Colocalization of pinopsin with two types of G-protein alpha-subunits in the chicken pineal gland.
Pinopsin is a photoreceptive molecule present in the outer segments of chicken pinealocytes. In this paper, the localization of alpha-subunits of G-proteins, rod transducin (Gt1) and Gq/11, was examined by immunoelectron microscopy to investigate whether these G-proteins colocalize with pinopsin in the outer segments. Ultrathin sections of the chicken pineal gland were double-immunolabeled with antibodies to pinopsin and either Gt1alpha or Gq/11alpha. As shown previously, the outer segments around the follicular lumen exhibited divergent morphology with ciliary, bulbous, or lamellate shapes, and most of them displayed pinopsin immunoreactivity. The majority (>90%) of pinopsin-immunopositive outer segments were labeled by anti-Gt1alpha and/or anti-Gq/11alpha antibodies. Application of double-immunolabeling to serial sections demonstrated that a large number of the pinopsin-immunopositive outer segments contained both Gt1alpha and Gq/11alpha immunoreactivities. These results suggest that Gt1alpha and Gq/11alpha are functionally coupled with light-activated pinopsin within a single outer segment.[1]References
- Colocalization of pinopsin with two types of G-protein alpha-subunits in the chicken pineal gland. Matsushita, A., Yoshikawa, T., Okano, T., Kasahara, T., Fukada, Y. Cell Tissue Res. (2000) [Pubmed]
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