Double-barrelled ion-selective microelectrodes were used to measure free [Cl-] in photoreceptors, extracellular space, and glial cells in superfused slices of drone retina. Tests indicated that with normal superfusate the intracellular electrode signal was due essentially to C1-and not to some other
Enhancement of sensitivity in photoreceptors of the honey bee drone by light and by Ca2+
โ Scribed by Bernd Walz
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 923 KB
- Volume
- 170
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0340-7594
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โฆ Synopsis
Deeply dark adapted (1 h) photoreceptor cells of the honey bee drone show a light-induced enhancement of sensitivity (facilitation) as an aftereffect of illumination or in the presence of dim backgrounds.
The Ca 2 ยง of this effect was studied: Reduction of extraceUular Ca 2 ยง to 0.1 mM decreases the sensitivity of a dark adapted cell, and the light-induced increase in sensitivity due to repetitive, dim, 20 ms test flashes is slower than in normal saline. After a sensitizing conditioning light, the sensitivity drops faster in lowcalcium saline. The light-induced enhancement of sensitivity is mimicked by pressure injections of low amounts of Ca 2+ (Ca2+/EGTA-buffers; 0.15 gM free Ca 2+) into a dark adapted cell. Injection of EGTA alone decreases the sensitivity. Injection of a solution containing cal mM free Ca 2 ยง sequentially decreases and later increases the sensitivity transiently.
These results suggest a model in which a progressive increase in intracellular Ca 2 ยง concentration by light first increases (facilitates), and, at higher concentrations, decreases (light adapts) the sensitivity of the cells. One possible site of action for this positive and negative feedback control of cell sensitivity by Ca 2 ยง is the endoplasmic reticulum.
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