G Proteins and Phototransduction
Harvard University · University of Cambridge · +1 more institution
Abstract
Phototransduction is the process by which a photon of light captured by a molecule of visual pigment generates an electrical response in a photoreceptor cell. Vertebrate rod phototransduction is one of the best-studied G protein signaling pathways. In this pathway the photoreceptor-specific G protein, transducin, mediates between the visual pigment, rhodopsin, and the effector enzyme, cGMP phosphodiesterase. This review focuses on two quantitative features of G protein signaling in phototransduction: signal amplification and response timing. We examine how the interplay between the mechanisms that contribute to amplification and those that govern termination of G protein activity determine the speed and the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 11.62
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 140
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Visual phototransduction
- Rhodopsin
- Transducin
- Biology
- Cell biology
- Effector
- Signal transduction
- Phosphodiesterase