Abstract
Gβ5 exists as two splice variants, Gβ5-S and Gβ5-L, which interact with and stabilize the R7 members of the regulators of G-protein signaling (RGSs): RGS6, RGS7, RGS9, and RGS11. Although the role of Gβ5-L and RGS9-1 is established in photoreceptors, the physiological functions of Gβ5-S and other R7 RGS proteins remain unclear. We found that the electroretinogram of Gβ5−/− mice lacks the b-wave component and that Gβ5-S and RGS11 colocalize with Goα at the tips of the ON-bipolar cell dendrites. Unexpectedly, we found a significant reduction in the number of synaptic triads in the outer plexiform layer (OPL) of the Gβ5−/− mice, which is evident at postnatal day 14. Transgenic expression of Gβ5-L in rods failed to rescue the b-wave or the OPL defects. These results indicate that Gβ5-S is indispensable for OPL integrity and normal light responses of the retina.
Introduction
Gβ5 is the fifth member of the heterotrimeric G-protein β-subunit family (Watson et al., 1994). It exists as two alternatively spliced forms: the photoreceptor-specific long form (Gβ5-L) and the broadly expressed short form (Gβ5-S), which lacks the first exon (Watson et al., 1996). Unlike the other four conventional G-protein β-subunits, Gβ5 interacts with the GGL (G-protein-γ-like) domain found in the R7 members of the regulators of G-protein signaling (RGSs) (Snow et al., 1998). This interaction confers mutual stability to Gβ5 and its partners (Witherow et al., 2000). In retinas of the Gβ5−/− mice, the levels of RGS6, 7, and 11 are downregulated below detection, whereas RGS9-1 falls to ∼3% of the control level (Chen et al., 2003). In the RGS9−/− mice, Gβ5-L is undetectable, whereas Gβ5-S level remains normal (Chen et al., 2000). Recordings from rods of Gβ5−/− (Krispel et al., 2003), RGS9−/− (Chen et al., 2000), and R9AP−/− (RGS9 anchoring protein) (Keresztes et al., 2004) mice, which displayed similar and prolonged recovery of rod photoresponses, have established the role of Gβ5-L/RGS9-1/R9AP as the GTPase accelerating protein complex (GAP) for transducin α-subunit (Gtα). The GAP activity resides in the RGS domain of RGS9-1, whereas Gβ5-L and R9AP confer intracellular stability, membrane affinity, and outer segment targeting modality to the complex (Chen et al., 2003; Martemyanov et al., 2003; Keresztes et al., 2004). Because Gβ5-L expression is restricted to the photoreceptors, we have further characterized the Gβ5−/− animals to study the physiological function of Gβ5-S and other R7 RGS proteins. Here we report that the scotopic and photopic electroretinogram (ERG) b-waves are absent in the Gβ5−/− mice. In addition, we show that Gβ5-S along with RGS11 is expressed at the tips of the ON-bipolar cell dendrites, where ERG b-wave originates. Unexpectedly, we also found that the synapses between photoreceptors and bipolar cells develop abnormally in the absence of Gβ5. These data indicate a hitherto unknown role of Gβ5-S in synaptic formation at the retinal outer plexiform layer (OPL) and suggest a role of Gβ5-S/RGS7 and/or Gβ5-S/RGS11 in normal bipolar cell light responses.
Materials and Methods
Animals.
The Gβ5−/− mice are maintained in a mixed background of C57BL/6 and 129SvEv. The TGβ5L transgenic line was generated by injecting the embryos of C57BL/6 and SJL parents with a DNA construct (see Fig. 1B) containing a C-terminal FLAG-tagged Gβ5-L cDNA placed downstream of a 4 kb rhodopsin promoter and upstream of a mouse protamine polyadenylation signal. Founders were identified by the presence of a 550 bp PCR product using the following primers: RH1.1: 5′-TCA GTG CCT GGA GTT GCG CT and Gβ5-510R: 5′-CTT ATT ATC CAG ACC ACC AC. The TGβ5L−/− mice were generated by breeding the TGβ5L mice with the Gβ5−/− mice and maintained in a mixed background of C57BL/6, 129SvEv, and SJL. The rd1 allele at the Pde6b locus intrinsic to the SJL background was identified by PCR (Pittler and Baehr, 1991) and eliminated. Littermate heterozygotes or age-matched C57BL/6 mice were used as controls. All studied were performed in accordance with the rules and regulations of the National Institutes of Health guidelines for research animals and approved by the institutional animal care and use committee at the Virginia Commonwealth University.
Immunohistochemistry.
The mice were killed by CO2 inhalation followed by cervical dislocation. Eyeballs were enucleated immediately after the mice were killed and immersion fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS for 30 min and cryoprotected overnight in 30% sucrose in PBS at 4°C. They were embedded in TBS (Richard Allan Scientific, Kalamazoo, MI), and 12 μm cryosections were prepared and stored at −80°C. When staining, sections were thawed, washed, and blocked with 10% goat or donkey serum with 0.3% Triton X-100 in PBS for 1 h, followed by overnight incubation at room temperature with appropriate dilutions of primary antibodies (Table 1). Dye-conjugated secondary antibodies were used at 1:100 and incubated for 1 h at room temperature. For reliable detection of Gβ5, RGS7, and RGS11, tyramide signal amplification kit (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) was used by following the manufacturer's instructions. After incubation with secondary antibodies, sections were washed three times with PBS for 10 min each and sealed in Vectashield (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA), and the fluorescent images were captured using a Zeiss (Thornwood, NY) LSM 510 Meta confocal microscope. For analyses of dendritic morphology of rod bipolar cells in the OPL (see Fig. 2G,H), z-stacks spanning a total of 7 μm were taken and rotated on the x- or y-axis to correct for cutting-angle artifacts. OPL images shown were taken at the superior meridian of retinal sections containing the optic nerve head (ONH).
Transmission electron microscopy.
The enucleated eyeballs were immersion fixed overnight with 2% paraformaldehyde/2% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 m phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, at room temperature and processed as described previously (Li et al., 2005). Ultrathin sections (100 nm) were prepared using a Sorvall MT-6000 ultramicrotome. Sections were stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate and imaged using a Joel JEM-1230 transmission electron microscope. For quantification of OPL synaptic triads and ribbons in Figure 3C–F, three sets of age-matched control, Gβ5−/−, or TGβ5L−/− animals were used per indicated postnatal age. For rod spherules, 20 random and nonoverlapped 38 × 38 μm transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images between the meridian and the ONH were analyzed per mouse eye. For cone pedicles, triads and ribbons were counted from 20 to 30 cone pedicles per mouse eye. All images were obtained with retinal sections containing the ONH. The difference in each measurement between the genotypes was examined by one-way ANOVA with p values <0.01 considered significant.
Electroretinography.
Mice were dark adapted for 16–24 h and anesthetized using ketamine/xylazine (150 and 10 mg/kg, i.p.). The eyes were dilated with 1% atropine sulfate (Falcon Laboratories, Forth Worth, TX). ERG recordings were performed using the UTAS E-3000 system (LKC Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) under scotopic and photopic (30 cd/m2) conditions as previously described (Li et al., 2005), except that responses from both eyes were recorded simultaneously but analyzed individually. Typically the difference in the A-wave amplitudes between the two eyes of the same animal was <10%. Three to 15 responses were collected and averaged for each stimulus intensity. The interstimulus interval ranges from 5 to 120 s for control and TGβ5L−/− animals. For Gβ5−/− mice, it ranges from 30 to >600 s to ensure full photoreceptor recovery. For intravitreal delivery, 2 μl of 11 mm l-2-amino-4-phosphono-butyric acid (APB) (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) dissolved in PBS was injected into the right eye under anesthesia in the dark using pulled-glass pipettes and a pneumatic Picopump. The final APB concentration was estimated to be 2.2 mm assuming an eyeball volume of 10 μl. The left eye was subsequently injected with PBS and served as control. Animals were allowed to recover from eye injections for 40 min in darkness before ERG recordings ensued.
Results
Gβ5−/− and TGβ5L−/− mice lack ERG b-waves
The scotopic ERG responses of dark-adapted Gβ5−/− mice exhibited waveforms distinctive to those of the controls, indicating the absence of the b-wave component (Fig. 1A). Photopic ERG, isolated by 0.01 Hz of flickering 80 cd s/m2 flashes, also revealed the absence of a b-wave (data not shown). ERG b-wave originates from the ON-bipolar cells (Stockton and Slaughter, 1989) and may be affected by postsynaptic or presynaptic defects at the OPL (Masu et al., 1995; Mansergh et al., 2005). Gβ5−/− mice have delayed phototransduction recovery because of the absence of the transducin GAP complex in photoreceptors. This defect is not expected to cause the no-b-wave phenotype because ERG b-wave is present in the RGS9−/− mice, which have a phototransduction recovery defect similar to that of Gβ5−/− mice (Lyubarsky et al., 2001). To further confirm this, we created a transgenic mouse line, TGβ5L−/−, in which a FLAG-tagged Gβ5-L is expressed in rods of the Gβ5−/− mice. The tagged Gβ5-L restores the level of RGS9-1 (Fig. 1C) and is found in the outer segments (Fig. 1D). The dominant recovery time constants (τD) for control and Gβ5−/− rods were previously determined by suction recordings to be 260 and 2700 ms, respectively (Krispel et al., 2003). Using double flash ERG recordings, we found comparable τD for the TGβ5L−/− (235 ± 8 ms, n = 15) and the control animals (189 ± 12 ms, n = 17). Despite the rescue of the rod recovery defect, the scotopic ERG responses of the TGβ5L−/− mice revealed a phenotype similar to that of the Gβ5−/− mice (Fig. 1E). The origin of the no-b-wave phenotype of the Gβ5−/− mice is thus determined to be postphotoreceptoral.
To examine whether the b-wave is completely or partially lost in the TGβ5L−/− mice, we compared the ERG responses with and without the treatment of APB, an agonist of the group III metabotropic glutamate receptors (Slaughter and Miller, 1981). As shown in Figure 1E, in control animals APB changes the retinal light responses by eliminating the ERG b-wave of the treated eyes but not in the untreated ones. Similar treatments to the TGβ5L−/− animals cause minimal changes to ERG waveforms (Fig. 1E), suggesting that ERG b-wave is completely lost when Gβ5-S is absent. There is a small positive component immediately following the a-wave in the TGβ5L−/− ERG responses under higher stimulus intensities. This upward potential is also present in APB treated control animals and may reflect the activity of hyperpolarization-activated and cyclic nucleotide gated channels present in the inner segments of the photoreceptors (Fain et al., 1978).
Gβ5−/− mice display abnormal rod bipolar cell morphology
The downregulation of the R7 RGS proteins in Gβ5−/− mouse retinas facilitates the examination of their expression by immunocytochemistry (Fig. 2). We found that Gβ5, RGS7, and RGS11 are localized to the OPL and that the inner plexiform layer contains Gβ5 and RGS7. Additionally, we discovered that Gβ5 and RGS11 colocalize with Goα at the dendritic tips of the ON-bipolar cells (Fig. 2E,F). Attempts to localize RGS6 were hampered by the lack of good antibodies for murine RGS6. However, we found a commercial antibody (Table 1) that stained the cholinergic synaptic terminals of the control and not the Gβ5−/− animals (data not shown). Because the no-b-wave ERG phenotype of the Gβ5−/− mice originates from postphotoreceptoral loss of Gβ5-S, we further investigated the morphology of the rod bipolar cells marked by PKCα and mGluR6. As shown in Figure 2G, OPL of the control mice showed elaborate dendritic branching of rod bipolar cells capped with mGluR6. In contrast, the OPL of the Gβ5−/− mice appears disorganized with shorter dendrites (Fig. 2H), suggesting gross morphological abnormalities. This finding is in contrast to the normal OPL morphology reported for three other mouse lines with known postphotoreceptoral origin of similar no-b-wave phenotype, namely mGluR6−/− (Tagawa et al., 1999), Goα−/− (Dhingra et al., 2000), and nob (Ball et al., 2003).
Rod synaptic triads in the OPL of the Gβ5−/− mice fail to develop properly
The morphological defects at the OPL of the Gβ5−/− mice could result from maintenance failure, developmental defect, or both. We found that Gβ5-S is detectable in retinal extracts as early as postnatal day 1 (P1), with a sharp increase from P7 to P10 and plateaus to the adult level at P21 (Fig. 3A). The expression profile of Gβ5-S is consistent with the notion that it plays a role in retinal development. In addition, we found that the typical three to four tiers of rod synaptic triads of normal OPL at P21 are reduced to one or two in aged-matched Gβ5−/− mice (Fig. 3B, top vs bottom). The rod synaptic triads of the control animals typically possess three postsynaptic elements consisting of two lateral dendrites of the horizontal cells and a central one/two ON-bipolar cell dendrites and a presynaptic ribbon (Kolb, 1977). In contrast, most of the rod spherules in the Gβ5−/− mice lack the central bipolar cell dendritic element (Fig. 3B, bottom). By analysis of OPL in the wild-type and Gβ5−/− mice, we found that the number of rod spherules between the two genotypes are similar (12 ± 0.38 and 12 ± 0.34 for WT and Gβ5−/− mice, respectively, over a 38 × 38 μm OPL area), but the percentage of rod termini with normal synaptic triads in P21 Gβ5−/− mice are reduced approximately fivefold compared with those of age-matched control animals (Fig. 3C). The percentage of control rod termini with triads increased steadily from 8.6 ± 2.9% at P13 to 34.1 ± 1.6% at P21. However, regardless of the age of the Gβ5−/− animals, the numbers were consistently below the level of the P13 control animals. A small but statistically significant reduction in the percentage of rod termini with ribbons beyond P15 was noted in Gβ5−/− and TGβ5L−/− mice (Fig. 3D,F). Furthermore, we found ∼2 ± 0.08 and 1 ± 0.14 synaptic triads per cone pedicle for wild-type and Gβ5−/− mice, respectively (Fig. 3E) (p = 0.0009). The numbers of ribbons per cone pedicle for wild-type and Gβ5−/− mice were 4 ± 0.23 and 3 ± 0.13, respectively (p = 0.0004). These data indicate that synaptic connection between bipolar cells and photoreceptors are abnormal in the Gβ5−/− animals. Transgenic expression of a tagged Gβ5-L in rods of the Gβ5−/− animals restored normal photoreceptor recovery but failed to rescue the OPL morphological defect as the number of OPL synaptic triads remains low in adult TGβ5L−/− animals (Fig. 3F).
Discussion
Gβ5 is essential for normal development of OPL synapses between photoreceptors and bipolar cells
We found, unexpectedly, abnormalities in the OPL of the Gβ5−/− mice, with short bipolar cell dendrites and reduction in number of synaptic triads at photoreceptor terminals. It has been reported that the ON-bipolar cells project neuroepithelial processes into the outer nuclear layer (ONL) until P7, followed by retraction of these processes from P7 to P9 (Morgan et al., 2006). The synaptic connections between photoreceptors and bipolar cells take shape between P10 to P14, during which ERG a-wave gradually develops and b-wave becomes recordable at the end of this period (Takada et al., 2004). The presence of Gβ5-S over this critical period and the failure of Gβ5−/− mice to increase the number of synaptic triads strongly suggest a role of Gβ5-S in normal OPL synaptic development. This conclusion is further supported by similar OPL morphological defects found in the adult TGβ5L−/− mice, in which recovery of rod phototransduction appears normal but the ERG b-wave is missing. Intriguingly, the reduction of synaptic triads is more severe at rod spherules than at cone pedicles. It remains to be determined whether all types of cone ON-bipolar cells or just a subset are affected. Systematic restoration of Gβ5-S in selective retinal layers or inducible expression at different developmental stages may thus provide valuable insight into the cellular origin of this OPL phenotype.
A role of Gβ5-S and R7 RGS proteins in the mGluR6 pathway of the ON-bipolar cells?
In the dark, glutamate released from photoreceptor terminals nearly saturates the mGluR6 metabotropic glutamate receptor located at the tips of the ON-bipolar cell dendrites (Sampath and Rieke, 2004). Activated mGluR6 couples to Goα (Nawy, 1999; Dhingra et al., 2000) and through an unknown mechanism closes cation channels resulting in membrane hyperpolarization. Upon illumination, the release of glutamate dwindles allowing ON-bipolar cells to reopen the channels and depolarize their membranes. This depolarization appears as a light-induced positive-going corneal potential in ERG and is referred to as the b-wave, which immediately follows the photoreceptor-driven negative potential (a-wave). All R7 RGS proteins, when complex with Gβ5-S, accelerate the hydrolysis of GTP by Goα in vitro (Hooks et al., 2003). Because Gβ5-S, RGS11, and RGS7 are present at the OPL, where ERG b-wave originates, it is not unreasonable to speculate that Gβ5-S/RGS7 and/or Gβ5-S/RGS11 participates in the mGluR6 signaling pathway by acting as the GAP for Goα. It is reported that failure to deactivate Goα abolishes the light responses of rod ON-bipolar cells (Sampath and Rieke, 2004). The absence of both scotopic (Fig. 1A) and photopic ERG b-waves in the Gβ5−/− mice, in which all R7 RGS proteins are downregulated (Chen et al., 2003), is consistent with the notion that sustained mGluR6 and Goα signaling abolishes light responses of ON-bipolar cells. The speculation that Gβ5-S/RGS7 and/or Gβ5-S/RGS11 regulates GTP hydrolysis of Goα is apparently at odds with the notion that Ret-RGS1 is the physiological GAP for Goα in the ON-bipolar cells (Dhingra et al., 2004).
Are the two phenotypes of the Gβ5−/− mice reported here related? Lack of ERG b-wave does not necessarily cause morphological defects, exemplified by the normal OPL appearance of the Goα−/− (Dhingra et al., 2000), mGluR6−/− (Tagawa et al., 1999), and nob animals (Ball et al., 2003). On the other hand, the OPL abnormality may be responsible for the observed no-b-wave phenotype. Whether the lack of ERG b-wave in Gβ5−/− mice reflects synaptic abnormality, sustained mGluR6/Goα signaling, or both remains to be determined. A detailed characterization of other R7 RGS knock-out or tissue-specific Gβ5 knock-out animals will be informative. Furthermore, it is interesting to determine whether RGS7 and RGS11 coexist in the same cells. The two novel phenotypes reported here signify the importance of Gβ5-S and the R7 RGS proteins in the CNS and the usefulness of the Gβ5−/− mice to help unveil their physiological functions.
Footnotes
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This work was supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) Grant EY013811 (C.K.C.). Transmission electron microscopy was performed at the Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy Microscopy Facility, supported in part by funding from NIH–National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Grant 5P30NS047463. Confocal microscopy was performed at the Massey Cancer Center, supported in part by NIH Grant 1P30CA16059. We thank Judy Williamson for assistance with electron microscopy and Lawrence Lanberg for ultramicrotomy.
- Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Ching-Kang Jason Chen, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Box 980614, Virginia Commonwealth University, 1101 E. Marshall Street, Room 2–032b, Richmond, VA 23298. cjchen{at}vcu.edu