Dissecting independent channel and scaffolding roles of the Drosophila transient receptor potential channel

TitleDissecting independent channel and scaffolding roles of the Drosophila transient receptor potential channel
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsWang T, Jiao Y, Montell C
JournalJ Cell Biol
Volume171
Pagination685-94
Date Published2005 Nov 21
ISSN0021-9525
KeywordsAlleles, Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Animals, Genetically Modified, Antiporters, Arrestins, Blotting, Western, Calcium, Cations, Drosophila melanogaster, Drosophila Proteins, Electroretinography, Gene Expression Regulation, Genes, Insect, Immunoprecipitation, Light, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutation, Mutation, Missense, Phenotype, Photoreceptor Cells, Invertebrate, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Retina, Retinal Diseases, Sequence Homology, Amino Acid, Signal Transduction, Sodium-Calcium Exchanger, Time Factors, Transient Receptor Potential Channels, Vision, Ocular
Abstract

Drosophila transient receptor potential (TRP) serves dual roles as a cation channel and as a molecular anchor for the PDZ protein, INAD (inactivation no afterpotential D). Null mutations in trp cause impairment of visual transduction, mislocalization of INAD, and retinal degeneration. However, the impact of specifically altering TRP channel function is not known because existing loss-of-function alleles greatly reduce protein expression. In the current study we describe the isolation of a set of new trp alleles, including trp(14) with an amino acid substitution juxtaposed to the TRP domain. The trp(14) flies stably express TRP and display normal molecular anchoring, but defective channel function. Elimination of the anchoring function alone in trp(Delta)(1272), had minor effects on retinal morphology whereas disruption of channel function caused profound light-induced cell death. This retinal degeneration was greatly suppressed by elimination of the Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger, CalX, indicating that the cell death was due primarily to deficient Ca(2+) entry rather than disruption of the TRP-anchoring function.

DOI10.1083/jcb.200508030
Alternate JournalJ. Cell Biol.
PubMed ID16301334
PubMed Central IDPMC2171549
Grant ListEY08117 / EY / NEI NIH HHS / United States
EY10852 / EY / NEI NIH HHS / United States