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  • Title: Light-induced changes in S-antigen (arrestin) localization in retinal photoreceptors: differences between rods and cones and defective process in RCS rat retinal dystrophy.
    Author: Mirshahi M, Thillaye B, Tarraf M, de Kozak Y, Faure JP.
    Journal: Eur J Cell Biol; 1994 Feb; 63(1):61-7. PubMed ID: 8005106.
    Abstract:
    The subcellular localization of S-antigen (arrestin), a protein regulating phototransduction in retinal rods, was studied by immunocytochemistry using monoclonal antibodies on sections of Swiss mouse, Lewis, Brown Norway (BN), Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) rdy-p+ (dystrophic) and RCS rdy(+)-p (non-dystrophic) rat retinas. In normal retinas, the topography of S-antigen immunoreactivity in photoreceptor cells varied according to the lighting environment of the animals. In dark-adapted eyes, outer segments did not display any S-antigen immunoreactivity while the inner segments, cell bodies and synaptic terminals were strongly labeled. A few minutes after light exposure, there was an inversion of the pattern of labeling: the label increased in the outer segment but was strongly reduced in the other compartments. After 1 h of light, S-antigen immunoreactivity remained only in outer segments and in a few synaptic terminals. We show that the kinetics of this change is slower in cone than in rod cells, and thus allows the transient visualization of the scarce cone photoreceptors. On the 17th day after birth, photoreceptor cells are well differentiated in all rat strains, including RCS rdy-p+ rats. At this time, the S-antigen shift phenomenon occurred in the non-dystrophic strains, but was not observed in rdy-p+ rats: after light exposure, the intracellular distribution of S-antigen remained the same as in the dark. We suggest that an abnormality in the mechanisms of intracellular protein transport could be a characteristic of this genetic disease.
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