首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Vitamin B12 has been reported to improve sleep-wake rhythm disorders. Although the mechanism is still unclear, a change in the sensitivity of the circadian clock system to photic input is thought to be a possible mechanism of the effect. In this study, the effect of the vitamin B12 on the circadian aspect of the electroretinogram (ERG) and serum melatonin level was analyzed in rats. Vitamin B12, α-(5,6-dimethylbenzimidazolyl)-co-methyl-cobamide was daily administrated subcutaneously for 8 weeks to adult male Wister rats in the experimental group, and saline was given to the control group. The ERGs were recorded under dark adaptation during the night and day, and under light adaptation (0.1 lux) during the night. Blood was drawn before and after ERG recording. The amplitudes of the a-wave, fc-wave, and trough-to-peak of both waves and latencies of ERG were analyzed following various exposures to stimuli of light intensity. These parameters in the group treated with vitamin B12 showed similar characteristics to the control group, and no significant difference was observed between the two groups. The melatonin levels of both groups before the measurement of ERG were similar under each measurement condition. The elevated serum melatonin concentration in the control group under dark adaptation at night was suppressed after the series of 10-msec light stimuli used for measurement of ERG. However, this suppressing effect of light pulses on melatonin level was significantly inhibited in the group treated with vitamin B12. Under light adaptation during the night and under dark adaptation during the day, melatonin levels after the measurement of ERG were not different between the groups. From these results, it is suggested that vitamin B12 is effective in suppressing melatonin rhythm disturbances introduced by transient light stimulation, and it affects the site more central than the retinal level. (Chronobiology International, 14(6), 549–560, 1997)  相似文献   

2.
Neural and Photochemical Mechanisms of Visual Adaptation in the Rat   总被引:20,自引:13,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
The effects of light adaptation on the increment threshold, rhodopsin content, and dark adaptation have been studied in the rat eye over a wide range of intensities. The electroretinogram threshold was used as a measure of eye sensitivity. With adapting intensities greater than 1.5 log units above the absolute ERG threshold, the increment threshold rises linearly with increasing adapting intensity. With 5 minutes of light adaptation, the rhodopsin content of the eye is not measurably reduced until the adapting intensity is greater than 5 log units above the ERG threshold. Dark adaptation is rapid (i.e., completed in 5 to 10 minutes) until the eye is adapted to lights strong enough to bleach a measurable fraction of the rhodopsin. After brighter light adaptations, dark adaptation consists of two parts, an initial rapid phase followed by a slow component. The extent of slow adaptation depends on the fraction of rhodopsin bleached. If all the rhodopsin in the eye is bleached, the slow fall of threshold extends over 5 log units and takes 2 to 3 hours to complete. The fall of ERG threshold during the slow phase of adaptation occurs in parallel with the regeneration of rhodopsin. The slow component of dark adaptation is related to the bleaching and resynthesis of rhodopsin; the fast component of adaptation is considered to be neural adaptation.  相似文献   

3.
Summary ERG amplitude facilitation, observed in the eye ofAtta sexdens after light adaptation, was studied as a function of duration and intensity of adaptation, of dark interval between adapting and test stimuli, and of level of steady background illumination. Results show that sensitivity facilitation in this eye cannot be regarded as a minor effect since it covers a 2 log unit range, the same as that obtained for conditions that produce sensitivity reduction. Maximum facilitation occurs with short and intense light adaptation. The time span of the effect is close to 2 min, and its maximum amplitude may be attained up to 20 s after light adaptation. Increase in background illumination gradually erases facilitation. However, the facilitated response is less sensitive to background illumination than the dark adapted response. Long durations of light adaptation cause ERG decrease, or inhibition. A comparison of these two end results of light adaptation suggests that they arise from different processes, perhaps with distinct origins.Supported by a grant from Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo, to the senior author (Contract n 71/1141)With a Fellowship from Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (N 74/388)We wish to express our appreciation to Henrique Fix for his editorial assistance, and to Celia Jablonka for laboratory help.  相似文献   

4.
In carp (Cyprinus) and goldfish (Carassius), long-wavelength cones are reported to be active under scotopic conditions. Using the electroretinogram (ERG), we tested another cyprinid fish, Danio aequipinnatus, which contains A1-based visual pigments and for which we had previously measured the spectral sensitivities of individual cones. Dark adaptation curves show a rod/cone break at about 45 min. When thoroughly dark-adapted, the spectral sensitivity function is broader than can be accounted for by self-screening of rhodopsin, but it can be modeled by an additive combination of rods and the 560-nm cones. Dim, red background light causes adaptation of rods and a broadening of the spectral sensitivity function, which can be simulated by increasing the proportion of cones in the model. Brighter red backgrounds adapt the 560-nm cones. Because of the effect of red adapting lights, the ERG evidence for the participation of long-wavelength cones close to visual threshold appears to be different in Danio than in the goldfish Carassius. Accepted: 14 June 1997  相似文献   

5.
The grasshopper ERG displays a rapid recovery of responsivity following the onset of a background light. Although observed earlier in skate and frog, this phenomenon has not previously been seen in an invertebrate. Furthermore, a period of hyperresponsivity exists in early dark adaptation and resembles that found in skate and frog. Thus, recovery in the light and hyperresponsivity in the dark seem to be corollaries of each other. Finally, spectral sensitivity of the ERG is determined and two peaks are found: one at 510 nm and the other at 360 nm. The former appears to be a rhodopsin-mediated sensitivity but the latter does not and they are not clearly separated by chromatic adaptation.  相似文献   

6.
The benthic amphipod Pontoporeia affinis lives in the Baltic sea and in northern European lakes in an environment where very little light is available for vision. The eyes, consisting of 40–50 ommatidia, are correspondingly modified. Microspectrophotometric recordings on isolated eyes show the presence of at least two kinds of screening pigments in the ommatidia with maxima at 540–580 nm and 460–500 nm. Difference spectra obtained from the rhabdoms after exposure to red and blue light, respectively, give evidence of a single rhodopsin with its maximum at 548 nm and a 500-nm metarhodopsin. In ERG recordings sensitivity in the dark-adapted state, after saturating exposures to blue and to red light, stabilizes at levels determined by the rhodopsin concentration. No change is observed during 10–14 h after the beginning of dark adaptation. However, using animals pre-exposed with a strong red light and then kept in darkness, it is found that after a delay of 20–40 h sensitivity of the dark-adapted eye begins to increase and finally, after 5–6 days reaches a level corresponding to 100% rhodopsin. Thus, a slow renewal of rhodopsin appears to occur in darkness, where a photoisomerization of metarhodopsin is excluded.Abbreviations ERG electroretinogram - IR infrared - MSP microspectrophotometry  相似文献   

7.
MS-222 is an anesthetic that is widely used for cold-blooded animals. The present study uses contact circum-corneal electrodes and conventional recording equipment to determine the effect of this anesthetic on the electroretinogram (ERG) of the rough-skinned newt (Taricha granulosa). When applied prior to retinal bleach, MS-222 retarded the rate of subsequent dark adaptation. This retardation was evidenced by a decreased sensitivity to light during the adaptation process, and by a higher threshold for induction of an ERG response after bleach.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The flying squirrel (Glaucomys volans) is a strongly nocturnal rodent. Previous anatomical observations suggested that the retina of this animal contains some cone-like receptors in addition to large numbers of rods. Evidence for duplicity of function in this visual system was obtained from an examination of three indices of visual activity: the electroretinogram (ERG), the isolated PIII retinal response, and the visually evoked cortical potential (VECP). The spectral sensitivity of the dark-adapted flying squirrel is similar to that of other mammals — it has a 500 nm peak (Figs. 3, 8). Responses of the ERG and isolated PIII to flickering light indicate the operation of two processes (Figs. 4, 7), one of which is unable to follow flickering light at repetition rates above 10–15 Hz. Spectral sensitivity measurements reveal that these two processes have different spectral sensitivities. The photopic mechanism in the flying squirrel visual system has peak sensitivity at about 520 nm (Figs. 5, 7, 9). The effects of steady light adaptation are much more obvious in the cortical potentials than they are in the retinal potentials.We thank David Birch for his advice and assistance. This research was supported by a Grant from the National Eye Institute (EY-00105).  相似文献   

9.
ABSTRACT. The time course of dark adaptation in Apis melifera L. was investigated by analyses of phototactic behaviour and electroretinogram (ERG). The behavioural results give a function for dark adaptation showing that in the dark after strong light adaptation the sensitivity increases exponentially with a time constant of 3 min. The sensitivity changes c. 2.4 log units during the time span of 5–720 s. The electrophysiological results indicate a smaller change in sensitivity at the level of the photoreceptors. Within a time span between 20 and 720 s the sensitivity increases during dark adaptation by a factor of 4.3 on a linear scale.  相似文献   

10.
Visual Adaptation in the Retina of the Skate   总被引:21,自引:16,他引:5  
The electroretinogram (ERG) and single-unit ganglion cell activity were recorded from the eyecup of the skate (Raja erinacea and R. oscellata), and the adaptation properties of both types of response compared with in situ rhodopsin measurements obtained by fundus reflectometry. Under all conditions tested, the b-wave of the ERG and the ganglion cell discharge showed identical adaptation properties. For example, after flash adaptation that bleached 80% of the rhodopsin, neither ganglion cell nor b-wave activity could be elicited for 10–15 min. Following this unresponsive period, thresholds fell rapidly; by 20 min after the flash, sensitivity was within 3 log units of the dark-adapted level. Further recovery of threshold was slow, requiring an additional 70–90 min to reach absolute threshold. Measurements of rhodopsin levels showed a close correlation with the slow recovery of threshold that occurred between 20 and 120 min of dark adaptation; there is a linear relation between rhodopsin concentration and log threshold. Other experiments dealt with the initial unresponsive period induced by light adaptation. The duration of this unresponsive period depended on the brightness of the adapting field; with bright backgrounds, suppression of retinal activity lasted 20–25 min, but sensitivity subsequently returned and thresholds fell to a steady-state value. At all background levels tested, increment thresholds were linearly related to background luminance.  相似文献   

11.
The S-potentials recorded intracellularly from the all-rod retina of the skate probably arise from the large horizontal cells situated directly below the layer of receptors. These cells hyperpolarize in response to light, irrespective of stimulus wavelength, and the responses in photopic as well as scotopic conditions were found to be subserved by a single photopigment with λmax = 500 nm. The process of adaptation was studied by recording simultaneously the threshold responses and membrane potentials of S-units during both light and dark adaptation. The findings indicate that the sensitivity of S-units, whether measured upon steady background fields or in the course of dark adaptation, exhibits changes similar to those demonstrated previously for the ERG b-wave and ganglion cell discharge. However, the membrane potential level of the S-unit and its sensitivity to photic stimulation varied independently for all the adapting conditions tested. It appears, therefore, that visual adaptation in the skate retina occurs before the S-unit is reached, i.e., at the receptors themselves.  相似文献   

12.
Electrical potentials from the eye (ERG) and from the contralateral visual cortex were recorded in response to flashes of white and of colored light of various intensities and durations. The evoked potentials were found to parallel the behavior of the ERG in several significant respects. Selective changes in the ERG brought about by increasing the light intensity and by light adaptation led to parallel selective changes in the cortical responses. The dual waves (b1, b2) of the ERG were found to have counterparts in two cortical waves (c1, c2) which, in respect to changes in light intensity and to light adaptation, behaved analogously to the two retinal components. The responses evoked at high intensity showed only the diphasic c1-potential. As stimulus intensity was lowered the c1-wave decreased in magnitude and a delayed c2-component appeared. The c2-potential increased in amplitude as light intensity of the flash was further reduced. Eventually the c2-wave, too, decreased as stimulus reduction continued. There was no wave length specificity in regard to either the duplex b-waves or duplex cortical waves. Both appeared at all wave lengths from 454 mµ to 630 mµ. The two cortical waves evoked by brief flashes of colored light showed all the behavior to changes in stimulus intensity and to light adaptation that occurred with white light.  相似文献   

13.
Electrical responses (ERG) to light flashes of various wavelengths and energies were obtained from the dorsal median ocellus and lateral compound eye of Limulus under dark and chromatic light adaptation. Spectral mechanisms were studied by analyzing (a) response waveforms, e.g. response area, rise, and fall times as functions of amplitude, (b) slopes of amplitude-energy functions, and (c) spectral sensitivity functions obtained by the criterion amplitude method. The data for a single spectral mechanism in the lateral eye are (a) response waveforms independent of wavelength, (b) same slope for response-energy functions at all wavelengths, (c) a spectral sensitivity function with a single maximum near 520 mµ, and (d) spectral sensitivity invariance in chromatic adaptation experiments. The data for two spectral mechanisms in the median ocellus are (a) two waveform characteristics depending on wavelength, (b) slopes of response-energy functions steeper for short than for long wavelengths, (c) two spectral sensitivity peaks (360 and 530–535 mµ) when dark-adapted, and (d) selective depression of either spectral sensitivity peak by appropriate chromatic adaptation. The ocellus is 200–320 times more sensitive to UV than to visible light. Both UV and green spectral sensitivity curves agree with Dartnall's nomogram. The hypothesis is favored that the ocellus contains two visual pigments each in a different type of receptor, rather than (a) various absorption bands of a single visual pigment, (b) single visual pigment and a chromatic mask, or (c) fluorescence. With long duration light stimuli a steady-state level followed the transient peak in the ERG from both types of eyes.  相似文献   

14.
The ERG of the compound eye in freshly collected Ligia occidentalis, in response to high intensity light flashes of ⅛ second or longer duration, begins with a negative on-effect quickly followed by an early positive deflection, rapidly returns to the baseline during illumination, and ends with a positive off-effect. As the stimulus intensity is decreased the early positivity progressively decreases and the rapid return to the baseline is replaced by a slowing decline of the negative on-effect. Responses were recorded with one active electrode subcorneally situated in the illuminated eye, the reference electrode in the dark eye. The dark-adapted eye shows a facilitation of the amplitude and rates of rise and fall of the on-effect to a brief, high intensity light stimulus. This facilitation may persist for more than 2 minutes. Following light adaptation under conditions in which the human eye loses sensitivity by a factor of almost 40,000 the Ligia eye loses sensitivity by a factor of only 3. The flicker fusion frequency of the ERG may be as high as 120/second with a corneal illumination of 15,000 foot-candles. Bleeding an otherwise intact animal very rapidly results in a decline of amplitude, change of wave form, and loss of facilitation in the ERG. When the eye is deganglionated without bleeding the animal the isolated retina responds in the same manner as the intact eye. Histological examination of the Ligia receptor layer showed that each ommatidium contains three different retinula cell types, each of which may be responsible for a different aspect of the ERG.  相似文献   

15.
Visual and circadian function are integrally related in birds, but the precise nature of their interaction is unknown. The present study determined whether visual sensitivity measured electroretinographically (ERG) in 7-week-old cockerels varies over the time of day, whether this rhythm persists in constant darkness (DD) and whether exogenous melatonin affects this ERG rhythmicity. ERG b-wave amplitude was rhythmic in LD and persisted in DD with peak amplitude during mid- to late afternoon in LD and mid-subjective day in DD, indicating that the ERG rhythm is endogenously generated. No daily or circadian variation in a-wave amplitude was observed, and ERG component latency and durations were not rhythmic. Intramuscular injection of 10 g/kg melatonin at ZT10 in LD significantly decreased b-wave amplitude but had no effect on a-wave. Intraocular injection of 600 pg melatonin, however, had no effect on any aspect of the ERG. These data indicate that a circadian clock regulates ocular sensitivity to light and that melatonin may mediate some or all of this effect. The level at which melatonin modulates retinal sensitivity is not known, but the present data suggest a central site rather than a direct effect of the hormone in the eye.Abbreviations DD constant darkness - ERG electroretinography - EW Edinger-Westphal nuclei - IMEL iodomelatonin - IO isthmooptic nucleus - LD light-dark cycle - SCG superior cervical ganglion - SCN suprachiasmatic nuclei - vSCN visual suprachiasmatic nucleus  相似文献   

16.
Characteristics of the electroretinogram (ERG) produced by the essentially all rod eye of the rat are presented as functions of the number of quanta absorbed by each rod per stimulus flash. The ERG's were obtained with 1.5 msec. stimulus flashes and uniform illumination of the entire retina. Under these conditions, distortions in the ERG due to stray light are minimized, and the ERG more accurately reflects the activity of its retinal sources. The effects of background light and two forms of dark adaptation were studied and compared. The results, especially for the b-wave, permit an interpretation in terms of two distinct processes. One process appears to determine the b-wave latency. This process is almost independent of the state of adaptation of the retina. The other process does not affect the latency, but determines the b-wave threshold and amplitude. This process strongly depends upon the state of adaptation. Moreover, the effects of dark adaptation on this amplitude-determining process are almost identical with the effects of background light.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
A quantitative model is developed to describe spectral sensitivity functions recorded extracellularly from heterogeneous populations of receptors in different states of adaptation. This treatment identifies the most important influences and clarifies several general features of experimental results. The shapes of retinal spectral sensitivity curves in different states of chromatic adaptation depend in predictable fashion on whether the primary effect of the adapting light on individual receptors is to decrease Vmax (response compression) or to increase the quantum demand for half-saturation. Some response compression is necessary in order for one or more receptors to drop out of the response at modest levels of adaptation. The apparent ease of adaptation also depends on the criterion voltage, particularly in the presence of response compression. The technique of selective adaptation of the ERG is capable of revealing the presence of receptors that comprise only a few percent of the total population. The short wavelength absorption of all visual pigments normally makes it impossible to use uv or violet light to adapt selectively those receptors with maximal sensitivity in the uv or violet region of the spectrum while sparing receptors with maximal sensitivity at longer wavelengths. The presence of cone oil droplets absorbing at short wavelengths, however, can effectively screen visual pigments in some of the receptors from uv or violet adapting lights.  相似文献   

19.
The visual response of laboratory-reared wild-type and yellow-eyed mutant (lacking pigments) cabbage loopers, Trichoplusia ni, was studied by standard electroretinogram (ERG) techniques. The ERG waveform, time to dark-adapt, maximum sensitivity, and flicker fusion frequency (FFF) of both strains and sexes were compared with those of moths treated with 15 and 30 krad of γ-radiation. From the rate of dark adaptation, yellow-eyed moths were initially more sensitive than wild-type moths, but no significant differences were apparent in the ERG waveform, total time to dark-adapt, and FFF between strains, sexes, or treatment groups. However, both sexes of both strains exhibited increased sensitivity (required less light to evoke a threshold response when fully dark-adapted) to light stimulus when they had been treated with 15 krad of γ-radiation.A comparison of the effects of irradiation on the fertility and fecundity of the two strains showed no significant differences between the number of eggs oviposited by inseminated females. However, the lower egg hatch by yellow-eyed females at most dose levels indicated reduced egg viability for the yellow-eyed genotype. Thus, a significant dose × strain interaction was found when the percentage of egg hatch of the two strains was compared.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Receptor deficient mutants and chromatic adaptation were used to isolate the contribution of R7 to the electroretinogram (ERG) ofDrosophila. R7 was found to be a single-peaked ultraviolet (UV) receptor (Fig. 1). Photoconversion of the UV absorbing rhodopsin (R) to its stable 470–495 nm metarhodopsin (M) was shown to elicit a long-lived negative (depolarizing) afterpotential (Fig. 3) while inactivating R7. Photoreconversion ofM toR reactivates R7 (Fig. 2) and repolarizes the ERG (Fig. 3). The intensities of light needed to elicit afterpotentials by photointerconverting R7 photopigment were found to be about 2 log units greater than for R1-6 photopigment (Fig. 4). Vitamin A deprivation decreases R7 (as well as R8) sensitivity by about 2 log units (through decreased photopigment levels) without changing spectral sensitivity shape (Fig. 5). Vitamin A deprivation further eliminates the light-induced inactivation of R7 allowing experiments designed to characterize the in vivo spectral absorption of R7M. R7M was found to have UV and 495 nm maxima (Fig. 6). No polarization sensitivity was detected in the R7 ERG component. The adaptational properties of R7 are similar to the properties previously established for R1-6 but different from the properties of R8.Supported by NSF grants BMS-74-12817 and BNS 76-11921. I thank M. Chapin, R. Greenberg, K. Hu, A. Ivanyshyn, D. Lakin, G. Pransky, D. Sawyer, J. Walker and W. Zitzmann for technical assistance.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号