The metabotropic receptor mGluR6 is localized to
the dendrites of On bipolar cells and mediates synaptic
input from photoreceptors. The binding of glutamate to
the receptor activates a phosphodiesterase (PDE), which
then hydrolyzes cGMP. A nonselective cationic conductance,
believed to be gated directly by cGMP, is turned off as
a result of the fall in cGMP levels, and the cell hyperpolarizes.
Here we present evidence for regulation of the conductance
by an additional mechanism that it is independent of cGMP.
Whole-cell recordings were obtained from On bipolar cells
in slices of tiger salamander retina. Dialysis of cells
with 1 μM KN-62 or 10 μM KN-93, two inhibitors
of type II calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaMKII),
depressed cGMP-dependent currents. This depression persisted
when hydrolysis of cGMP was prevented with IBMX, a broad-spectrum
PDE inhibitor, suggesting that CaMKII acts downstream from
the PDE in the cascade. The depression of cGMP-dependent
currents was probably not due to a direct interaction of
the inhibitors with the channels as neither 1 μM KN-62
or 10 μM KN-93 was found to have any effect on cyclic
nucleotide-gated channels when applied directly to excised
patches of rod outer segments. We propose that phosphorylation
by CaMKII may be an important mechanism for regulating
the cGMP-dependent conductance of On bipolar cells.