Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 11, 900-909, Copyright © 1991 by Society for Neuroscience
Spatial restriction of light adaptation and mutation-induced inactivation in fly photoreceptors
B Minke and R Payne
Department of Neuroscience, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205.
The spatial spread within fly photoreceptors of 2 forms of desensitization
by bright light have been investigated: the natural process of light
adaptation in normal Musca photoreceptors and a receptor-potential
inactivation in the no-steady-state (nss) mutant of the sheep blowfly
Lucilia. The suction-electrode method used for recording from vertebrate
rods was applied to fly ommatidia. A single ommatidium in vitro was
partially sucked into a recording pipette. Illumination of the portion of
the ommatidium within the pipette resulted in a flow of current having a
wave form similar to that of the receptor potential and polarity consistent
with current flow into the illuminated region of the photoreceptors. Two
5-microns slits of light, positioned at right angles to the ommatidial
axis, were employed to determine the spread of light adaptation or
inactivation along the ommatidium. The intensity of a flash of light
delivered to one (adapting) slit was adjusted until it produced a criterion
fractional reduction in the response to the other (test) slit. The
reciprocal of this intensity of the adapting slit was taken as a measure of
the effectiveness of the slit in causing light adaptation or inactivation.
The effectiveness of the slit in causing light adaptation in normal Musca
ommatidia fell as the adapting and test slits were moved farther apart
along the ommatidial axis, declining to half its maximal value at a
distance of 13 +/- 2 microns. Similar measurements of the effectiveness of
a slit in causing light-induced inactivation in the nss mutant of Lucilia
also demonstrated localization, declining to half its maximal value at a
distance between the slits of 9 +/- 1 microns. Neither light adaptation nor
inactivation by the nss mutation, therefore, appear to be mediated by
voltage or by a highly diffusible agent. The results are consistent with
the idea that inactivation by the nss mutation replaces adaptation in the
mutant photoreceptors.