (no inactivation no after
potential), a null allele of the non-conventional myosin kinase
(Matsumoto et al., 1987 ; Montell and Rubin, 1988 ; Porter and Montell,
1993 ); P[ninaC 132] and
P[ninac 174], which are
transformant flies expressing ninaC constructs lacking either the cytosolic (132 kDa) or rhabdomeric (174 kDa)
ninaC transcripts on the null
ninaCp235 background (provided by C. Montell, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD) (Porter et
al., 1992 ). For Ca2+ measurements, we used
a null rhodopsin mutant, ninaEI117.
Finally, we also recorded from flies expressing a truncated rhodopsin
lacking C-terminal phosphorylation sites,
P[ninaE 356], on the same
null rhodopsin background (provided by C. Zuker, University of
California San Diego, La Jolla, CA) (Vinos et al., 1997 ).
Electrophysiological recordings and stimulation.
Dissociated ommatidia were prepared as described previously (Hardie,
1991 ). In brief, whole retinas were dissected out in
Ca2+ free Ringer's solution under red
light, triturated in fetal calf serum supplemented medium, and
ommatidia then transferred to the bottom of a recording chamber on an
inverted Nikon (Tokyo, Japan) Diaphot microscope. Whole-cell
voltage-clamp recordings were made using electrodes of resistance of
5-10 M . Cells were held at 70 mV unless otherwise stated. Series
resistance values were generally below 25 M and were routinely
compensated by 80%. Data were collected and analyzed using an Axopatch
1-D amplifier and pCLAMP 6 software (Axon Instruments, Foster City CA).
Responses to brief 10 msec light flashes were collected between 2 and 4 min after establishing whole-cell configuration. This interval allows
intracellular contents to equilibrate with pipette solutions and at the
same time avoids changes in response kinetics occurring after prolonged
whole-cell recordings. To avoid series resistance errors, light
intensity was adjusted to elicit relatively small responses with peak
amplitudes in the 200-400 pA range. To elicit single bumps, shorter (1 msec) flashes were delivered with intensity adjusted to elicit bumps
with ~70% success rate. Calcium measurements using INDO-1 (100 µM in the patch pipette; Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR)
were performed as described previously (Hardie, 1996 ).
Solutions. Standard extracellular solution was composed of
(in mM): 120 NaCl, 5 KCl, 10 TES, 4 MgCl2, 1.5 CaCl2, 25 proline, and 5 alanine. Intracellular solution was composed of (in
mM): 140 K gluconate, 10 TES, 4 Mg ATP, 2 MgCl2, 1 NAD, and 0.4 Na GTP. All solutions were buffered
to a pH of 7.15. Solutions containing cyclic nucleotides and their
analogs were made from frozen 100 mM aqueous
stocks and added to the pipette or bath solution as indicated.
Phosphodiesterase inhibitors (IBMX and zaprinast), the adenylyl cyclase
activator forskolin, the protein kinase A inhibitor H-89 (BIOMOL">Biomol,
Exeter, UK), as well as extracellular ligands dopamine, octopamine,
tyramine, histamine, and serotonin, were added to the bath. In some
experiments, test compounds were applied from a wide-bored (~5 µm)
puffer pipette positioned close to the cells. Unless otherwise stated,
chemicals were obtained from Sigma (Poole, UK).
Immunocytochemistry. Frozen sections of fly heads were
immunostained for Gs as described previously
(Wolfgang et al., 1990 ) using an affinity-purified antibody raised
against a synthetic oligopeptide (residues 376-385 of
Drosophila Gs).
Adenylyl cyclase assay. GTP-dependent cyclase activity was
assayed using dissected eye homogenates as described previously (Cassel
and Selinger, 1977 ). Background activity was measured in the absence of
any GTP; GTP-dependent activity was measured in the presence
of 50 µM GTP. Maximal G-protein
activation was achieved by addition of 10 µM
GTP S or 1 mM AlF4. The
reaction was run for 15 min at 30° C.
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RESULTS |
cAMP modulates macroscopic response kinetics
Experiments were performed using whole-cell recordings of
dark-adapted photoreceptors from dissociated ommatidia voltage-clamped at resting potential ( 70 mV). Under control conditions,
photoreceptors respond to brief (10 msec) flashes of light with a
stereotyped response with a time to peak of ~50 msec and a
time-to-half-decay (with respect to stimulus) of ~70 msec. For
responses up to at least 1 nA in amplitude, such macroscopic "flash
responses" scale linearly with intensity, and their kinetics are
invariant with intensity (Hardie, 1991 ). We tested the effects of
cyclic nucleotides in this preparation by exposing the photoreceptors
to cGMP, cAMP, or their nonhydrolyzable and membrane-permeant 8-bromo
or dibutyryl analogs (8-Br-cGMP and 8-Br-AMP, db-cGMP and db-AMP). The
cyclic nucleotides were applied by internal perfusion via the patch
pipette or (for the case of membrane-permeant analogs) via bath
application at concentrations up to 10 mM. When using cGMP
or its analogs, in no case (n > 20) was any
conductance activated nor were any effects detected on the sensitivity
or kinetics of the flash response. In marked contrast, when cAMP was
included in the patch electrode or when the analogs 8-Br-cAMP and
db-cAMP were applied to the bath, the kinetics of the flash responses
in WT flies were significantly slowed (Fig.
1), both the time-to-peak of the flash
response and the termination of the light-induced current being delayed
by ~10 msec compared with controls. When applied externally, the effect of db-cAMP (5 mM) developed within ~30
sec of continuous puffer application (Fig.
2) and was partially reversible
(n = 4).

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Figure 1.
cAMP, but not cGMP, slows down macroscopic light
response in wild-type photoreceptors. A, Responses to 10 msec flashes recorded in WT photoreceptors in controls and in the
presence of 8-Br-cGMP (5 mM), 8-Br-cAMP (5 mM),
IBMX (100 µM), and photoreceptors from flies expressing
activated Gs (Gs *). Cyclic nucleotides
were applied via the recording pipette, and all other drugs were added
to the bath. B, C, Time-to-peak
(B) and time-to-half-decay
(C) of macroscopic light responses in control WT
photoreceptors and in the presence of a cGMP analog (8-Br-cGMP; 5 mM), the specific cGMP-PDE inhibitor zaprinast (100 µM), 8-Br-cAMP (5 mM), IBMX (100 µM), forskolin (FK; 10 µM),
and photoreceptors from Gs * flies. Data are mean ± SD from between 5 and 20 cells. Statistically significant treatments
are marked with asterisks (*p < 0.05;
***p < 0.001).
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Figure 2.
Time course of action of 8-Br-cAMP on response
kinetics. A, Responses to 10 msec flashes recorded from
a wild-type photoreceptor before, during (horizontal
bar), and after application of 8-Br-cAMP (5 mM)
from a puffer pipette placed near the recorded cell. Flashes were
repeated, and responses were recorded at 20 sec intervals starting ~2
min after establishing whole-cell configuration. Similar results were
obtained on three other cells. Bottom, Changes in the
values of time-to-peak (triangles) and current integrals
(bars) of the macroscopic responses shown above. A
gradual increase in the time-to-peak value was observed within 40 sec
of 8-Br-cAMP application, with a partial recovery after washout.
Although peak amplitudes decreased during application of cAMP, the
current integral showed virtually no change. B,
Individual macroscopic responses before (1),
during (2), and after (3)
8-Br-cAMP application.
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To test whether photoreceptors contained endogenous enzymatic pathways
for cAMP metabolism, we applied the nonspecific phosphodiesterase inhibitor IBMX (100 µM) and the adenylyl cyclase
activator forskolin (10-100 µM). Both of these agents
slowed down the kinetics of phototransduction in a manner
indistinguishable from the effects of cAMP or its analogs. In contrast,
a specific cGMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor, zaprinast (100 µM), was ineffective (Fig. 1).
Activated Gs mimics effects of cAMP
These results demonstrate that cAMP, as well as IBMX and
forskolin, which are expected to increase endogenous cAMP levels, modulates the kinetics of the response to light. To complement these
pharmacological data, we manipulated adenylyl cyclase activity genetically by overexpressing a Drosophila
Gs subunit, rendered constitutively active by
substitution of leucine 215 by glutamine 215 (see Materials and
Methods), targeted to the photoreceptors using the Rh1 opsin promoter.
Successful and specific targeting of the construct to the
photoreceptors was confirmed by immunocytochemistry, which revealed
dense staining of the major R1-R6 class of photoreceptor, whereas R7,
which expresses a different rhodopsin, was at most only weakly stained
(Fig. 3).

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Figure 3.
Frozen sections of fly heads stained with
antibodies for Drosophila Gs .
A, Transverse section through Gs * flies
showing high levels of Gs in the photoreceptor cell bodies
and axon terminals in the lamina compared with control
(B) untransformed flies. Scale bar, 20 µm.
C, Tangential section through a Gs * eye
at the equator showing high levels of immunoreactivity in cell bodies
of photoreceptors R1-R6 compared with the central cell R7. Scale bar,
2 µm. D, A schematic diagram of the two
asterisked ommatidia indicating photoreceptors 1-7 (8 is below the plane of section) within each unit. Note that the two
ommatidia straddle the equator of the eye and so are mirror images of
each other.
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To determine whether the activated G-protein was indeed capable of
activating an endogenous adenylyl cyclase, cyclase activity was assayed
in an eye homogenate. GTP-dependent adenylyl cyclase activity was
increased ~10-fold in these flies, reaching levels close to those
induced by maximal G-protein stimulation by AlF4 or GTP S (Table 1). Because the
activated subunit was expressed only in photoreceptors, these data
represent strong evidence for the presence of a functional
G-protein-regulated adenylyl cyclase within the photoreceptors.
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Table 1.
GTP-dependent adenylyl cyclase activity in control
(cn, ry) flies and flies expressing the activated
Gs subunit
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When investigated in whole-cell patch clamp, photoreceptors from
Gs * flies appeared to mimic the
pharmacological effects of cAMP, IBMX, and forskolin but in a more
pronounced manner, with the macroscopic light response being greatly
slowed during both activation and termination phases (Fig. 1). IBMX had
no statistically significant effect on macroscopic light responses in
these flies, suggesting that levels of cAMP and/or protein
phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent kinase (see below) may be saturated
(n = 7 cells) (data not shown).
Quantum bumps
At the intensities used in these experiments, the macroscopic
flash response is the simple linear summation of responses to single
photons of light, namely quantum bumps, which are generated with a
finite but variable latency (Wong, 1982 ) (for review, see Hardie and
Minke, 1995 ). The flash response waveform is thus completely described
by the convolution of the bump waveform with the bump latency
distribution (R. C. Hardie and S. R. Henderson, unpublished results). Determining which is responsible for the change in
macroscopic response kinetics should provide insight into the
underlying molecular mechanism(s), because bump latency in
Drosophila is believed to be determined by early steps of
the cascade (up to and including PLC), whereas the amplification
responsible for the bump waveform is generated downstream of PLC (Pak
et al., 1976 ; Scott and Zuker, 1998a ) (for review, see Hardie and
Minke, 1995 ).
To test whether bump latency, waveform, or both were affected by cAMP,
we recorded individual quantum bumps in response to dim light under
control and modulated conditions and generated average quantum bump
waveforms by aligning bumps on their rising phases. Neither bump
amplitude nor waveform recorded in the presence of IBMX or from flies
expressing activated Gs were significantly different from controls (n = 4-5 cells each) (Fig.
4A), indicating that
bump latency is the parameter that is modulated. The effect of
cAMP-dependent modulation on quantum bump latency was illustrated more
directly by the analysis of bumps elicited in responses to short (1 msec) flashes of light containing on average less than a single
effective photon (Fig. 4B). In the presence of IBMX, mean bump latency was increased by ~20 msec with respect to controls and >50 msec in the Gs * transformants. The
earliest bump latencies (~20 msec) remained unaffected so that the
effect on macroscopic kinetics was reflected in a shift in time-to-peak
rather than in the timing of first detectable deviation from
baseline.

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Figure 4.
Quantum bump latency but not bump shape or
amplitude change with cAMP modulation. A, Representative
quantum bumps recorded in wild-type photoreceptors in the absence
(WT; solid line) and presence
(dotted line) of 100 µM IBMX and in
Gs * photoreceptors (broken line). Each
trace is the average of at least 30 quantum bumps
aligned by their rising phases and normalized, showing that their time
courses are indistinguishable. Actual amplitudes were in the range of
10-12 pA and not statistically distinguishable (n = 4-5 cells for each condition). B, Quantum bumps
elicited by brief (1 msec) flashes of light of intensity sufficient to
evoke a single photon response ~70% of time delivered at the start
of each trace (superimposed). Records in WT
photoreceptors in the absence and presence of IBMX (100 µM) and in photoreceptors from Gs * flies.
Note the longer latencies in the presence of IBMX and particularly in
Gs * flies. C, Mean quantum bump latencies
recorded in WT photoreceptors in the absence and presence of IBMX and
in photoreceptors from transgenic Gs * flies. Mean ± SD from three to four cells in each case (latency from ~10 bumps
for each cell). *p < 0.05.
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cAMP effects are mediated by protein kinase A
Most cellular effects of cAMP are mediated via PKA. To test
whether this is also the case in Drosophila photoreceptors,
we used two approaches. First, we attempted to pharmacologically inhibit PKA activation and therefore prevent cAMP modulatory effects. By itself, the specific protein kinase A inhibitor H-89 did not have
any effect on macroscopic light response or quantum bump waveform.
However, pretreatment (>5 min) with H-89 (1 µM) prevented the effect of IBMX on
macroscopic light response (Fig. 5). H-89 did not have any effect on the macroscopic light response in
Gs * flies (data not shown), suggesting that
endogenous phosphatase activity was not sufficient to reverse the
effects of this transgene on the time scale (~30-45 min) of the
experiment.

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Figure 5.
cAMP modulation can be blocked by the protein
kinase A inhibitor H-89. A, Responses to 10 msec flashes
recorded in photoreceptors from WT photoreceptors in the absence and
presence of phosphodiesterase inhibitor IBMX (100 µM),
IBMX and protein kinase A inhibitor H-89 (1 µM), and H-89
alone (1 µM). B, C,
Time-to-peak (B) and time-to-half-decay
(C) of macroscopic light responses in control WT
photoreceptors and in the presence of IBMX, IBMX and H-89, and H-89
alone. Although H-89 PKA inhibitor had no effect on its own, it
eliminated the effect of IBMX on the response kinetics. Mean ± SD; n = 5-7 cells. *p < 0.05.
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Second, we expressed a constitutively active catalytic subunit of
Drosophila PKA, in the expectation that this might mimic the
effect of cAMP. To target the PKA construct to the photoreceptors, we
used the UAS-Gal4 strategy (Brand and Perrimon, 1993 ), crossing flies
transformed with UAS-PKAact constructs to lines expressing Gal4 under
the control of the opsin promoter (Rh1Gal4). Two independent UAS-PKAact
lines were tested in this way; both were found to have slower
macroscopic kinetics, although bump waveforms were unaltered (data not
shown), similar to the effects of cAMP and IBMX (Fig. 6). The effect was significantly greater
in one line (PKAact1) than the other
(PKAact2); this is the same order of
efficacy observed in an independent study in which the same UAS-PKA
constructs were found to reduce the quantal amplitude of miniature
excitatory junctional potentials (Davis et al., 1998 ). As controls for
these flies we measured light responses in UAS-PKAact and Rh1-Gal4
flies crossed to WT; both had normal response kinetics (Fig. 6).

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Figure 6.
Flies expressing constitutively active protein
kinase A in their photoreceptors exhibit slower light responses.
A, B, Responses to 10 msec flashes
recorded in photoreceptors from transgenic flies expressing
constitutively active protein kinase A, PKAact1
(A), and PKAact2
(B). UAS-PKAact constructs were targeted to
photoreceptors by crossing to flies expressing Gal4 under the control
of the Rh1 opsin promoter (Rh1-Gal4). The control responses
(PKAact × wOR) are from the progeny of the same UAS-PKAact lines
crossed to WT (w Oregon R) flies. C,
D, Time-to-peak (C) and
time-to-half-decay (D) of macroscopic light
responses in photoreceptors from PKAact1
(A; n = 7 cells) and
PKAact2 (B; n = 5) compared with responses from photoreceptors in the control flies
(solid traces; n = 4).
*p < 0.05.
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Possible mechanisms for cAMP-dependent modulation
in photoreceptors
The finding that cAMP specifically affects quantum bump latency
suggests that it modulates the early stages of signal transduction. Possible target sites might therefore include rhodopsin,
Gq-protein, and PLC. Alternatively, its actions
might be mediated indirectly, e.g., via regulation of
Ca2+ levels, because reducing
intracellular Ca2+ levels has been shown
to increase bump latency, presumably by modulating one or more of these
targets (Henderson and Hardie, unpublished results).
Rhodopsin
ninaE 356 is a truncated
rhodopsin (Rh1) construct lacking the last 18 amino acid residues of
its C terminus, including all potential serine and threonine
phosphorylation sites (Vinos et al., 1997 ). The molecular identity of
rhodopsin kinase (RK) has not been established in
Drosophila, and although it would seem unlikely to be PKA, RK itself might also be subject to modulation, as is the case in
vertebrate rods. Surprisingly, unlike the situation in vertebrates rods, phosphorylation of rhodopsin appears not to be required for
response termination, because flies expressing
ninaE 356 instead of wild-type
rhodopsin have been reported to show normal light responses
(Vinos et al., 1997 ). To test whether rhodopsin phosphorylation might
be responsible for the modulatory effects of cAMP, we applied IBMX to
flies expressing ninaE 356.
However, we found that macroscopic responses were still slowed in a
manner indistinguishable from the effect of IBMX in WT flies, suggesting that rhodopsin is not a direct or indirect target for PKA
modulation (n = 13 cells) (data not shown).
Calcium
Cytosolic Ca2+ levels were monitored
using the ratiometric Ca2+ indicator
INDO-1. Ca2+ levels were measured
continuously, using null ninaE mutants lacking rhodopsin to
eliminate responses to the measuring light (Hardie, 1996 ).
Application of 5 mM 8-Br-cAMP (n = 2 cells) or 100 µM IBMX (n = 4 cells) by puffer pipette was not found to induce any significant change in baseline Ca2+ (data not shown).
We cannot, however, exclude an effect on
Ca2+ buffering capacity or localized
changes that went undetected by our global
Ca2+ measurements.
Light-sensitive ion channels TRP and TRPL
Although the light-sensitive channels would appear unlikely
candidates for mediating an effect on bump latency, PKA consensus sequences are found in the amino acid sequences of the two
light-sensitive channels, TRP and TRPL, and in vitro
PKA-dependent phosphorylation of TRPL has been reported to modulate its
ability to bind calmodulin (CaM) (Warr and Kelly, 1996 ). However, we
found IBMX to be effective in slowing down light response kinetics in
both trp and trpl mutants (n = 8 cells each) (data not shown), each lacking one or other of the two
light-sensitive channels, indicating that neither channel alone was
specifically responsible for mediating the effect.
ninaC is a putative target of cAMP modulation
ninaC is a photoreceptor-specific gene encoding an
unconventional myosin with a CaM binding domain, a protein kinase
domain, and a myosin heavy chain head (Montell and Rubin, 1988 ).
Alternative splicing of the gene generates two spatially segregated
proteins: NINAC (132 kDa) found in photoreceptor cell bodies, and NINAC (174 kDa) found only in rhabdomeres. Null mutants lacking both proteins
and mutants lacking the 174 kDa microvillar protein have specific
defects in response deactivation and greatly reduced CaM levels in the
microvilli (Porter et al., 1993 , 1995 ; Hofstee et al., 1996 ). We
hypothesized that the NINAC protein might be involved in the
cAMP-dependent modulation, because, in Limulus lateral eye
photoreceptors, which are also subject to modulation via a cAMP
pathway, a homolog of NINAC has been shown to be phosphorylated by PKA
(Battelle et al., 1998 ). We therefore tested the effect of both
8-Br-cAMP (5 mM) and IBMX (100 µM) on the kinetics of the macroscopic light
response in various alleles of the ninaC gene. In
P[ninaC 132], which lacks only
the cytosolic 132 kDa protein, macroscopic response kinetics were
slowed as in control WT flies without changes to bump waveform.
However, neither 8Br-cAMP nor IBMX had any significant effect on the
response kinetics in the null mutant
(ninaCP235) or
P[ninaC 174], lacking the
microvillar 174 kDa protein (Fig. 7).
These results indicate that the 174 kDa protein is required for the
effects of cAMP to be manifested.

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Figure 7.
Drosophila NINAC is a putative target of
cAMP modulation. A, Responses to 10 msec flashes
recorded in photoreceptors from Drosophila mutants
ninaCP235, ninaC
132, and
ninaC 174 in the absence
(solid traces) and presence (dotted
traces) of IBMX (100 µM, bath). Similar
data were obtained with 8-Br-cAMP. B, C,
Time-to-peak (B) and time-to-half-decay
(C) of macroscopic light responses in
photoreceptors from ninaC P235,
ninaC 132, and
ninaC 174 in the absence and
presence of 100 µM IBMX. Mean ± SD;
n = 4-8 cells. *p < 0.05.
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Biogenic amines mimic effects of cAMP
To investigate the possible identity of the putative in
situ agonist that might be responsible for stimulating the cAMP
pathway in Drosophila photoreceptors, we tested a number of
potential neuromodulators. Histamine, the neurotransmitter released by
the photoreceptors themselves (Hardie, 1987 ), had no effect at
concentrations of 1 mM. Serotonin, which has been
shown previously to modulate potassium currents in
Drosophila photoreceptors (Hevers and Hardie, 1995 ),
appeared to have a weak effect at concentrations of 1 mM, but this was not statistically significant.
Another potential candidate would be octopamine, which is a widespread
insect neurohormone and has been shown to modulate light responses in
Limulus when released in a circadian manner from efferent
nerve fibers (for review, see Barlow, 1987 ). Octopamine closely
mimicked the effect of cAMP, reversibly slowing down the light-induced
current without changing bump shape (Fig.
8), but not at concentrations below 100 µM. Tyramine, an octopamine precursor and
octopamine receptor agonist, also modulated the macroscopic light
response in a similar manner, but its effects were only apparent at
concentrations of 1 mM. The most potent agent
tested was dopamine, which mimicked the effect of cAMP at
concentrations down to 10 µM. Dopamine (1 µM), which would be expected to saturate
known dopamine receptors in Drosophila (Sugamori et al.,
1995 ; Feng et al., 1996 ) was ineffective, however, and the effect of
dopamine was not blocked by butaclamol (10 µM),
which has been reported to be an effective antagonist of a cloned
Drosophila D1-like dopamine receptor (Sugamori et al., 1995 )
at submicromolar concentrations.

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|
Figure 8.
Biogenic amines mimic the effects of cAMP.
A, Responses to 10 msec flashes recorded in
photoreceptors from WT flies in the absence and presence of dopamine
(DA; 10 µM) and octopamine
(OA; 100 µM). B,
C, Time-to-peak (B) and
time-to-half-decay (C) of macroscopic light
responses in WT photoreceptors under control conditions and in the
presence of octopamine (OA; 100 µM;
n = 16), tyramine (TA; 1 mM; n = 8), serotonin
(5-HT; 1 mM; n = 9),
histamine (HA; 1 mM; n = 5), dopamine (DA; n = 13), and
dopamine plus butaclamol (BTL; 10 µM plus
10 µM dopamine; n = 4).
*p < 0.05.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
This study has shown that cAMP can modulate the light response and
provided evidence for the existence of many components of a functioning
G-protein-coupled adenylyl cyclase signaling cascade in
Drosophila photoreceptors. In contrast, we found no evidence
for any role of cGMP in either activating light sensitive channels or
modulating the response to light. On the one hand, the negative results
obtained using cGMP or its analogs serve as a control for the
specificity of the actions of cAMP. On the other hand, the reproducible
effects of cAMP and its analogs serve as a positive control
highlighting the inability of cGMP to activate channels or influence
the kinetics of phototransduction. These results contradict an earlier
study by Bacigalupo et al. (1995) , who reported that cGMP activated an
inward current and enhanced responses to light. We cannot unequivocally
resolve this discrepancy, but note that inspection of Bacigalupo et
al.'s published traces indicates that many recordings were made from
cells exhibiting spontaneous activity of the light-sensitive channels
typical of a rundown state (cf. Hardie and Minke, 1994 ).
Although cAMP has been implicated in developmental processes in
Drosophila retina (Strutt et al., 1995 ), to our knowledge, there has been no other evidence for involvement of cAMP metabolism in
adult Drosophila photoreceptor function, although
Schraermeyer et al. (1995) presented histochemical evidence for the
existence of adenylyl cyclase in microvillar membrane of the blowfly
Calliphora. In the present study, strong evidence for the
presence of a functional G-protein-dependent adenylyl cyclase in
Drosophila photoreceptors has been provided by the finding
of increased cyclase activity in eye homogenates from flies in which an
activated Gs subunit was targeted specifically
to the photoreceptors. Gs * flies have a
characteristic phenotype of increased quantum bump latency, which was
also mimicked by application of cAMP or forskolin to WT flies. These
data implicate this putative adenylyl cyclase in cross-talk with the
PLC-based phototransduction cascade. A cAMP-dependent PDE is implicated
by the action of IBMX, which is a nonspecific PDE inhibitor, and the
lack of effect of a specific cGMP PDE inhibitor, zaprinast, at
concentrations 10-100 times its reported IC50
(Burns et al., 1992 ). Two independent lines of evidence support the
involvement of PKA in mediating the response: namely, the ability of
the specific PKA inhibitor H-89 to block the effect of IBMX, and the
ability of a transgenically expressed constitutively active PKA subunit
to mimic the prolongation of the light response. Finally, we have found
that external application of some biogenic amines, including dopamine
and octopamine, also mimic the effects of cAMP. Because of the
relatively high concentrations required to elicit modulation (10-100
µM) and the lack of effect of a dopamine
receptor antagonist, there remains doubt as to the identity of the
naturally occurring agonist and receptors; however, the efficacy of
dopamine and octopamine suggests the existence of membrane receptors
which couple to an endogenous Gs-protein. Overall, our results present a consistent body of evidence supporting the existence of a receptor and G-protein-coupled adenylyl cyclase and
PKA capable of modulating the PLC-based phototransduction cascade.
Potential PKA targets
The finding that the modulation could be accounted for by a
specific lengthening of quantum bump latency suggests action, either
directly or via an intermediate, at an early stage in the cascade (up
to and including PLC). This is because hypomorphic mutations in
Gq (Scott et al., 1995 ) or PLC (Pak et al, 1976 ; Scott and Zuker, 1998a ) have been reported to result in increases in
bump latency without affecting bump shape or amplitude, implying that
these early stages determine latency, whereas events downstream of PLC
are responsible for amplification and bump waveform. Phosphorylation of
rhodopsin, either directly or via modulation of RK, seems an unlikely mechanism because the modulatory effect of cAMP remained intact in flies expressing a truncated rhodopsin lacking the C-terminal phosphorylation sites. In principle, either Gq or
PLC might be targets; however, because neither sequence contains
consensus PKA phosphorylation sites one, would need to hypothesize that the proteins might be modulated by an intermediate. A precedent is
suggested in vertebrate photoreceptors in which the activity of
G-protein (transducin) can be regulated by PKA-dependent
phosphorylation of phosducin, which binds to and inactivates the 
subunits of transducin only in the unphosphorylated state (Willardson
et al., 1996 ).
Another possible intermediate target was suggested by the recent
finding that a ninaC homolog in Limulus lateral
eye can be phosphorylated by PKA, leading to the suggestion that this
might mediate some of the effects of the adenylyl cyclase believed to underlie the circadian changes initiated by octopamine (Battelle et
al., 1998 ). The Drosophila NINAC protein (Montell and
Rubin, 1988 ) is a multifunctional protein that is required for normal response termination, but its mechanism of action remains obscure. The
two NINAC splice variants are multifunctional chimeric proteins that
contain a myosin heavy chain head domain believed to interact with the
central actin filament in each microvillus, a kinase domain (the
substrate for which is unknown), and a CaM binding domain that is
required for targeting CaM to the rhabdomeres (Porter et al., 1993 ).
Many of the electrophysiological consequences of deletion of the
rhabdomeric NINAC isoform (174 kDa) appear to be explained by the
reduced CaM levels, because they can be mimicked by transgenic flies
expressing ninaC constructs lacking only the CaM binding
domain (Porter et al., 1995 ). Interestingly, we found that deletion of
the 174 kDa microvillar ninaC splice variant (but not the
132 kDa cytosolic form) abolished the ability of both cAMP and IBMX to
slow the response to light. This suggests that the microvillar NINAC
protein might be a PKA target responsible for mediating this effect.
This possibility is supported by the presence of two putative PKA
phosphorylation sites in the NINAC174 sequence, but which are missing
in NINAC132. One can only speculate as to how phosphorylation of NINAC
might result in the specific change in bump latency. Possibilities
include modulation of its own kinase activity, which might then result
in a change in phosphorylation state of a further target such as
Gq or PLC, or changes in its affinity for CaM,
which might result in regulation of further Ca-CaM-dependent processes
within the microvilli.
Functional considerations and comparison with other species
Bump latency is presumed to decrease during light adaptation so
that the increase in bump latency seen in response to cAMP can be
interpreted as enhanced dark adaptation. Although the modulated responses did not appear to be associated with any increase in sensitivity per se (as bump amplitude remains unaffected), theoretical considerations suggest that information capacity of photoreceptors will
be enhanced at low-light levels if signal power is concentrated at low
temporal frequencies (van Hateren, 1992 ). It therefore seems reasonable
to suggest that dopamine (or some other neuromodulator) might be
released, in either a circadian manner, as in Limulus, or in
direct response to ambient illumination, to predispose the eye for
vision in dim light.
The modulation reported here in Drosophila shows intriguing
similarities with that reported in the Limulus lateral eye,
in particular the involvement of biogenic amines, adenylyl cyclase, PKA, and an unconventional myosin (for review, see Barlow, 1987 ; Battelle, 1991 ); however, there are also significant differences. In
Limulus, the overall gain of phototransduction is increased and spontaneous noise caused by thermal isomerizations of
rhodopsin is reduced (Barlow et al., 1987 ), neither of which were
observed in Drosophila. Also, although the kinetics of the
light response are also slowed down in Limulus, this appears
to be primarily by an increase in bump duration rather than bump
latency (Kaplan and Barlow, 1990 ). Finally, it is interesting to
note that dopamine has also been reported to modulate responses of
vertebrate photoreceptors, although in this case indirectly by
modulation of voltage-sensitive ion channels (Akopian and Witkovsky,
1996 ), Na-K ATPase pumps (Shulman and Fox, 1996 ), or rod-cone coupling
(Krizaj et al., 1998 ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received June 14, 1999; revised Aug. 2, 1999; accepted Aug. 5, 1999.
This work was supported by grants from the Biotechnology and Biological
Sciences Research Council (R.C.H., S.C., W.H.), the United
States-Israel Science Foundation and the Minerva Center for Visual
Transduction (Z.S.), and the National Institutes of Health (M.F.,
W.J.W.).
Correspondence should be addressed to Roger C. Hardie, Cambridge
University, Department of Anatomy, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3DY,
United Kingdom.
Dr. Hevers's present address: University of Mainz, Clinical Research
Group, Department of Psychiatry, Untere Zahlbacher Strasse 8 D-55131 Mainz, Germany
 |
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S. K. Park, S. A. Sedore, C. Cronmiller, and J. Hirsh
Type II cAMP-dependent Protein Kinase-deficient Drosophila Are Viable but Show Developmental, Circadian, and Drug Response Phenotypes
J. Biol. Chem.,
June 30, 2000;
275(27):
20588 - 20596.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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