Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 12, 1490-1501, Copyright © 1992 by Society for Neuroscience
Submicrovillar tubules in distal segments of squid photoreceptors detected by rapid freezing
JP Walrond and EZ Szuts
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins 80523.
Invertebrate phototransduction is believed to involve an inositol
trisphosphate (InsP3)-mediated release of calcium from intracellular
storage compartments. Although light-induced production of InsP3 has been
demonstrated for squid retinas, morphological evidence for the presence of
internal calcium stores has been lacking. Because squid retinas are about 1
mm thick and composed of densely packed receptor cells, conventional
aldehyde fixatives may not penetrate rapidly enough to preserve subcellular
organelles. To reduce the time for fixative penetration, receptor cells
were isolated from intact retinas before fixation, but these techniques
provided little improvement in the preservation of membrane-bound
compartments. Alternatively, the distal ends of the receptors were
ultra-rapidly frozen by dropping 1 mm2 pieces of intact retina against a
liquid helium-cooled copper block. Electron micrographs of thick sections
from rapidly frozen and freeze- substituted retinas showed elongated
saccules oriented parallel to the long axis of the receptor cell and
located about 40 nm from the microvillar openings. Freeze-fracture and etch
views of rapidly frozen cells showed that the saccules are 130 nm diameter
tubules and extend for at least several micrometers along the length of the
receptor cell. We call these organelles submicrovillar tubules (SMT). The
gap between the SMT and the plasma membrane contains a network of filaments
that appear to be actin. Freeze-fracture and etch views of the rhabdomeres
also indicate that adjacent microvilli are separated by a 6-8-nm-wide
extracellular space along most of their length. This space is spanned by
extracellular connections linking adjacent microvilli. The position and
orientation of the SMT suggest that these organelles may serve the same
function as the more voluminous and highly convoluted submicrovillar
cisternae found in other invertebrates. The SMT is likely to be the
intracellular compartment that stores and releases calcium as part of the
InsP3-mediated light response.