| Literature DB >> 28762890 |
Ben Katz1, Olaf Voolstra2, Hanan Tzadok1, Bushra Yasin1, Elisheva Rhodes-Modrov1, Jonas-Peter Bartels2, Lisa Strauch2, Armin Huber2, Baruch Minke1.
Abstract
Drosophila photoreceptors respond to oscillating light of high frequency (∼100 Hz), while increasing the oscillating light intensity raises the maximally detected frequency. Recently, we reported that dephosphorylation of the light-activated TRP ion channel at S936 is a fast, graded, light-, and Ca2+-dependent process. We further found that this process affects the detection limit of high frequency oscillating light. Accordingly, transgenic Drosophila, which do not undergo phosphorylation at the S936-TRP site (trpS936A), revealed a short time-interval before following the high stimulus frequency (oscillation-lock response) in both dark- and light-adapted flies. In contrast, the trpS936D transgenic flies, which mimic constant phosphorylation, showed a long-time interval to oscillation-lock response in both dark- and light-adapted flies. Here we extend these findings by showing that dark-adapted trpS936A flies reveal light-induced current (LIC) with short latency relative to trpWT or trpS936D flies, indicating that the channels are a limiting factor of response kinetics. The results indicate that properties of the light-activated channels together with the dynamic light-dependent process of TRP phosphorylation at the S936 site determine response kinetics.Entities:
Keywords: TRP channel; TRP dephosphorylation; light induced current; transgenic Drosophila
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28762890 PMCID: PMC5786177 DOI: 10.1080/19336950.2017.1361073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Channels (Austin) ISSN: 1933-6950 Impact factor: 2.581