Molecular characterization of human and bovine rod photoreceptor cGMP phosphodiesterase alpha-subunit and chromosomal localization of the human gene.

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Citation

Pittler SJ, Baehr W, Wasmuth JJ, McConnell DG, Champagne MS, vanTuinen P, Ledbetter D, Davis RL

Molecular characterization of human and bovine rod photoreceptor cGMP phosphodiesterase alpha-subunit and chromosomal localization of the human gene.

Genomics. 1990 Feb;6(2):272-83.

PubMed ID
2155175 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Defects in proteins that function in photoreceptor signal transduction are prime suspects as causes of some human hereditary retinal degenerations. We have characterized cDNA clones encoding the alpha-subunit of human and bovine rod cell cGMP phosphodiesterase a key phototransduction enzyme. Clones from both species contain an open reading frame capable of coding for an approximately 100-kDa polypeptide of 859 amino acids, 94% of which are identical. Two or more transcripts were detected in both human and bovine retinal poly(A)+ RNA preparations, although the human transcripts ranging from 5.3 to 4.9 kb are significantly larger than the two bovine transcripts of 4.6 and 4.0 kb. The bovine and human genes appear to exist in single copy, with the bovine gene spanning more than 140 kb of genomic DNA. Somatic cell hybrids were used to map the human gene to the long arm of chromosome 5 (5q31.2----q34). Finally, the use of the candidate gene approach in the study of hereditary retinal dystrophies is discussed.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Rod cGMP-specific 3',5'-cyclic phosphodiesterase subunit alphaP16499Details