Abstract: | Halobacterium salinarum cells from 3-day-old cultures have been stimulated with different patterns of repetitive pulse stimuli. A short train of 0.6-s orange light pulses with a 4-s period resulted in reversal peaks of increasing intensity. The reverse occurred when blue light pulses were delivered as a finite train: with a 3-s period, the response declined in sequence from the first to the last pulse. To evaluate the response of the system under steady-state conditions of stimulation, continuous trains of pulses were also applied; whereas blue light always produced a sharply peaked response immediately after each pulse, orange pulses resulted in a declining peak of reversals that lasted until the subsequent pulse. An attempt to account for these results in terms of current excitation/adaptation models shows that additional mechanisms appear to be at work in this transduction chain. |