Literature DB >> 21542135

Ectoplasm, ghost in the R cell machine?

Hongai Xia1, Donald F Ready.   

Abstract

Drosophila photoreceptors (R cells) are an extreme instance of sensory membrane amplification via apical microvilli, a widely deployed and deeply conserved operation of polarized epithelial cells. Developmental rotation of R cell apices aligns rhabdomere microvilli across the optical axis and enables enormous membrane expansion in a new, proximal distal dimension. R cell ectoplasm, the specialized cortical cytoplasm abutting the rhabdomere is likewise enormously amplified. Ectoplasm is dominated by the actin-rich terminal web, a conserved operational domain of the ancient vesicle-transport motor, Myosin V. R cells harness Myosin V to move two distinct cargoes, the biosynthetic traffic that builds the rhabdomere during development, and the migration of pigment granules that mediates the adaptive "longitudinal pupil" in adults, using two distinct Rab proteins. Ectoplasm further shapes a distinct cortical endosome compartment, the subrhabdomeral cisterna (SRC), vital to normal cell function. Reticulon, a protein that promotes endomembrane curvature, marks the SRC. R cell visual arrestin 2 (Arr2) is predominantly cytoplasmic in dark-adapted photoreceptors but on illumination it translocates to the rhabdomere, where it quenches ongoing photosignaling by binding to activated metarhodopsin. Arr2 translocation is "powered" by diffusion; a motor is not required to move Arr2 and ectoplasm does not obstruct its rapid diffusion to the rhabdomere.
Copyright © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21542135      PMCID: PMC3202658          DOI: 10.1002/dneu.20898

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Neurobiol        ISSN: 1932-8451            Impact factor:   3.964


  67 in total

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  7 in total

Review 1.  Intracellular trafficking in Drosophila visual system development: a basis for pattern formation through simple mechanisms.

Authors:  Chih-Chiang Chan; Daniel Epstein; P Robin Hiesinger
Journal:  Dev Neurobiol       Date:  2011-12       Impact factor: 3.964

Review 2.  Emerging perspectives on multidomain phosphatidylinositol transfer proteins.

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3.  RDGBα localization and function at membrane contact sites is regulated by FFAT-VAP interactions.

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4.  Crumbs regulates rhodopsin transport by interacting with and stabilizing myosin V.

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Authors:  Andrew C Zelhof; Simpla Mahato; Xulong Liang; Jonathan Rylee; Emma Bergh; Lauren E Feder; Matthew E Larsen; Steven G Britt; Markus Friedrich
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6.  chaoptin, prominin, eyes shut and crumbs form a genetic network controlling the apical compartment of Drosophila photoreceptor cells.

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7.  Changes in endolysosomal organization define a pre-degenerative state in the crumbs mutant Drosophila retina.

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  7 in total

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