Search results for "Receptor"

showing 10 items of 6990 documents

Motion detection in goldfish investigated with the optomotor response is “color blind”

1996

AbstractThe action spectrum of the optomotor response in goldfish was measured to investigate which of the four cone types involved in color vision contributes to motion detection. In the dark-adapted state, the action spectrum showed a single maximum in the range of 500–520 nm, and resembled the rod spectral sensitivity function. Surprisingly, the action spectrum measured in the light-adapted state also revealed a single maximum only, located in the long wavelength range between 620 and 660 nm. A comparison with spectral sensitivity functions of the four cone types suggests that motion detection is dominated by the L-cone type. Using a two colored, “red-green” cylinder illuminated with two…

genetic structuresColor visionMotion PerceptionDark AdaptationRetinal Cone Photoreceptor CellsMotionOpticsGoldfishAnimalsMotion perceptionAction spectrumPhysicsbusiness.industryAdaptation OcularColor visionMotion detectionSensory SystemsOphthalmologySpectral sensitivityOptomotor responseRetinal Cone Photoreceptor CellsMonochromatic colorsense organsGoldfish (Carassius auratus)businessOptomotor responseColor PerceptionPhotic StimulationVision Research
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Suppression and Replacement Gene Therapy for Autosomal Dominant Disease in a Murine Model of Dominant Retinitis Pigmentosa

2011

For dominantly inherited disorders development of gene therapies, targeting the primary genetic lesion has been impeded by mutational heterogeneity. An example is rhodopsin-linked autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa with over 150 mutations in the rhodopsin gene. Validation of a mutation-independent suppression and replacement gene therapy for this disorder has been undertaken. The therapy provides a means of correcting the genetic defect in a mutation-independent manner thereby circumventing the mutational diversity. Separate adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors were used to deliver an RNA interference (RNAi)-based rhodopsin suppressor and a codon-modified rhodopsin replacement gene res…

genetic structuresGenetic enhancementMice TransgenicPolymerase Chain ReactionPhotoreceptor cellMiceRNA interferenceRetinitis pigmentosaDrug DiscoverymedicineGeneticsElectroretinographyAnimalsGeneMolecular BiologyPharmacologyGene therapy of the human retinabiologyAutosomal dominant traitGenetic Therapymedicine.diseaseMolecular biologyDisease Models Animalmedicine.anatomical_structureRhodopsinbiology.proteinMolecular MedicineOriginal Articlesense organsRetinitis PigmentosaMolecular Therapy
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Light-dependent CK2-mediated phosphorylation of centrins regulates complex formation with visual G-protein.

2008

AbstractCentrins are Ca2+-binding EF-hand proteins. All four known centrin isoforms are expressed in the ciliary apparatus of photoreceptor cells. Cen1p and Cen2p bind to the visual G-protein transducin in a strictly Ca2+-dependent way, which is thought to regulate light driven movements of transducin between photoreceptor cell compartments. These relatively slow motile processes represent a novel paradigm in light adaptation of photoreceptor cells.Here we validated specific phosphorylation as a novel regulator of centrins in photoreceptors. Centrins were differentially phosphorylated during photoreceptor dark adaptation. Inhibitor treatments revealed protein kinase CK2 as the major protein…

genetic structuresLightG proteinVisionChromosomal Proteins Non-HistoneBlotting WesternDark AdaptationBiologySignal transductionMicrotubulesPhotoreceptor cellMass SpectrometryCa2+-binding proteinsSubstrate SpecificityRats Sprague-DawleyMiceHeterotrimeric G proteinmedicineAnimalsCiliaTransducinPhosphorylationProtein kinase ACasein Kinase IIFluorescent Antibody Technique IndirectMicroscopy ImmunoelectronMolecular BiologyCytoskeletonCiliumCalcium-Binding ProteinsCell BiologyCell biologyRatsMice Inbred C57BLmedicine.anatomical_structureCentrinPhosphorylationHeterotrimeric G-proteinCalciumCattleTransducinsense organsMolecular translocationPhotoreceptor Cells VertebrateProtein BindingBiochimica et biophysica acta
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Interaction of glutamic-acid-rich proteins with the cGMP signalling pathway in rod photoreceptors.

1999

The assembly of signalling molecules into macromolecular complexes (transducisomes) provides specificity, sensitivity and speed in intracellular signalling pathways. Rod photoreceptors in the eye contain an unusual set of glutamic-acid-rich proteins (GARPs) of unknown function. GARPs exist as two soluble forms, GARP1 and GARP2, and as a large cytoplasmic domain (GARP' part) of the beta-subunit of the cyclic GMP-gated channel. Here we identify GARPs as multivalent proteins that interact with the key players of cGMP signalling, phosphodiesterase and guanylate cyclase, and with a retina-specific ATP-binding cassette transporter (ABCR), through four, short, repetitive sequences. In electron mic…

genetic structuresPhosphodiesterase InhibitorsMolecular Sequence DataCyclic Nucleotide-Gated Cation ChannelsGlutamic AcidNerve Tissue ProteinsPlasma protein bindingBiologyIn Vitro TechniquesRetinal Rod Photoreceptor CellsAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceTransducinEye ProteinsPeptide sequenceCyclic GMPMultidisciplinaryPhosphoric Diester HydrolasesPhosphodiesteraseProteinsTransporterGlutamic acidRod Cell Outer SegmentRecombinant ProteinsCell biologyBiochemistryCytoplasmGuanylate CyclaseATP-Binding Cassette TransportersCattleTransducinSignal transductionProtein BindingSignal TransductionNature
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Temporal resolution and temporal transfer properties: gabaergic and cholinergic mechanisms.

2007

Temporal resolution is a basic property of the visual system and critically depends upon retinal temporal coding properties which are also of importance for directional coding. Whether the temporal coding properties for directional coding derive form inherent properties or critically depend upon the temporal coding mechanisms is unclear. Here, the influence of acetylcholine and GABA upon photopic temporal coding was investigated in goldfish, using flicker stimuli, in a behavioral and an electrophysiological (ERG) approach. The goldfish temporal resolution ability decreased from more than 90% correct choices at 20 Hz flicker frequency to about 65% at 45 Hz flicker frequency with a flicker fu…

genetic structuresPhysiologyGABA AgentsCholinergic AgentsFlicker fusion thresholdChoice BehaviorRetinaFlicker FusionGoldfishMuscarinic acetylcholine receptormedicineElectroretinographyAnimalsgamma-Aminobutyric AcidAcetylcholine receptorBehavior AnimalDose-Response Relationship DrugChemistryAdaptation OcularFlickerSensory SystemsAcetylcholineNicotinic agonistTemporal resolutionCholinergicNeuroscienceAcetylcholinePhotic Stimulationmedicine.drugVisual neuroscience
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Optomotor-blind negatively regulates Drosophila eye development by blocking Jak/STAT signaling

2015

Organ formation requires a delicate balance of positive and negative regulators. In Drosophila eye development, wingless (wg) is expressed at the lateral margins of the eye disc and serves to block retinal development. The T-box gene optomotor-blind (omb) is expressed in a similar pattern and is regulated by Wg. Omb mediates part of Wg activity in blocking eye development. Omb exerts its function primarily by blocking cell proliferation. These effects occur predominantly in the ventral margin. Our results suggest that the primary effect of Omb is the blocking of Jak/STAT signaling by repressing transcription of upd which encodes the Jak receptor ligand Unpaired.

genetic structuresScienceNerve Tissue ProteinsEyeTranscription (biology)ddc:570AnimalsDrosophila ProteinsReceptorTranscription factorCell ProliferationJanus KinasesGeneticsMultidisciplinarybiologyCell growthQRbiology.organism_classificationCell biologySTAT Transcription FactorsDrosophila melanogasterEye developmentMedicineDrosophila melanogasterJanus kinaseT-Box Domain ProteinsDrosophila ProteinResearch ArticleTranscription Factors
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Polyamines and ripening of photoreceptor outer segments in chicken embryos.

1995

Abstract Polyamines and their related monoacetyl derivatives were studied in rod outer segment (ROS) and cone outer segment (COS) of photoreceptor cells from chick embryo retina during eye development (7th–18th days). Putrescine was found to be necessary, in the second phase of retinogenesis, to sustain both ROS and COS differentiation and, after acetylation, γ-aminobutyric acid synthesis. On the other hand, spermidine and even more spermine intervene in the third phase of development when photoreceptors mature. Moreover, the presence of N1-acetylspermidine already at the 7th day indicates that in the outer segment of photoreceptor cells too, as in the whole retina, putrescine synthesis com…

genetic structuresSpermineChick EmbryoBiologyOrnithine DecarboxylaseRetinaOrnithine decarboxylasechemistry.chemical_compoundDevelopmental NeuroscienceAcetyltransferasesCadaverinemedicinePutrescineAnimalsPhotoreceptor Cellsgamma-Aminobutyric AcidRetinaBiogenic PolyaminesCell DifferentiationRod Cell Outer SegmentSpermidinemedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryBiochemistrySpermine synthasebiology.proteinPutrescineSperminesense organsSpermidine synthasePolyamine oxidaseDevelopmental BiologyInternational journal of developmental neuroscience : the official journal of the International Society for Developmental Neuroscience
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Induced Night-Vision by Singlet-Oxygen-Mediated Activation of Rhodopsin

2019

In humans, vision is limited to a small fraction of the whole electromagnetic spectrum. One possible strategy for enhancing vision in deep-red or poor-light conditions consists of recruiting chlorophyll derivatives in the rod photoreceptor cells of the eye, as suggested in the case of some deep-sea fish. Here, we employ all-atom molecular simulations and high-level quantum chemistry calculations to rationalize how chlorin e6 (Ce6), widely used in photodynamic therapy although accompanied by enhanced visual sensitivity, mediates vision in the dark, shining light on a fascinating but largely unknown molecular mechanism. First, we identify persistent interaction sites between Ce6 and the extra…

genetic structuresbiology010405 organic chemistrySinglet oxygenPhotoreceptor proteinRetinal010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesVisual sensitivityeye diseasesTransmembrane protein0104 chemical scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryRhodopsinNight visionbiology.proteinBiophysics[CHIM]Chemical SciencesGeneral Materials SciencePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSVisual phototransduction
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100 Years of Benham's Top in Colour Science

1995

For 100 years Benham's top has been a popular device demonstrating pattern-induced flicker colours (PIFCs). Results of early and recent investigations on PIFCs are reported and show that the phenomenon originates in phase-sensitive lateral interactions of modulated neural activity in the retina followed by additional spatial interactions in the visual cortex behind the locus of binocular fusion. Colour matches with normal colour stimuli indicate that S/(M + L) opponent neurons are involved. Dichromats do not find matching stimuli for all PIFCs. PIFCs may become useful in medical diagnosis. The phenomenon is interpreted as a side effect of a neural mechanism providing colour constancy under…

genetic structuresmedia_common.quotation_subjectMotion PerceptionIllusionExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyStimulus (physiology)Retina050105 experimental psychologyBenham's topFlicker Fusion03 medical and health sciencesNeural activity0302 clinical medicineRetinal Rod Photoreceptor CellsArtificial IntelligenceOrientationPsychophysicsmedicinePsychophysicsHumansVisual Pathways0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesVisual Cortexmedia_commonNeuronsRetinaCommunicationOptical Illusionsbusiness.industryFlicker05 social sciencesSensory SystemsOphthalmologymedicine.anatomical_structureVisual cortexRetinal Cone Photoreceptor CellsbusinessPsychologyNeuroscienceColor Perception030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPerception
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Replication of the association between CHRNA4 rs1044396 and harm avoidance in a large population-based sample.

2015

Harm avoidance is a personality trait characterized by excessive worrying and fear of uncertainty, which has repeatedly been related to anxiety disorders. Converging lines of research in rodents and humans point towards an involvement of the nicotinic cholinergic system in the modulation of anxiety. Most notably, the rs1044396 polymorphism in the CHRNA4 gene, which codes for the α4 subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, has been linked to negative emotionality traits including harm avoidance in a recent study. Against this background, we investigated the association between harm avoidance and the rs1044396 polymorphism using data from N=1673 healthy subjects, which were collected …

genetics [Receptors Nicotinic]0301 basic medicineAdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtymedia_common.quotation_subjectContext (language use)Receptors NicotinicPolymorphism Single NucleotideNicotine03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHarm ReductionGermanymedicinePersonalityHumansPharmacology (medical)ddc:610PsychiatryBiological PsychiatryGenetic Association Studiesmedia_commonPharmacologybusiness.industrySmokinggenetics [Smoking]medicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthNicotinic acetylcholine receptor030104 developmental biologyNicotinic agonistNeurologygenetics [Personality]AnxietyHarm avoidanceCholinergicFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessnicotinic acetylcholine receptor alpha4 subunit030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedicine.drugPersonalityEuropean neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology
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