The phototransduction cascade in invertebrate photoreceptors
has not been fully elucidated. It has been proposed that in
Limulus ventral photoreceptor cGMP is the intracellular
second messenger that directly controls the gating of the
light-dependent channels (Johnson et al., 1986; Bacigalupo et
al., 1991). Recently, a putative cGMP-gated channel cDNA,
Lcng1, has been cloned from Limulus and shown
to be expressed in the brain and the ventral eye (Chen et al.,
1999). In this study, we sought to more specifically localize
the LCNG1 transcript and protein. In situ hybridization
was used to determine whether the gene is expressed in glia
or photoreceptor cells in the ventral eye. The results clearly
demonstrated that Lcng1 mRNA is transcribed in the
ventral photoreceptors. On Western blots probed with a polyclonal
antibody raised against the C-terminus of LCNG1, a 100-kDa band
and an 80-kDa band was labeled in the membrane protein preparations
from brain and ventral eye, respectively. The labeling of these
bands was blocked by preabsorption of the antibody with the
antigen, indicating the labeling specificity. Immunocytochemistry
and confocal microscopy were applied to investigate the subcellular
localization of this antigen. Immunolabeling was highly localized
in the transducing lobes of ventral eye photoreceptors and lateral
eye photoreceptors. In both cases, the labeling was associated
with membrane regions specialized for phototransduction, but
the exact pattern appeared to be somewhat different in the two
eyes. Preabsorption of the antiserum with antigen abolished
the labeling, confirming specificity. The results lend support
to the hypothesis that a cGMP-gated channel is directly involved
in the phototransduction process.