Literature DB >> 5916942

Mechanism of polarized light perception.

T H Waterman, K W Horch.   

Abstract

As background for a report on our current selective adaptation experiments in decapod crustaceans, the various facts and hypotheses generally relevant to intraretinal sensitivity to polarized light in arthropods as well as cephalopods have been marshaled. On the basis of this review, the following working hypotheses have been made. 1) One ommatidium in the compound eye is the functional unit in image perception but contains in its component retinular cells subunits which can work independently in detecting other visual parameters, such as polarization. 2) Single retinular cells do respond differentially to light polarized in various planes. 3) Light sensitivity, including e-vector detection, is localized in the rhab domeres, which comprise closely packed arrays of microvilli protruding axially from retinular cells; the dichroism of the photopigment molecules, which are contained within the microvilli, provides the molecular basis of e-vector detection. 4) The visual pigment molecules have their major dichroic axis aligned predominantly parallel to the long axis of the microvillus containing them; typically all microvilli in a single rhab domere are closely parallel to one another, thus comprising at the cellular level a unit dichroic analyzer with maximum optical density to photons vibrating in the direction parallel to these microvillous protrusions. 5) In most decapod crustaceans, in cephalopods, and in some insects the microvilli in all rhabdomeres of a retinula are oriented in only two directions, perpendicular. to each other. Therefore, e-vector perception must depend at the retinular level on a two channel system consisting of a pair of dichroic analyzers with their major transmitting axes fixed at a 90 degrees angle determined by the two directions of microvillus orientation. Our new results on selective adaptation in the eye of Cardisoma provide direct experimental evidence for such a two-channel analyzer in which the pair of functional units have their maximum sensitivity to polarization in the same retinal directions as the rhab dom microvilli observed in electron micrographs. In turn, these directions correspond with the vertical and horizontal axes of the animal's normal spatial orientation. In e-vector detection the seven retinular cells of a single decapod ommatidium thus form two operational subgroups of four and three cells, respectively (39). The correspondence of the electrophysiological evidence for a dual polarization analyzer with the perpendicular directions shown by the microvilli in a single rhabdom strengthens the idea that one ommatidium is enough for detecting e-vector orientation. On this evidence we may conclude that the model developed above for a two-channel polarization analyzer effectively accounts for the relevant spectrophotometric, fine-structural, electrophysiological, and behavioral data currently available for a considerable number of arthropods and cephalopods.

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Year:  1966        PMID: 5916942     DOI: 10.1126/science.154.3748.467

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Science        ISSN: 0036-8075            Impact factor:   47.728


  12 in total

Review 1.  Teleost polarization vision: how it might work and what it might be good for.

Authors:  Maarten Kamermans; Craig Hawryshyn
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2011-03-12       Impact factor: 6.237

2.  A discussion of light scattering in the Squilla rhabdom.

Authors:  H Schiff
Journal:  Kybernetik       Date:  1974-03-13

3.  Localization of the violet and yellow receptor cells in the crayfish retinula.

Authors:  E Eguchi; T H Waterman; J Akiyama
Journal:  J Gen Physiol       Date:  1973-10       Impact factor: 4.086

4.  Dichroism of photosensitive pigment in rhabdoms of the crayfish Orconectes.

Authors:  T H Waterman; H R Fernández; T H Goldsmith
Journal:  J Gen Physiol       Date:  1969-09       Impact factor: 4.086

5.  Changes in retinal fine structure induced in the crab Libinia by light and dark adaptation.

Authors:  E Eguchi; T H Waterman
Journal:  Z Zellforsch Mikrosk Anat       Date:  1967

6.  Unorthodox pattern of microvilli and intercellular junctions in regular retinular cells of the porcellanid crab Petrolisthes.

Authors:  E Eguchi; T Goto; T H Waterman
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1982       Impact factor: 5.249

7.  The morphology of the Limulus visual system. 3. The lateral rudimentary eye.

Authors:  W H Fahrenbach
Journal:  Z Zellforsch Mikrosk Anat       Date:  1970

8.  Fine structure of the ommatidia and the occurrence of rhabdomeric twist in the dorsal eye of male Bibio marci (Diptera, Nematocera, Bibionidae).

Authors:  I Altner; D Burkhardt
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1981       Impact factor: 5.249

9.  [The orientation of the ommatidia in the retina of the honeybee (Apis mellifica L.)].

Authors:  K H Skrzipek; H Skrzipek
Journal:  Z Zellforsch Mikrosk Anat       Date:  1973-06-07

10.  Freeze-etch and histochemical evidence for cycling in crayfish photoreceptor membranes.

Authors:  E Eguchi; T H Waterman
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1976-07-06       Impact factor: 5.249

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