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1.
Summary Light and dark adaptations were studied in the eye of Squilla mantis. Light adaptation is characterized by (1) a proximal shift of the distal pigment sheath (DPS) surrounding the proximal portion of the crystalline cone above its zone of contact with the rhabdom; (2) flattening of the distal pigment sheath; (3) lengthening of the crystalline cone correlated with shortening of the rhabdom; (4) a migration of screening pigment granules in retinula cells in the protoplasmic bridges crossing the perirhabdomal space. In animals kept in constant darkness, longitudinal displacements of the distal pigment sheath were found to be subject to a circadian rhythm characterized by a maximal light adaptation state at about 5 p.m. and a minimal one at 5 a.m. Screening pigment granule translocation in retinula cells does not show such rhythmic activity.Abbreviations a, b maximal incidence angles in L.A., and D.A., respectively - Cc crystalline cone - Dps distal pigment sheath - I extreme incident light beam - Prs perirhabdomal space - Rh rhabdom - Rp reflecting pigment This research has been supported by grant 3.012-76 of the Swiss National Science Foundation  相似文献   

2.
Summary In the superposition eyes of the sphingid moth Deilephila and the neuropteran Ascalaphus, adjustment to different intensities is subserved by longitudinal migrations of screening pigment in specialized pigment cells. Using ophthalmoscopic techniques we have localized the light-sensitive trigger that controls pigment position.In both species, local illumination of a small spot anywhere within the eye glow of a dark-adapted eye evokes local light adaptation in the ommatidia whose facets receive the light. Details of the response pattern demonstrate that a distal light-sensitive trigger is located axially in the ommatidium, just beneath the crystalline cone, and extends with less sensitivity deep into the clear zone. The distal trigger in Deilephila was shown to be predominantly UV sensitive, and a UV-absorbing structure, presumably the distal trigger, was observed near the proximal tip of the crystalline cone.In Ascalaphus we also found another trigger located more proximally, which causes local pigment reaction in the ommatidia whose rhabdoms are illuminated (the centre of the eye glow). The light-sensitive trigger for this response appears to be the rhabdom itself.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The retina of the phalangid, Opilio ravennae, consists of retinula cells with distal rhabdomeres, arhabdomeric cells, and sheath cells. The receptive segment of retinula cells shows a clear separation into a Proximal rhabdom, organized into distinct rhabdom units formed by three or four retinula cells, and a Distal rhabdom, consisting of an uniterrupted layer of contiguous rhabdomeres. One of the cells comprising a retinula unit, the so-called distal retinula cell (DRC), has two or three branches that pass laterally alongside the rhabdom, thereby separating the two or three principal retinula cells of a unit. The two morphologically distinct layers of the receptive segment differ with respect to the cellular origin of rhabdomeral microvilli: DRC-branches contribute very few microvilli to the proximal rhabdom and develop extremely large rhabdomeres in the distal rhabdom only, causing the rhabdom units to fuse. Principal retinula cells, on the other hand, comprise the majority of microvilli of the proximal rhabdom, but their rhabdomeres diminish in the distal rhabdom. It is argued that proximal and distal rhabdoms serve different functions in relation to the intensity of incident light.In animals fixed 4 h after sunset, pigment granules retreat from the distal two thirds of the receptive segment. A comparison of retinae of day- and night-adapted animals shows that there is a slight (approximately 15%) increase in the cross-sectional area of rhabdomeral microvilli in dark-adapted animals, which in volume corresponds to the loss of pigment granules from the receptive segment. The length of the receptive segment as well as the pattern and shape of rhabdom units, however, remain unchanged.Each retinula unit is associated with one arhabdomeric cell. Their cell bodies are located close to those of retinula cells, but are much smaller and do not contain pigment granules. The most remarkable feature is a long, slender distal dendrite that extends up to the base of the fused rhabdom where it increases in diameter and develops a number of lateral processes interdigitating with microvilli of the rhabdom. The most distal dendrite portion extends through the center of the fused rhabdom and has again a smooth outline. All dendrites end in the distal third of the proximal rhabdom and are never present in the layer of the contiguous distal rhabdom. Arhabdomeric cells are of essentially the same morphology in day- and night-adapted animals. They are interpreted as photoinsensitive secondary neurons involved in visual information-processing that channel current collected from retinula cells of the proximal rhabdom along the optic nerve. A comparison is made with morphological equivalents of these cells in other chelicerate species.  相似文献   

4.
The compound eye of Pieris rapae crucivora contains ventrally three types of histologically distinct ommatidia. An ommatidium contains nine photoreceptors, four of which (R1-4) construct the distal tier of the rhabdom. We determined the sensitivity spectra of the R1-4 distal photoreceptors in each type of ommatidia by intracellular electrophysiology and identified UV, blue, double-peaked blue, green, and a green receptor with depressed sensitivity in the violet. We localized these receptors in each type of ommatidia by injecting dye after the recording. In type I ommatidia the R1 and R2 cells are UV and blue receptors. When R1 is UV sensitive, R2 is always blue sensitive, or vice versa. R3 and R4 in type I are both green receptors. In type II, R1 and R2 are both double-peaked blue receptors and R3 and R4 are both green receptors with depressed sensitivity in the violet. In type III, R1 and R2 are both UV, and R3 and R4 are green receptors. The double-peaked blue, and green receptors with depressed sensitivity in the violet in type II ommatidia have depressed sensitivity at 420 nm, which is probably due to the filtering effect of a fluorescing material present in the type II ommatidia. Spectral heterogeneity of ommatidia seems to be a common design of insect compound eyes.  相似文献   

5.
Cellular identification of the violet receptor in the crayfish eye   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Summary Ten violet receptors in the retinas of crayfish (Procambarus) were injected intracellularly with the fluorescent dye Lucifer Yellow-CH and subsequently identified in histological preparations. All had their cell body located distal to the main rhabdom, in the position of the small, 8th retinular cell. In nine cases it was possible to trace the axon of the violet receptor beyond thelamina ganglionaris, and in four cases, to its termination in themedulla.By contrast, 22 green receptors similarly injected were all found to contribute to the main rhabdom, which is formed by retinular cells 1–7. Their axons synapsed in thelamina ganglionaris.Microspectrophotometry of the 8th cell reveals an absorption peak at 440 nm. As previous microspectrophotometric observations indicated that retinular cells 1–7 all contain a visual pigment with max at 530 nm, the microspectrophotometric data confirm that the violet receptor is cell 8.This work was supported by USPHS grant EY00222 to Yale University. D.C. is a USPHS predoctoral trainee supported by National Research Service Award 5-T32-GM07527. We are grateful to Dr. W.W. Steward for a gift of Lucifer Yellow-CH and J.D. Collins for technical assistance.  相似文献   

6.
The ommatidia in the ventral two-thirds of the compound eye of male Pieris rapae crucivora are not uniform. Each ommatidium contains nine photoreceptor cells. Four cells (R1-4) form the distal two-thirds of the rhabdom, four cells (R5-8) approximately occupy the proximal one-third of the rhabdom, and the ninth cell (R9) takes up a minor basal part of the rhabdom. The R5-8 photoreceptor cells contain clusters of reddish pigment adjacent to the rhabdom. From the position of the pigment clusters, three types of ommatidia can be identified: the trapezoidal (type I), square (type II), and rectangular type (type III). Microspectrophotometry with an epi-illumination microscope has revealed that the reflectance spectra of type I and type III ommatidia peak at 635 nm and those of type II ommatidia peak at 675 nm. The bandwith of the reflectance spectra is 40-50 nm. Type II ommatidia strongly fluoresce under ultra-violet and violet epi-illumination. The three types of ommatidia are randomly distributed. The ommatidial heterogeneity is presumably crucial for color discrimination.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The fine structure of an ommatidium of a skipper butterfly, Parnara guttata, has been studied using the electron microscope. Each ommatidium has nine retinula cells, which were classified into three groups: two distal, six medial and one basal retinula cells. The rhabdomeres of the distal retinula cells are localized in the distal part of the rhabdom, while those of the six medial retinula cells appear throughout most of the rhabdom. The rhabdomere of the basal retinula cell occupies only the basal part of the rhabdom. The rhabdomeres of four medial cells are constructed of parallel microvilli, while fan-like microvilli form the rhabdomeres of other two medial retinula cells. The distal and basal retinula cells have rhabdomeres consisting of both parallel and fan-like microvilli. This is the first time the construction of the rhabdomeres of the distal and basal retinula cells has been described in such fine detail for a skipper butterfly. Nine retinula cell axons of each ommatidium extend to the first neuropile of the optic lobe, the lamina ganglionaris. No difference was found in the number of retinula cells of an ommatidium or the shape of the rhabdom between the dorsal and ventral regions of the compound eye.  相似文献   

8.
The visual pigments in the compound eye of the comma butterfly, Polygonia c-album, were investigated in a specially designed epi-illumination microspectrophotometer. Absorption changes due to photochemical conversions of the visual pigments, or due to light-independent visual pigment decay and regeneration, were studied by measuring the eye shine, i.e., the light reflected from the tapetum located in each ommatidium proximal to the visual pigment-bearing rhabdom. The obtained absorbance difference spectra demonstrated the dominant presence of a green visual pigment. The rhodopsin and its metarhodopsin have absorption peak wavelengths at 532 nm and 492 nm, respectively. The metarhodopsin is removed from the rhabdom with a time constant of 15 min and the rhodopsin is regenerated with a time constant of 59 min (room temperature). A UV rhodopsin with metarhodopsin absorbing maximally at 467 nm was revealed, and evidence for a blue rhodopsin was obtained indirectly.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract The compound (apposition) eyes of Tanais cavolinii are not well developed: the number of ommatidia is small and there are certain irregularities in structure. The refractive components are formed by the cornea and the cone. The latter is built up by two cone cells. In addition, there are two accessory cone cells confined to the distal part of the cone. The eight pigmented retinular cells extend from the cornea to the basement membrane. Proximal to the cone, they form a fused continuous rhabdom, which in cross section has a rectangular outline. In the middle part of the rhabdom, the microvilli are arranged perpendicular to the long axis of the rhabdom when seen in cross section. The microvilli outside of this area can be arranged either parallel or perpendicular to the microvilli of the middle part. Other irregularities occur in the ommatidium, e.g. the position of the retinular cell nuclei, which are found at different levels. Extensions from the cone cells fuse and form a mesh proximal to the rhabdom. Between the mesh and basal lamina is a basal cell type enveloping the proximal parts of the retinular cells and their axons. These cells also form the basal lamina, which delimits the compound eye from the haemocoel. No special pigment cells are present in the compound eye of Tanais cavolinii.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Pigment granule migration in pigment cells and retinula cells of the digger wasp Sphex cognatus Smith was analysed morphologically after light adaptation to natural light, dark adaptation and after four selective chromatic adaptations in the range between 358 nm and 580 nm and used as the index of receptor cell sensitivity. The receptor region of each ommatidium consists of nine retinula cells which form a centrally located rhabdom. Two morphologically and physiologically different visual units can be described, defined by the arrangement of the rhabdomeric microvilli, the topographical relationship of the receptor cells with respect to the eye axes and the unique retinula cell screening pigmentation. These two different sets of ommatidia (type A and B) are randomly distributed in a ratio of 13 throughout the eye (Ribi, 1978b). Chromatic adaptation experiments with wavelengths of 358 nm, 443 nm, 523 nm and 580 nm and subsequent histological examination reveal two UV receptors, two blue receptors and four yellow-green receptors in type A ommatidia and two UV receptors and six green to yellow-green receptors in type B ommatidia. The pigments in cells surrounding each ommatidium (two primary pigment cells, 20 secondary pigment cells and four pigmented cone extensions) were not affected significantly by the adaptation experiments.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The apposition eyes of the corduliid dragonfly Hemicordulia tau are each divided by pigment colour, facet size and facet arrangement into three regions: dorsal, ventral, and a posterior larval strip. Each ommatidium has two primary pigment cells, twenty-five secondary pigment cells, and eight receptor cells, all surrounded by tracheae which probably prevent light passing between ommatidia, and reduce the weight of the eye. Electron microscopy reveals that the receptor cells are of two types: small vestigial cells making virtually no contribution to the rhabdom, and full-size typical cells. The ventral ommatidia have a distal typical cell (oriented either horizontally or vertically), four medial typical cells, two proximal typical cells and one full-length vestigial cell. The dorsal ommatidia have only four full-length typical cells, and one distal and three vestigial full-length cells. The cross-section of dorsal rhabdoms is small and circular distally, but expands to a large three-pointed star medially and proximally. The tiered receptor arrangement in the ventral ommatidia is typical of other Odonata but the dorsal structure has not been fully described in other species. Specialised dorsal eye regions are typical of insects that detect others against the sky.  相似文献   

12.
The fine structure of the compound eyes of the adult diving beetle Agabus japonicus is described with light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy. The eye of A. japonicus is mango‐shaped and consists of about 985 ommatidia. Each ommatidium is composed of a corneal facet lens, an eucone type of crystalline cone, a fused layered rhabdom with a basal rhabdomere, seven retinula cells (including six distal cells and one basal cell), two primary pigment cells and an undetermined number of secondary pigment cells that are restricted to the distalmost region of the eye. A clear‐zone, separating dioptric apparatus from photoreceptive structures, is not developed and the eye thus resembles an apposition eye. The cross‐sectional areas of the rhabdoms are relatively large indicative of enhanced light‐sensitivity. The distal and central region of the rhabdom is layered with interdigitating microvilli suggesting polarization sensitivity. According to the features mentioned above, we suggest that 1) the eye, seemingly of the apposition type, occurs in a taxon for which the clear‐zone (superposition) eye is characteristic; 2) the eye possesses adaptations to function in a dim‐light environment; 3) the eye may be sensitive to underwater polarized light or linearly water‐reflected polarized light. J. Morphol. 275:1273–1283, 2014. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
Curis caloptera is a buprestid beetle, which is active in bright sunlight. Its eye, like that of many other diurnal arthropods, is of the apposition type, in which dioptric apparatus and receptor layer are not separated by a region devoid of pigment. Perhaps to prevent damage by U. V.-radiation, the cornea is relatively thick (approximately 90 micron) and crystalline cones are of the "eucone-type". In each ommatidium the cone cell extensions occupy regular positions between the 8 retinula cells and reach down to the basement membrane where they end in bulbous swellings and contain grains of screening pigment. Pigment grains, slightly smaller than those present in the primary pigment cells, are also found within the retinula cells. Although the rhabdom possesses a uniform diameter of approximately 2 micron over its entire length of almost 300 micron, the number of rhabdomeres contributing to the rhabdom varies and depends on the level at which the rhabdom is sectioned. At the distal end, only one retinula cell possesses a rhabdomere; the same holds true for the proximal end, where a different rhabdomere (with microvilli at right angles to those of the distal cell) dominates. One retinula cell, of darker appearance in electron micrographs, occupies a distal position in each ommatidium and remains preferentially oriented within a sector of 60 degrees irrespective of the ommatidial axis. The ommatidial axis itself was found to vary 235 degrees. We provide circumstantial evidence for the view that the cell in question could be a U. V.-receptor with a role to play in an unambiguous determination of the E-vector. Separate bundles, each containing 8 axons, pass through the basement membrane together with 1 or 2 tracheoles. A traceheal tapetum is not developed.  相似文献   

14.
Among ants, Cataglyphis bicolor shows the best performance in optical orientation. Its eye is of the apposition type with a fused rhabdom. Morphological studies on the general struture of the eye as well as the effect of light have been carried out with transmission and scanning electron microscopy. An ommatidium is composed of a dioptric apparatus, consisting of a cornea, corneal process and a crystalline cone, the sensory retinula, which is made up of eight retinula cells in the distal half and of an additional ninth one in the proximal half. The ommatidia are separated from each other by two primary pigment cells, which surround the crystalline cone and an average of 12 secondary pigment cells, which reach from cornea to the basement membrane. The eye of Cataglyphis bicolor possesses a light intensity dependent adaptation mechanism, which causes a radial and distal movement of the pigment granules within the retinula cells and a dilatation of cisternae of the ER along the rhabdom. Until now, no overall order in arrangement of retinula cells or direction of microvilli has been found from ommatidium to ommatidium. Such an order, however, must exist, either on the retina or the lamina level, since we have proven the ant's capacity for polarized light analysis.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The compound eyes of two species of damsel-flies, Ishunura senegalensis and Cersion calamorum, were examined by electron microscopy. Each ommatidium is composed of eight retinula cells which are semistratified in the receptor layer. The retinula cells are divided into four types from the difference of levels in the rhabdom formation; one distal large cell having the rhabdomere only in the distal layer, four middle cells forming the rhabdom in the middle layer, two proximal cells making up the rhabdom in the proximal layer and one distal small cell having no rhabdomere in any layers. In addition, the lamina ganglionaris was partly observed. Some retinula axons terminate at an different level from the other axons. The functional differentiation among these different types of cells is discussed with relation to the analysis of the polarized light and the discrimination of the diffraction images.This work is supported by a grant from the U.S. Army Research and Development Group (Far East), Department of the Army (DA-CRD-AG-S29-544-67-G61).The authors wish to express their gratitude to Drs. H. Morita and H. Tateda for their helpful discussions throughout this study.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Rhabdoms of the green crabCarcinus maenas were examined by microspectrophotometry and found to contain a visual pigment with max at 502–506 nm. Upon irradiation, a stable metarhodopsin formed with unchanged max and molar extinction coefficient. In the presence of 5% glutaraldehyde the rhabdoms were photobleached. Partial bleaching experiments indicate that in the rhabdoms studied, only one visual pigment was present, with an absorption spectrum appropriate for a hypothetical rhodopsin from Dartnall's (1953) nomogram.Retinular (photoreceptor) cells were studied with microelectrodes. They had negative resting potentials of 30–65 mV and responded to light with depolarizing receptor potentials. All cells had maximum sensitivity at ~493 nm, as did the ERG (electroretinogram). Selective adaptation failed to alter the spectral sensitivity functions of single cells or the ERG. If these spectral sensitivity data are pooled with Wald's (1968), the average sensitivity of the dark-adapted eye is accounted for adequately by the pigment of the rhabdom.The results of this work do not support the hypothesis of Horridge (1967) that each ommatidium ofCarcinus has two color receptors.This work was supported by U.S. P.H.S. grant EY 00222.  相似文献   

17.
Summary In the compound eye of the moth Antheraea polyphemus, three types of visual pigments were found in extracts from the retina and by microspectrophotometry in situ. The absorption maxima of the receptor pigment P and the metarhodopsin M are at (1) P 520–530 nm, M 480–490 nm; (2) P 460–480 nm, M 530–540 nm; (3) P 330–340 nm, M 460–470 nm. Their localization was investigated by electron microscopy on eyes illuminated with different monochromatic lights. Within the tiered rhabdom, constituted of the rhabdomeres of nine visual cells, the basal cell contains a blue-and the six medial cells have a greenabsorbing pigment. The two distal cells of most ommatidia also have the blue pigment; only in the dorsal region of the eye, these cells contain a UV-absorbing pigment, which constitutes a portion of only 5% of the visual pigment content within the entire retina. The functional significance of this distribution is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Ultrastructure of the eye of a euphausiid crustacean   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The compound eye of the Antarctic euphausiid Euphausia superba is a spherical clear zone eye. The dioptric system consists of a hexagonally-faceted cornea, two corneagenous cells, two crystalline cone cells which form the bipartite crystalline cone, and two accessory cone cells. The dioptric system of each ommatidium is separated from that of adjacent ommatidia by six distal pigment cells and a basement membrane. The proximal tip of the crystalline cone is cupped by the distal ends of the seven retinula cells whose nuclei are arranged in a staggered array slightly distal to the middle of the clear zone. In the distal half of the clear zone, each narrow retinula cell column is surrounded by large proximal extensions of the six distal pigment cells. The pigment cells narrow more proximally and terminate at the proximal basement membrane. A specialized axial channel complex extends from the crystalline cone through the clear zone, and is continuous with a conical refractive element which caps the distal end of the rhabdom. The rhabdom is fused, and made up of alternating highly birefringent layers of orthogonally-oriented microvilli. It is surrounded by a narrow extra-cellular space which is continuous with the distal refractive element and a second conical refractive element at the proximal end of the rhabdom.  相似文献   

19.
The lateral compound eye of Scutigera coleoptrata was examined by electron microscopy. Each ommatidium consists of a dioptric apparatus, formed by a cornea and a multipartite eucone crystalline cone, a bilayered retinula and a surrounding sheath of primary pigment and interommatidial pigment cells. With reference to the median eye region, each cone is made up of eight cone segments belonging to four cone cells. The nuclei of the cone cells are located proximally outside the cone near the transition area between distal and proximal retinula cells. The connection between nuclear region and cone segment is via a narrow cytoplasmic strand, which splits into two distal cytoplasmic processes. Additionally, from the nuclear region of each cone cell a single cytoplasmic process runs in a proximal direction to the basement membrane. The bilayered rhabdom is usually made up of the rhabdomeres of 9–12 distal retinula cells and four proximal retinula cell. The pigment shield is composed of primary pigment cells (which most likely secrete the corneal lens) and interommatidial pigment cells. The primary pigment cells underlie the cornea and surround, more or less, the upper third of the crystalline cone. By giving rise to the cornea and by functioning as part of the pigment shield these pigment cells serve a double function. Interommatidial pigment cells extend from the cornea to the basement membrane and stabilise the ommatidium. In particular, the presence of cone cells, primary pigment cells as well as interommatidial pigment cells in the compound eye of S. coleoptrata is seen as an important morphological support for the Mandibulata concept. Furthermore, the phylogenetic significance of these cell types is discussed with respect to the Tetraconata.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The compound eye of Psychoda cinerea comprises two types of ommatidia, arranged so as to divide the retina into distinct dorsal and ventral regions. The P-type ommatidium, in the ventral part of the eye, differs fundamentally from the other dipteran ommatidia so far described, and is regarded as a primitive ommatidium. The acone dioptric apparatus is the same in both types, with a spherical lens and four Semper cells, the processes of which expand below the rhabdom to form a ring of pigment sacs. Only the distal region of the rhabdom is surrounded by a continuous ring of screening pigment, formed by 2 primary and 12–16 secondary pigment cells. The highly pigmented retinula cells penetrate the basement membrane proximally at about the level of their nuclei; in this region they are separated from the hemolymph by glial elements. The rhabdomeres R1–6 are fused to form a tube. The two types of ommatidia are defined by the arrangement of the retinula cells R7/8: in the T type the central rhabdomeres are one below the other, in the usual tandem position, whereas in the P type only R8 is central, with R7 in the peripheral ring. In the proximal region of the retina, retinula cells with parallel microvilli in neighboring ommatidia are joined in rows by lateral processes from the R8 cells. All the rhabdomeres are short and not twisted, which suggests that the retinula cells are highly sensitive to direction of polarization. The eye can adapt by a number of retinomotor processes. These findings, together with observations of behavior, imply that the psychodids have well-developed visual abilities.  相似文献   

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