Visual transduction in cones of the monkey Macaca fascicularis
1. Visual transduction in macaque cones was studied by measuring the membrane current of single outer segments projecting from small pieces of retina. 2. The response to a brief flash of light was diphasic and resembled the output of a bandpass filter with a peak frequency near 5 Hz. After the initi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1990-08, Vol.427 (1), p.681-713 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Visual transduction in macaque cones was studied by measuring the membrane current of single outer segments projecting
from small pieces of retina. 2. The response to a brief flash of light was diphasic and resembled the output of a bandpass
filter with a peak frequency near 5 Hz. After the initial reduction in dark current there was a rebound increase which resulted
from an increase in the number of open light-sensitive channels. The response to a step of light consisted of a prominent
initial peak followed by a steady phase of smaller amplitude. 3. Responses to dim light were linear and time-invariant, suggesting
that responses to single photons were linearly additive. From the flash sensitivity and the effective collecting area the
peak amplitude of the single photon response was estimated as about 30 fA. 4. With flashes of increasing strength the photocurrent
amplitude usually saturated along a curve that was gentler than an exponential but steeper than a Michaelis relation. The
response reached the half-saturating amplitude at roughly 650 photoisomerizations. 5. The response-intensity relation was
flatter in the steady state than shortly after a light step was turned on, indicating that bright light desensitized the transduction
with a delay. This desensitization was not due to a reduction in pigment content. In the steady state, a background of intensity
I lowered the sensitivity to a weak incremental test flash by a factor 1/(1 + I/IO), where IO was about 2.6 x 10(4) photoisomerizations
s-1, or about 3.3 log trolands for the red- and green-sensitive cones. 6. Bleaching exposures produced permanent reductions
in flash sensitivity but had little effect on the kinetics or saturating amplitude of subsequent flash responses. The sensitivity
reductions were consistent with the expected reductions in visual pigment content and gave photosensitivities of about 8 x
10(-9) microns2 (free solution value) for the red- and green-sensitive pigments. During a steady bleaching exposure the final
exponential decline of the photocurrent had a rate constant given by the product of the light intensity and the photosensitivity.
7. In some cells it was possible to measure a light-induced increase in current noise. The power spectrum of the noise resembled
the spectrum of the dim flash response and the magnitude of the noise was consistent with a single photon response roughly
20 fA in size. 8. The membrane current recorded in darkness was noisy, with a variance near 0 |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1990.sp018193 |