[No authors listed]
In mammalian retinas, it has been believed that just one kind of phosducin (PD) commonly exists in both rods and cones. However, we have previously reported that there are rod- and cone-specific PDs (OlPD-R and OlPD-C) in medaka (Oryzias latipes) retina [FEBS Lett., 502, 117-121, 2001]. To clarify the distribution and evolution of these photoreceptor type-specific PDs, we investigated PDs of another teleost and a reptile. Immunohistochemical and Western blot analyses using anti-medaka PD antisera demonstrated that two kinds of PDs are expressed in zebrafish (Danio rerio) photoreceptor cells. Our study is suggestive that teleosts generally possess rod- and cone-specific PDs. We isolated a cDNA encoding putative PD (PmlPD) of a diurnal gecko (Phelsuma madagascariensis longinsulae). Because diurnal gecko possesses a pure-cone retina, it was expected that PmlPD would be expressed in cones. Molecular phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that PmlPD was more closely related to mammalian PDs than teleost cone-specific PDs, suggesting that the rod- and cone-specific subtype of teleost PDs have arisen after the teleost-tetrapod divergence.
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