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Copyright © 2003 European Molecular Biology Organization Regulation of light-dependent Gqα translocation and morphological changes in fly photoreceptors Department of Biological Chemistry and the Kühne Minerva Center for Studies of Visual Transduction, Institute of Life Sciences, The Hebrew University, Givat Ram, Jerusalem, 91904, 1Department of Physiology and the Kühne Minerva Center for Studies of Visual Transduction, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, 91120, Israel and 2Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556-0369, USA 3Corresponding author e-mail: selinger/at/vms.huji.ac.il M.Kosloff and N.Elia contributed equally to this work Received May 8, 2002; Revised November 21, 2002; Accepted December 3, 2002. This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract Heterotrimeric G-proteins relay signals between membrane-bound receptors and downstream effectors. Little is known, however, about the regulation of Gα subunit localization within the natural endogenous environment of a specialized signaling cell. Here we show, using live Drosophila flies, that light causes massive and reversible translocation of the visual Gqα to the cytosol, associated with marked architectural changes in the signaling compartment. Molecular genetic dissection together with detailed kinetic analysis enabled us to characterize the translocation cycle and to unravel how signaling molecules that interact with Gqα affect these processes. Epistatic analysis showed that Gqα is necessary but not sufficient to bring about the morphological changes in the signaling organelle. Furthermore, mutant analysis indicated that Gqβ is essential for targeting of Gqα to the membrane and suggested that Gqβ is also needed for efficient activation of Gqα by rhodopsin. Our results support the ‘two-signal model’ hypothesis for membrane targeting in a living organism and characterize the regulation of both the activity-dependent Gq localization and the cellular architectural changes in Drosophila photoreceptors. Keywords: G-protein/localization/membrane attachment/rhabdomere/vision Introduction In many signaling cascades, heterotrimeric (αβγ) G-proteins function as molecular transducers that relay signals from cell surface receptors to downstream effectors. To ensure specificity, effective concentrations and speed of interactions, the signaling components usually are restricted to the membrane domain. One of the main determinants of this localization is the dynamic lipid modification of G-proteins by S-acylation, commonly referred to as palmitoylation. All α-subunits of heterotrimeric G-proteins (with the exception of transducin) are modified reversibly by palmitoylation on cysteine residues at the N-terminus of the protein (reviewed in Mumby, 1997; Wedegaertner, 1998; Chen and Manning, 2001). This modification has been equated with targeting and anchorage of the G-protein to the plasma membrane, and influences its functional interaction with relevant receptors and effectors (Wedegaertner et al., 1993; Edgerton et al., 1994; Hepler et al., 1996; Wise et al., 1997; Wedegaertner, 1998; Chen and Manning, 2001; Hughes et al., 2001). In particular, the Gq/G11 family is representative of a wider group of heterotrimeric G-proteins that include Gs, G12 and G13, which are modified only by palmitoylation on N-terminal cysteines of the α-subunit (Wedegaertner et al., 1993; Edgerton et al., 1994; Hepler et al., 1996; Wise et al., 1997; Wedegaertner, 1998). There are, however, conflicting reports about the relationship between the palmitoylation state of a heterotrimeric G-protein and its cellular localization (Resh, 1999; Chen and Manning, 2001). Results range from persistent membrane localization of the α-subunit (Edgerton et al., 1994; Mumby et al., 1994; Huang et al., 1999; Hughes et al., 2001) to activity-dependent translocation from the membrane to the cytosol as a result of depalmitoylation (Milligan and Unson, 1989; Ransnas et al., 1989; Wedegaertner et al., 1993, 1996; Wedegaertner and Bourne, 1994; Terakita et al., 1996; Wise et al., 1997; Narita, 1999). These apparent conflicting findings might be due to the inherent differences among various cell lines and between transfected cell cultures and the original physiological environment of the G-protein (discussed in Jones et al., 1997). Indeed, most previous studies have been carried out using different cell cultures that were transfected with the analyzed proteins. However, in two marine invertebrate visual systems, the phenotype of Gqα translocation has been described previously in vivo (Terakita et al., 1996; Narita et al., 1999). While a great deal was learnt in previous studies, little is known about the mechanism and control of the dynamic localization of G-proteins within their endogenous physiological environment. The extensively studied Drosophila visual system, combined with the large repertoire of Drosophila visual mutants, offers a unique opportunity to study in vivo signaling by Gq in sensory neurons in general and the effects of other signaling molecules on its translocation cycle in particular. In contrast to cell cultures, this specialized system is comprised of highly polarized and compartmentalized cells that sequester the phototransduction machinery in a specific membrane organelle—the rhabdomere (Minke and Hardie, 2000; Hardie and Raghu, 2001). This signaling organelle is functionally equivalent to the vertebrate rod photoreceptor outer segment, as both are the structural unit responsible for the utmost sensitivity of the photoreceptor cells, capable of detecting single photons. At the biochemical level, however, each system uses a different cascade to translate light into an electrical signal (Hardie and Raghu, 2001). Drosophila phototransduction is initiated upon activation of rhodopsin by light and proceeds through a photoreceptor-specific Gq protein (DGq), which activates phospholipase C (PLC) (Devary et al., 1987; Scott et al., 1995). In turn, the latter activates downstream effectors that culminate in the opening of the trp and trpl channels, depolarization of the photoreceptor cell and a rise in cellular calcium (Hardie and Raghu, 2001). Drosophila photoreceptors contain extraordinarily high amounts of signaling molecules per cell. For example, each photoreceptor cell contains ~30 × 106 copies of rhodopsin and ~3 × 106 copies of DGqα (Hardie and Raghu, 2001). This high copy number, as well as the specificity of the signaling molecules for the photoreceptor cells, enabled us to utilize the live, whole fly in the present studies. Here we show that in Drosophila photoreceptors, activation of DGq by light causes a massive, but reversible, translocation of the α-subunit to the cytosol. Intriguingly, we also observed activity-dependent architectural changes that are specific to the signaling compartment of the photoreceptor. Epistatic analysis of these light-dependent changes shows that DGqα is necessary but not sufficient to bring about these changes. Our detailed analysis of the translocation and recovery kinetics of DGqα in wild-type flies together with the use of specific visual mutants enabled us to determine how other signaling components influence these processes. Our study provides a functional and morphological analysis of the voyages undertaken by a G-protein in vivo, which may have implications for other sensory transduction systems and for a variety of proteins that undergo reversible anchoring to the cell membrane. Results Light-dependent translocation of the DGqα protein The distribution of DGqα between membrane and cytosol can be determined readily and accurately by separation of the membranes from the cytosol followed by western blot analysis (Figure 1
Any physiologically relevant event such as the activity-dependent translocation of DGqα would be expected to be fully reversible once the activating stimulus is turned off. To examine the recovery process, flies illuminated until maximum translocation had occurred were illuminated briefly with orange light to photoconvert the active meta-rhodopsin to the inactive rhodopsin. Following this treatment, the flies were kept in the dark for various times and assayed for DGqα localization (Figure 1 Past and recent work has shown that in vertebrate photoreceptors, transducin moves along the photoreceptor cell (Brann and Cohen, 1987; Philp et al., 1987; Whelan and McGinnis, 1988; Sokolov et al., 2002), reminiscent of the results shown above. Because of the nature of the experimental procedures used, it was not determined whether translocation from the membrane to the cytosol was involved. The mechanism of translocation of Gqα described in the present study probably differs from that of transducin, as the latter is not palmitoylated and instead is modified by stable myristoylation. Depalmitoylation of Gq was shown to be the underlying cause of its translocation from membrane to cytosol. A method previously used to show this was incubating membranes or isolated proteins containing acylated cysteines (and in particular palmitoylated Gq) with neutral hydroxylamine, resulting in specific cleavage of the thioester bond and consequently, translocation of the protein to the soluble fraction (Degtyarev et al., 1993; Wedegaertner et al., 1993; Pepperberg et al., 1995; Iiri et al., 1996; Terakita et al., 1996; Jones et al., 1997). We therefore incubated isolated membranes of fly heads with 1 M hydroxylamine in Tris buffer pH 8.0 for 30 min at 30°C. This treatment caused translocation of ~50% of the DGqα to the soluble fraction, while incubation with the equivalent buffer lacking hydroxylamine did not result in appreciable translocation (data not shown). These results suggest that the in vivo translocation of the DGqα to the cytosol is the result of thioester bond cleavage, as indeed was shown previously for transfected Gq in cell lines. In an attempt to see whether the translocation of DGqα can be observed at the structural level of the cell, we applied transmission electron microscopy (TEM) using immunogold staining of DGqα with specific antibodies (Figure 2
Light-dependent architectural changes in the photoreceptor Intriguingly, we also found that illumination apparently caused disruption of the rhabdomeral boundary (marked with arrows in Figure 2 To see whether these morphological changes indeed correlate with changes in the cytoskeleton, we used fluorescent confocal microscopy of Rh1–GFP–moe flies. In these transgenic flies, a GFP–moesin chimera expressed in the photoreceptors (see Materials and methods) marks the actin cytoskeleton (Edwards et al., 1997; Chang and Ready, 2000). In dark-adapted flies (Figure 3
Epistatic analysis of the architectural changes To investigate these architectural changes further, we turned to ultrastructural EM of the photoreceptor cell. As a control, we illuminated wild-type flies with white light to make sure the changes are not an artifact of illumination with blue light, and saw that the same phenomenon is observed with either treatment (Figure 4
We next used the powerful genetics of Drosophila for epistatic analysis of the activity-dependent architectural changes. The Gαq1 mutant, a severe hypomorph in DGqα, exhibited a complete block of this phenomenon (Figure 5
Intriguingly, in contrast to wild-type flies, in the trpP343 mutant, the DGqα protein does not spread out of the rhabdomere after illumination (Figure 5 Constitutively active rhodopsin results in persistent localization of DGqα to the cytosol To learn more about the translocation process of DGqα, we used the Drosophila ninaEpp100 mutant in which rho dopsin is constitutively active (T.D.Zars and D.R.Hyde, in preparation). In this mutant, ~70% of the α-subunit is in the cytosol, with no noticeable difference between dark-adapted and blue-illuminated flies (Figure 6
DGqβ is critical for the translocation cycle of DGqα The βγ dimer binds the inactive Gα (charged with GDP) and plays an important role in localization and interaction of the α-subunit with upstream and downstream signaling components (Degtyarev et al., 1994; Iiri et al., 1996; Wedegaertner, 1998; Resh, 1999). Previous work employed Gqα mutations to disrupt the interaction between the α-subunit and the βγ complex in cell cultures (Evanko et al., 2000). While these mutant Gqα proteins were localized mainly to the cytosol, this approach could not resolve the question of whether this steady-state localization was due to an increase in the rate of the translocation reaction or an inhibition of the recovery back to the membrane. The Drosophila visual system offers a different approach to study the role of the β-subunit by using the Gβe1 mutant, which expresses small amounts of the eye-specific DGqβ (Dolph et al., 1994). We found that in the Gβe1 mutant, the kinetics of the light-dependent translocation of DGqα, and in particular the subsequent recovery in the dark, were markedly affected (Figure 7
Positively charged patches in the N-terminus of DGqα The translocation cycle of DGqα can also be influenced by additional factors. We have shown recently that all human Gα proteins that undergo palmitoylation as their only lipid modification (including Gq) contain a novel basic, positively charged motif in their N-termini (Kosloff et al., 2002). This structural motif was suggested to participate together with the βγ complex in the recovery of these Gα subunits back to the membrane. It is therefore notable that of the 34 residues in the N-terminal α-helix of DGqα, 11 are basic, positively-charged residues (Figure 8
DGqα translocation is independent of PLC and downstream signaling In Drosophila photoreceptors, PLC plays a key role in both excitation and termination of the response to light (Cook et al., 2000). DGqα activates the PLC enzyme, while PLC accelerates the hydrolysis of GTP, thereby leading to response termination (Berstein et al., 1992). In the absence of PLC, DGqα remains in the activated (GTP-bound) state much longer than in wild-type flies (Cook et al., 2000). To test potential effects of PLC on the localization of DGqα, we studied the translocation reaction in the norpAP24 mutant. We found that in this mutant, the initial rate of DGqα translocation during the first 30 min is very similar to that of wild-type flies (Figure 9
Discussion In this work, we investigated the dynamic localization of the Gqα subunit in a neuronal, compartmentalized cell. The physiological environment of the Drosophila visual system stands in contrast to the heterologous expression of Gqα in tissue culture cells. These cells have various ratios and compositions of Gα-interacting molecules that affect the translocation process and could account for the conflicting reports in previous studies. On the other hand, the large amount of photoreceptor-specific signaling molecules in Drosophila eyes combined with the availability of visual mutants constitute a unique and powerful experimental system. This system enabled us to characterize the kinetics of the DGqα translocation cycle in its natural setting and thereby to investigate how other signaling molecules interact with DGqα to regulate this process. We found that in live Drosophila flies, there is a massive light-dependent translocation of DGqα from the membrane to the soluble fraction. This translocation is time dependent and follows reversible first-order reaction kinetics. Further evidence, together with previous studies of Gq localization in transfected cell lines, suggests that this activity-dependent translocation is due to depalmitoylation of DGqα resulting from activation of the G-protein by rhodopsin. Accordingly, in a constitutively active rhodopsin mutant, the major part of DGqα was present in the cytosol regardless of illumination. Thus, it is evident that DGqα translocation is a sensitive indicator of activated rhodopsin, regardless of whether this activation is achieved by light or by mutation. Interestingly, in a PLC-null mutant, the initial rate of DGqα translocation is similar to the rate in wild-type flies. This result indicates that DGqα translocation is due to its interaction with the receptor and is neither dependent on nor influenced by phototransduction steps at the level of PLC or downstream of it. The fact that the extent of DGqα translocation is higher in the norpAP24 mutant, reaching >95%, apparently is the result of slower recovery. Presumably, this is due to the absence of PLC, which normally accelerates GTP hydrolysis. This leaves DGqα active for a longer period in the norpAP24 mutant (Cook et al., 2000). While it is important to characterize the enzymes that underlie the translocation cycle and its regulation, technical difficulties unfortunately have hindered this effort (Wedegaertner, 1998; Resh, 1999; Chen and Manning, 2001). The finding that the regulation of DGqα translocation is confined to the interaction of the G-protein with the receptor should simplify future analysis of this process. Another insight into the mechanism of the translocation cycle of DGqα was obtained by analysis of the Gβe1 mutant. The importance of the interactions between the α- and β-subunits in membrane localization was noted previously in several studies, but left unresolved which part of the translocation cycle is affected (Evanko et al., 2000). Our results indicate that the major determinant of the persistent cytosolic localization of such mutant α-subunits was probably a severe inhibition of the recovery process. In fact, our kinetic analysis showed that the βγ complex plays a dual role. First, it is required for proper presentation of the G-protein to the receptor in order to achieve efficient activation of the α-subunit. This notion is in line with the lack of light-dependent GTPγS binding shown for the Gβe1 mutant (Dolph et al., 1994). Secondly, we found that the βγ complex is essential for efficient targeting of DGqα to the membrane. The mechanistic explanation for the latter has been described by the ‘two-signal model’ (reviewed in Wedegaertner, 1998; Resh, 1999). This model suggests that more than one membrane attachment signal determines the membrane localization of peripheral membrane proteins such as G-proteins. In the case of α-subunits such as DGqα, the two signals are lipid modification of the α-subunit and its interaction with the βγ complex, which contain lipid modification on the γ-subunit. Our results showed that in the Gβe1 mutant, recovery of the soluble DGqα back to the membrane was not observed, even after 2 h in the dark. Under the same conditions, full recovery was obtained in the wild-type flies. This indeed demonstrates that in vivo the βγ complex is a critical signal for targeting of the α-subunit to the membrane of the signaling compartment. An additional insight gained from our experiments is that dissociation of DGqα from the βγ complex is not sufficient to cause its translocation. As a significant amount of DGqα is membrane bound in the Gβe1 mutant in the dark, it is conceivable that activation by the receptor and exchange of the bound GDP for GTP are also needed to facilitate the translocation reaction. Additionally, the three-dimensional model of DGqα identified a basic, positively charged motif in its N-terminus, a signal that can participate in the targeting of the α-subunit to the plasma membrane and assist in its subsequent palmitoylation (Kosloff et al., 2002). This structural motif can be an additional regulatory signal in the translocation cycle of DGqα, adding another signal to the two-signal model in addition to the βγ complex and the palmitoylation of DGqα. We observed and characterized light-dependent architectural changes in the Drosophila photoreceptor cell, associated with redistribution of the cortical actin cytoskeleton. We showed that DGqα is necessary, but not sufficient, to bring about the morphological changes, while these changes are needed to allow the spread of DGqα from the cytosol of the rhabdomere to the cell interior. A possible physiological role for these reversible architectural changes is to facilitate efficient recovery of damaged phototransduction components after prolonged illumination, and can enable the relocation of signaling molecules within the compartmentalized photoreceptor cell. The translocation of DGqα, combined with the light-dependent morphological changes we observed, raises new possibilities for cross-talk between the DGq protein and other cellular processes and effectors. Indeed, several such novel effectors have been reported recently (Bence et al., 1997; Carman et al., 1999). Additional work is needed to characterize further this morphological phenomenon and its relevance to additional signaling molecules. The removal of DGqα from the vicinity of the other phototransduction components might accelerate signal termination in the short term and contribute to long-term adaptation in the longer time frame (Selinger et al., 1993; Wedegaertner and Bourne, 1994). Such a contribution to adaptation was shown recently to be associated with the redistribution of transducin in vertebrate photoreceptors (Sokolov et al., 2002). A similar redistribution was also reported in earlier studies (Brann and Cohen, 1987; Philp et al., 1987; Whelan and McGinnis, 1988). These results suggest that although the two phototransduction cascades differ greatly in their signaling components and mechanisms, the general phenotype of translocation evolved in both visual systems. A recent study (Bahner et al., 2002) reported that light causes translocation of the Drosophila TRPL channels and that this contributes to long-term adaptation. This translocation of TRPL and its recovery back to the rhabdomere follow a similar time course to the translocation and recovery of DGqα shown in the present work. As the amount of DGqα was shown to determine directly the sensitivity of the photoreceptor to light (Scott et al., 1995), it seems that the DGqα translocation we observe is an additional direct contributor to long-term adaptation. It is also possible that the light-induced morphological changes play a part in the previously observed translocation of the TRPL channel, an integral membrane protein, but this problem needs further study. In conclusion, our in vivo studies suggest a putative model of DGqα translocation and its regulation in Drosophila phototransduction, depicted in Figure 10
Materials and methods Fly stocks Drosophila melanogaster of the following strains were used: wild-type, Oregon-R w; Gaq1, a severe hypomorph for DGqα (Scott et al., 1995) (from C.S.Zuker); norpAP24, a null mutant for the eye-specific PLCβ (Pearn et al., 1996) (from W.L.Pak); ninaEpp100, a constitutively active dominant rhodopsin mutant (from D.R.Hyde); Gβe1, a severe hypomorph mutant of the eye-specific DGqβ (Dolph et al., 1994) (from C.S.Zuker); and trpP343, a null mutant for the eye-specific TRP calcium channel (Scott et al., 1997) (from W.L.Pak). Rh1–GFP–moe, GFP–moe (a chimeric protein coupling GFP and the actin-binding domain of moesin) (Edwards et al., 1997) was expressed in the rhabdomeres by crossing P[UAS-GFP–moe] transgenic flies (from D.Kiehart and R.Montague) with Rh1–Gal4 flies. Assay of light-dependent DGqα localization In Drosophila flies, the photopigment is thermostable and photoreversible. By applying blue light (λ <490 nm), inactive rhodopsin is converted to active meta-rhodopsin (80%) and, by applying orange light (λ >570 nm), rhodopsin is regenerated (100%) (Selinger et al., 1993). In each experiment, flies were dark adapted overnight prior to the experiments. Live flies, in glass vials covered with aluminum foil, were subjected to illumination with activating blue light (18 W white light lamp with a Schott BG 28 wide band filter, 1 mm thick, 12 cm away from the flies) for various times at 22°C. Control experiments using white light showed similar results. Termination was carried out by moving the flies to 4°C in the dark and promptly separating the fly heads. Ten flies were used for each time point. The fly heads were homogenized in 1 ml of hypotonic homogenization buffer (HEPES 20 mM pH 7.6, leupeptin 20 µg/ml, pepstatin A 1 µg/ml, o-phenanthroline 0.35 mg/ml, N-ethylmaleimide 15 mM). Membranes and cytosol were separated by centrifugation (15 800 g for 15 min at 4°C). The pellet was washed, centrifuged again and the supernatants were combined. Ultracentrifugation at 150 000 g for 30 min did not precipitate additional DGqα proteins or change the distribution between the fractions. The proteins were precipitated by 5% trichloroacetic acid (TCA), run on 10% SDS–polyacrylamide gels and subjected to quantification as described below. In recovery experiments, after illumination of the flies with blue light to achieve maximal translocation of DGqα (60 min), the flies were illuminated for 5 min with orange light (Schott OG 570 edge filter) to inactive the photo-pigment. These flies were then incubated in the dark at 22°C for various times. Subsequent steps were as described above. Quantification of DGqα After separation by SDS–PAGE, western blotting was carried out using an anti-DGqα polyclonal antibody raised in rabbit against the C-terminal decapeptide of the protein as described in Palczewski et al. (1993). This antibody was shown to be highly specific and hardly detected any background bands. Quantitation of the enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) was carried out either using a Fuji LAS-1000 system or by exposure to film, scanning and using the NIH image software (version 1.62). To reduce the variance due to the experimental procedure, the amounts of DGqα in each fraction were calculated as a percentage of the total DGqα in both the pellet and supernatant of each treatment. In the graphs, only the percentage in the supernatant is shown (out of 100%). Electron microscopy Flies were dark adapted and illuminated as detailed above. For immunogold EM analysis, the heads were separated, cut longitudinally in two and fixed for 12 h in a solution of 4% paraformaldehyde and 0.05% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer pH 7.4. The head sections were washed three times in the same phosphate buffer and dehydrated in ethanol. The half heads were infiltrated by LR white resin and polymerized in gelatin capsules at 50°C for 24 h. Thin sections were cut and placed on nickel grids. The sections were blocked for 5 min with 5% goat serum in 10 mM Tris–HCl buffer pH 8.2 (containing 0.9% NaCl, 0.5% bovine serum albumin, 0.1% Tween-20 and 20 mM NaN3) and incubated for 1 h at room temperature with the same primary antibody used for the western blotting (diluted 1:80). After washing with the Tris–HCl buffer described above, the grids were incubated for 1 h with a goat anti-rabbit secondary antibody conjugated to either 18 or 20 nm gold particles, washed again and stained with saturated aqueous uranyl acetate and lead citrate. For ultrastructural EM, fixation was done in a solution of 1.5% paraformaldehyde and 2.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer pH 7.4. The head sections were washed three times in the same phosphate buffer. After fixation, eyes were post-fixed with 1% osmium tetroxide for 4 h, dehydrated in ethanol and propylene oxide, and embedded in epon. Thin sections were cut and stained with saturated aqueous uranyl acetate and lead citrate. Sections were observed and photographed with a Technai-12 transmission electron microscope (Philips) equipped with a Mega-view II CCD camera. Fluorescent confocal microscopy The retina from Rh1–GFP–moe flies was isolated from the cornea and brain and kept in Ringer’s solution as described previously (Peretz et al., 1994). A cross-section of a single ommatidium was visualized using a Fluoview 300 confocal microscope (Olympus). Optical sections were obtained from the upper region of the ommatidia at a depth of 6–10 µm from the tip of the ommatidium. The fluorescence images arise from excitation with blue light of GFP–moe, a marker for the actin cytoskeleton (see above). Electrostatic surface map of DGqα A three-dimensional homology model of DGqα and the electrostatic potential distribution around it were produced as described previously (Kosloff et al., 2002). Visualization of the results was done by mapping the electrostatic potential on the Connolly surface of the protein and by adding the electrostatic potential surfaces as equipotential contour meshes using the InsightII package (Accelrys). Acknowledgements We thank D.Kiehart, R.Montague, C.Zuker and W.Pak for specific Drosophila mutants, M.Bar-Yaakov and D.Shalev for technical assistance, and the late M.Shramm for helpful discussion. This work was supported by grants from the NIH (EY-03529 to Z.S and B.M., R01-EY-12426 to D.R.H.), the ISF (to Z.S. and B.M.), the BSF (to Z.S. and B.M.), The Moscona foundation (to Z.S. and B.M.), the German–Israel Foundation (to B.M.), the Foundation for Fighting Blindness (to D.R.H.) and the Minerva Foundation (to Z.S. and B.M.). References
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