In vertebrate retina interneuronal communication through gap
junctions is involved in light adaptation and in the transfer of visual
information from the rod pathway to the cone pathway. Reports over the
last two decades have indicated that these gap junctions are regulated
by cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinases suggesting that the gap
junction proteins, connexins, are phosphorylated. Though all the
connexins involved in light adaptation and information transfer from
rod to cone pathway are not yet known, connexin 36 has been shown to be
definitively involved in the latter process. We have therefore
attempted to investigate the cyclic nucleotide-dependent
phosphorylation of this connexin in bovine retina. We found several
soluble and membrane proteins in bovine retina whose phosphorylation
was regulated by cyclic nucleotides. However, no protein of about 36
kDa with cyclic nucleotide-regulated phosphorylation was found in gap
junction-enriched membrane preparations. A 36-kDa phosphorylated
protein was found in gap junction-enriched membranes phosphorylated in
the presence of calcium. However, this protein was not
immunoprecipitated by anti-connexin 36 antibodies indicating that it
was not connexin 36 in spite of its similarity in molecular weight.
Immunoprecipitation did reveal phosphorylated proteins
coimmunoprecipitated with connexin 36. Two of these proteins were
identified as beta and alpha tubulin subunits. Though cyclic GMP and
calcium did not greatly influence the association of these proteins
with connexin 36, the results suggest the possibility of connexin 36
associating with other proteins. Together, these observations indicate
that interneuronal communication at gap junctions made by connexin 36
may not be regulated by direct phosphorylation of connexin 36, but
possibly by phosphorylation of associated proteins.