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1.
Summary The fine structure of photoreceptors is described in miracidia of Fasciola hepatica, Heronimus chelydrae, Allocreadium lobatum, and Spirorchis sp., and in a spirorchiid cercaria. All have in common eyespots consisting of pigment cells with chambers occupied by rhabdomeres consisting of retinular cell dendrites with numerous microvilli. Photoreceptors of the miracidia show a bilateral asymmetry which is most pronounced in H. chelydrae with a pair of well separated eyespots unequal in size. The smaller right one consists of a pigment cell and two rhabdomeres; the larger left eyespot has an anterior pigment cell with two rhabdomeres and a posterior cell containing one rhabdomere. Photoreceptors in the other species of miracidia also have five rhabdomeres but contain only two pigment cells which are closely apposed. Each contains a pair of lateral rhabdomeres and a fifth one occupies a posteromedian extension of the left pigment cell. In the number of rhabdomeres, their relationship to pigment cells and the resulting asymmetry, photoreceptors are more alike in the distantly related species of miracidia studied than they are in ocellate cercariae or even in the miracidium and cercaria of the same species or two closely related ones. From the asymmetry of photoreceptors in larvae of certain flatworms other than digenetic trematodes, it seems that eyespots of miracidia have retained an ancestral pattern whereas the diversity of photoreceptors in cercariae reflects the varied phototactic behavior of those larvae which complete their life cycles by all the means known for cercariae with a free-swimming period. In both miracidia and cercariae, photoreceptors show an anterior-posterior organization that would seem to be concerned with orientation of the larvae with respect to light.Supported in part by a David Ross Fellowship of the Purdue Research Foundation and in part by U.S.P.H.S. Grants 1T1 GM 1392 01 and 2T1 Al 106 07. We express thanks to Dr. Keith Dixon for aid in obtaining and processing miracidia of Fasciola hepatica; to Prof. Clark P. Read for his valuable comments and suggestions; and to Profs. Charles W. Philpott and Richard H. White for advice concerning electron microscopy.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The absorption maxima ( max) of the visual pigments in the ommatidia ofNotonecta glauca were found by measuring the difference spectra of single rhabdomeres after alternating illumination with two different adaptation wavelengths. All the peripheral rhabdomeres contain a pigment with an extinction maximum at 560 nm. This pigment is sensitive to red light up to wavelengths > 700 nm. In a given ommatidium in the dorsal region of the eye, the two central rhabdomeres both contain one of two pigments, either a pigment with an absorption maximum in the UV, at 345 nm, or — in neighboring rhabdoms — a pigment with an absorption maximum at 445 nm. In the ventral part of the eye only the pigment absorbing maximally in the UV was found in the central rhabdomeres. The spectral absorption properties of various types of screening-pigment granules were measured.  相似文献   

3.
Summary In the noctuid moth Spodoptera exempta, the distribution of visual pigments within the fused rhabdoms of the compound eyes was investigated by electron microscopy. Each ommatidium regularly contains eight receptor cells belonging to three morphological types: one distal, six medial, and one basal cell (Meinecke 1981); four different visual pigments — absorption maxima at approximately 355, 465, 515, and 560 nm — are known to occur within the eye (Langer et al. 1979). The compound eyes were illuminated in situ by use of monochromatic light of different wavelengths. This illumination produced a wide scale of structural changes in the microvilli of the rhabdomeres of individual cells. Preparation of eyes by freeze-substitution revealed the structural changes in the rhabdomeres to be effects of light occurring in vivo.The degree of structural changes may be considerably different in rhabdomeres within the same ommatidium; it was found to depend on the wavelength and the duration of illumination, the intensity received by the ommatidia as well as the spectral sensitivity of the receptor cells. Therefore, it was possible to estimate the spectral sensitivities of the morphological types of receptor cells. Generally, all medial cells are green receptors and all basal cells red receptors; distal cells are blue receptors in about two-thirds of the ommatidia, while in the remaining third of them distal cells are sensitive to ultraviolet light.Supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Sonderforschungsbereich 114 (Bionach)  相似文献   

4.
Five different, well-characterized mutants of the R1–6 rhodopsin gene (ninaE), which corresponds to the rod opsin gene of vertebrates, have been examined morphologically as a function of age (up to 9 weeks) to determine whether or not the photoreceptors degenerate and to assess the pattern of degeneration. Structural deterioration of R1–6 photoreceptors with age has been found in all five mutants. The structural pattern of degeneration is similar in the five mutants, but the time course of degeneration is allele dependent and varies greatly among the five, with the strongest alleles causing the fastest degeneration. The degeneration appears to be independent of either the illumination cycle to which the animals are exposed or the presence of screening pigments in the eye. Although the degeneration first appears in R1–6 photoreceptors, eventually R7/8 photoreceptors, which correspond to cones of vertebrates, are also affected. In many of these mutants, striking proliferations of membrane processes have been observed in the subrhabdomeric region of R1–6 photoreceptors. It is hypothesized that (1) this accumulation of membranes may be caused by the failure of newly synthesized membranes that are inserted into the base of microvilli to be assembled into R1–6 rhabdomeres and (2) this failure may be caused by the extremely low concentration of normal R1–6 rhodopsin in the nina E mutants. © 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Visual pigment extracts prepared from rhabdomeric membranes of vitamin A deficient blowflies contain a 5–10 times lower concentration of rhodopsin than extracts from flies which were raised on a vitamin A rich diet. Spectrophotometry showed that digitonin-solubilized rhodopsin from blowfly photoreceptors R1–6 has an absorbance maximum at about 490 nm, but no unusually enhanced β-band in the ultraviolet. The extracts did not contain detectable concentrations of other visual pigments nor was there any evidence for the presence of photostable vitamin A derivatives.Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrated that the concentration of opsin in the rhabdomeric membrane is significantly reduced in vitamin A deficient flies compared to normal flies. The results indicate that the synthesis of opsin or its incorporation into the photoreceptor membrane is regulated by the chromophore concentration in the receptor cell. Furthermore, our findings open up the possibility that differences in the spectral absorption and excitability of photoreceptors from normal and vitamin A deficient flies result from the differing opsin content of the rhabdomeres.  相似文献   

6.
Summary In crabs, there is behavioural evidence for colour discrimination from the portunidCarcinus and severalUca species, but in the same and related species only a single visual pigment has been found in the rhabdoms by microspectrophotometry. Micro-electrode recordings of the spectral sensitivity of single portunid photoreceptors may throw some light on this apparent inconsistency. Large changes in spectral sensitivity occur with light adaptation in the crabScylla serrata. Selective adaptation experiments rule out the possibility that the changes may be caused by the presence of a number of visual pigments or of antenna pigments. The results suggest that inScylla the absorption of a single visual pigment type is modified by different coloured filters in different photoreceptors and that this makes colour discrimination possible.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Microspectrophotometry has shown that fly rhabdomeres with C40-carotenoid pigments incorporated into their membrane are more resistant to destruction by short wavelength radiation than others, lacking this pigment (Kirschfeld 1982). We show here that the fine structure of those photoreceptors with the carotenoids is also much better preserved after uv-illumination than in cells lacking this pigment. The intensity of uv-illumination in the experiments was higher than in natural conditions in order to enhance the observable effects, but it is concluded that carotenoid pigments in photoreceptors should also serve a protective function under normal conditions.  相似文献   

8.
Colour vision is mediated by the expression of different visual pigments in photoreceptors of the vertebrate retina. Each visual pigment is a complex of a protein (opsin) and a vitamin A chromophore; alterations to either component affects visual pigment absorbance and, potentially, the visual capabilities of an animal. Many species of fish undergo changes in opsin expression during retinal development. In the case of salmonid fishes the single cone photoreceptors undergo a switch in opsin expression from SWS1 (ultraviolet sensitive) to SWS2 (blue-light sensitive) starting at the yolk-sac alevin stage, around the time when they first experience light. Whether light may initiate this event or produce a plastic response in the various photoreceptors is unknown. In this study, Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha were exposed to light from the embryonic (5 days prior to hatching) into the yolk sac alevin (25 days post hatching) stage and the spectral phenotype of photoreceptors assessed with respect to that of unexposed controls by in situ hybridization with opsin riboprobes. Light exposure did not change the spectral phenotype of photoreceptors, their overall morphology or spatial arrangement. These results concur with those from a variety of fish species and suggest that plasticity in photoreceptor spectral phenotype via changes in opsin expression may not be a widespread occurrence among teleosts.  相似文献   

9.
A number of invertebrates are known to be sensitive to the polarization of light and use this trait in orientation, communication, or prey detection. In these animals polarization sensitivity tends to originate in rhabdomeric photoreceptors that are more or less uniformly straight and parallel. Typically, polarization sensitivity is based on paired sets of photoreceptors with orthogonal orientation of their rhabdomeres. Sunburst diving beetle larvae are active swimmers and highly visual hunters which could potentially profit from polarization sensitivity. These larvae, like those of most Dytiscids, have a cluster of six lens eyes or stemmata (designated E1 through E6) on each side of the head capsule. We examined the ultrastructure of the photoreceptor cells of the principal eyes (E1 and E2) of first instar larvae to determine whether their rhabdomeric organization could support polarization sensitivity. A detailed electron microscopical study shows that the proximal retinas of E1 and E2 are in fact composed of photoreceptors with predominantly parallel microvilli and that neighboring rhabdomeres are oriented approximately perpendicularly to one another. A similar organization is observed in the medial retina of E1, but not in the distal retinas of E1&2. Our findings suggest that T. marmoratus larvae might be able to analyze polarized light. If so, this could be used by freshly hatched larvae to find water or within the water to break the camouflage of common prey items such as mosquito larvae. Physiological and behavioral tests are planned to determine whether larvae of T. marmoratus can actually detect and exploit polarization signals.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Deficiency of the photopigment chromophore, resulting from carotenoid/retinoid (vitamin A) deprivation, that severely impairs the visual function of Manduca sexta also leads to the hypertrophy of smooth endoplasmic reticulum in the photoreceptors. The excess endomembrane accumulates in the stacked cisternae of myeloid bodies. Although 11-cis retinal promotes substantial recovery of function in the retinas of deprived moths maintained in darkness, the myeloid bodies remain. When such recovering photoreceptors were exposed to light of moderate intensities, the amount of endomembrane diminished to normal levels over a period of several hours, while rhabdomeres grew larger. Since there was no endocytolysis, the myeloid bodies must have provided the membrane for rhabdomere enlargement. Bright light similarly mobilized the myeloid bodies in deprived receptors. Thus the persistence of myeloid bodies in moderately illuminated chromophoredeficient receptors is a consequence of their insensitivity. However, the initial hypertrophy of endomembrane does not appear to result from the lack of adequate stimulation: normal, chromophore-replete photoreceptors maintained in darkness from before the period of retinal development had large rhabdomeres and no myeloid bodies. The development of myeloid bodies during the differentiation of vitamin A-deprived photoreceptors appears to entail an influence of the chromophore at another level of receptor cell function.  相似文献   

11.
1.  Interspecific diversity in the visual pigments of stomatopod crustaceans was characterized using microspectrophotometry. We examined the 10 visual pigments in main rhabdoms in retinas of 3 species of each of two genera of stomatopod crustaceans of the superfamily Gonodactyloidea, Gonodactylus (G. oerstedii, G. aloha, and G. curacaoensis) and Odontodactylus (O. scyllarus, O. brevirostris, and O. havanensis). Species were selected to provide a matched diversity of habitats.
2.  In each genus, visual pigments varied in max in several regions of the retina, as revealed by analysis of variance. The variation within closely related species of the same genus implies that visual pigments can evolve rapidly in stomatopods.
3.  In photoreceptors of the peripheral retina, which are devoted to spatial vision, visual pigment max decreased as the depth range of the various species increased, a typical pattern for marine animals. In contrast, visual pigment max in photoreceptors of retinal regions devoted to polarization vision (midband Rows 5 and 6) is not obviously correlated with the spectral environment, implying that polarization information may be confined to particular spectral ranges. Visual pigments of the tiered rows of the midband, which are committed to spectral analysis, span a larger spectral range in shallow-water than deepwater species.
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12.
The cell polarity gene,crumbs (crb), has been shown to participate in the development and degeneration of theDrosophila retina. Mutations inCRB1, the human homologue ofDrosophila crb, also result in retinitis pigmentosa and Leber congential amaurosis. In this study, we used the gain-of-function approach to delineate the roles ofcrb in developingDrosophila eye. In the third-instar larval stage, eye development is initiated with photoreceptor differentiation and positioning of photoreceptor nuclei in the apical cellular compartment of retinal epithelium. In the pupal stage, differentiated photoreceptors begin to form the photosensitive structures, the rhabdomeres, at their apical surface. UsingGMR-Gal4 to drive overexpression of the Crb protein at the third-instar eye disc, we found that differentiation of photoreceptors was disrupted and the nuclei of differentiated photoreceptors failed to occupy the apical compartment. Usinghs-Gal4 to drive Crb overexpression in pupal eyes resulted in interference with extension of the adherens junctions and construction of the rhabdomeres, and these defects were stage-dependent. This gain-of-function study has enabled us to delineate the roles of Crb at selective stages of eye development inDrosophila.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Autoradiographs of the brains of the visual mutantsouter rhabdomeres absent JK84 (ora),small optic lobes KS58 (KS58) andno object fixation E B12 (B12) have been obtained by the deoxyglucose method. The patterns of metabolic activity in the optic lobes of the visually stimulated mutants is compared with that of similarly stimulated wildtype (WT) flies which was described in Part I of this work (Buchner et al. 1984b).In the mutantKS58 the optomotor following response to movement is nearly normal despite a 40–45% reduction of volume in the visual neuropils, medulla and lobula complex. InB12 flies the volume of these neuropils and the optomotor response are reduced. In autoradiographs of both mutants the pattern of neuronal activity induced by stimulation with moving gratings does not differ substantially from that in the WT. It suggests that only neurons irrelevant to movement detection are affected by the mutation. However, in the lobula plate of someKS58 flies and in the second chiasma of allB12 flies, the pattern of metabolic activity differs from that observed in WT flies. Up to now no causal relation has been found between the modifications described in behaviour or anatomy and those observed in the labelling of these mutants.In the ommatidia ofora flies the outer rhabdomeres are lacking while the central photoreceptors appear to be normal. Stimulus-specific labelling is absent in the visual neuropil of these mutants stimulated with movement or flicker. This result underlines the importance of the outer rhabdomeres for visual tasks, especially for movement detection.Abbreviations DG deoxyglucose - KS58 small optic lobesKS58 - B12 no object fixation EB12 - JK84 ora outer rhabdomeres absent JK84 - WT wildtype  相似文献   

14.
Visual pigment extracts prepared from rhabdomeric membranes of vitamin A deficient blowflies contain a 5-10 times lower concentration of rhodopsin than extracts from flies which were raised on a vitamin A rich diet. Spectrophotometry showed that digitonin-solubilized rhodopsin from blowfly photoreceptors R1-6 has an absorbance maximum at about 490 nm, but no unusually enhanced beta-band in the ultraviolet. The extracts did not contain detectable concentrations of other visual pigments nor was there any evidence for the presence of photostable vitamin A derivatives. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrated that the concentration of opsin in the rhabdomeric membrane is significantly reduced in vitamin A deficient flies compared to normal flies. The results indicate that the synthesis of opsin or its incorporation into the photoreceptor membrane is regulated by the chromophore concentration in the receptor cell. Furthermore, our findings open up the possibility that differences in the spectral absorption and excitability of photoreceptors from normal and vitamin A deficient flies result from the differing opsin content of the rhabdomeres.  相似文献   

15.
Summary In the ommatidia of Musca, the light flux transmitted by each one of the rhabdomeres of sense cells no. 1 to 6 decreases as a function of time if light falls onto these rhabdomeres. With a similar time course the light flux reflected from these rhabdomeres increases. These changes take place within a few seconds following illumination. The results have been established in the intact animal using changes in the appearance of the pseudopupil as indicator and also in surviving preparations of the eye with direct inspection of the rhabdomeres.The changes are interpreted as a consequence of interactions between pigment granules in the sense cells and electromagnetic fields induced outside the rhabdomeres by light travelling on the inside: In the dark adapted situation the granules are quite distant from the rhabdomeres, the interaction is negligible. During light adaptation the granules move close to the rhabdomeres, and as a consequence, total reflection of the light in the rhabdomere is frustrated. The relatively rapid changes in the optical characteristics of the rhabdomeres are explained by the fact that the distance, the granules have to move in order to switch from one condition to the other is in principle on the order of the wavelength of light.The results indicate, that the changes in the position of the granules are induced by the excitation of the respective sense cells themselves, for instance by the degree of their depolarisation. No interaction between the sense cells of one ommatidium nor between those of different ommatidia could be found.The function of the movement of the pigment granules is interpreted as a means to protect the sense cells no. 1 to 6 against strong illumination. — Movement of pigment granules is not induced in sense cells no. 7 and 8 with light intensities which give maximal response in sense cells no. 1 to 6.

Wertvolle Diskussionen verdanken wir Herrn Dr. K. G. Götz sowie Herrn Prof. W. Reichardt. Wir danken Fräulein T. Wiegand für Mithilfe bei den Experimenten sowie Herrn E. Freiberg für das Fertigstellen der Abbildungen.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The compound eye of the Golden Birdwing, Troides aeacus formosanus (Papilionidae, Lepidoptera), is furnished with three types of ommatidia, which are clearly different in pigmentation around the rhabdom. Each ommatidium contains nine photoreceptors, whose spectral sensitivities were analyzed electrophysiologically. We identified nine spectral types of photoreceptor with sensitivities peaking at 360 nm (UV), 390 nm (V), 440 nm (B), 510 nm (BG), 540 nm (sG), 550 nm (dG), 580 nm (O), 610 nm (R), and 630 nm (dR) respectively. The spectral sensitivities of the V, O, R and dR receptors did not match the predicted spectra of any visual pigments, but with the filtering effects of the pigments around the rhabdom, they can be reasonably explained. In some of the receptors, negative-going responses were observed when they were stimulated at certain wavelengths, indicating antagonistic interactions between photoreceptors.  相似文献   

18.

Monascus pigments are secondary metabolites of Monascus species and are mainly composed of yellow pigments, orange pigments and red pigments. In this study, a larger proportion of Monascus yellow pigments could be obtained through the selection of the carbon source. Hydrophilic yellow pigments can be largely produced extracellularly by Monascus ruber CGMCC 10910 under conditions of high glucose fermentation with low oxidoreduction potential (ORP). However, keeping high glucose levels later in the culture causes translation or a reduction of yellow pigment. We presume that the mechanism behind this phenomenon may be attributed to the redox level of the culture broth and the high glucose stress reaction of M. ruber CGMCC 10910 during high glucose fermentation. These yellow pigments were produced via high glucose bio-fermentation without citrinin. Therefore, these pigments can act as natural pigments for applications as food additives.

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19.
Vision frequently mediates critical behaviours, and photoreceptors must respond to the light available to accomplish these tasks. Most photoreceptors are thought to contain a single visual pigment, an opsin protein bound to a chromophore, which together determine spectral sensitivity. Mechanisms of spectral tuning include altering the opsin, changing the chromophore and incorporating pre-receptor filtering. A few exceptions to the use of a single visual pigment have been documented in which a single mature photoreceptor coexpresses opsins that form spectrally distinct visual pigments, and in these exceptions the functional significance of coexpression is unclear. Here we document for the first time photoreceptors coexpressing spectrally distinct opsin genes in a manner that tunes sensitivity to the light environment. Photoreceptors of the cichlid fish, Metriaclima zebra, mix different pairs of opsins in retinal regions that view distinct backgrounds. The mixing of visual pigments increases absorbance of the corresponding background, potentially aiding the detection of dark objects. Thus, opsin coexpression may be a novel mechanism of spectral tuning that could be useful for detecting prey, predators and mates. However, our calculations show that coexpression of some opsins can hinder colour discrimination, creating a trade-off between visual functions.  相似文献   

20.
An important component of the cone photoreceptors of bird eyes is the oil droplets located in front of the visual-pigment-containing outer segments. The droplets vary in colour and are transparent, clear, pale or rather intensely yellow or red owing to various concentrations of carotenoid pigments. Quantitative modelling of the filter characteristics using known carotenoid pigment spectra indicates that the pigments’ absorption spectra are modified by the high concentrations that are present in the yellow and red droplets. The high carotenoid concentrations not only cause strong spectral filtering but also a distinctly increased refractive index at longer wavelengths. The oil droplets therefore act as powerful spherical microlenses, effectively channelling the spectrally filtered light into the photoreceptor''s outer segment, possibly thereby compensating for the light loss caused by the spectral filtering. The spectral filtering causes narrow-band photoreceptor spectral sensitivities, which are well suited for spectral discrimination, especially in birds that have feathers coloured by carotenoid pigments.  相似文献   

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