Abstract: | We have used a vibrating probe to determine the profile of electrical current density around ventral photoreceptors of the horseshoe crab following flashes of light that uniformly illuminated the entire surface of the photoreceptor's cell body. The vibrating probe signal indicated that the density of inward current was greatest at the distal region of the cell, the region that is expected to contain the light-sensitive rhabdom. The density of inward current typically declined at the midpoint of the cell body and then reversed to an outward current flow in the proximal region of the cell body, close to the axon. The profile of local sensitivity of the photoreceptor to light closely matched the profile of inward current density, suggesting that the light-activated conductance is localized to the light-sensitive region of the cell. |