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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Dichroism of Photosensitive Pigment in Rhabdoms of the Crayfish Orconectes

TLDR
Measurements of isolated crayfish rhabdoms illuminated transversely show that their photosensitive absorption exhibits a dichroic ratio of 2 in situ, and the rhabdom's functional dichroism thus arises from its specific fine structural geometry.
Abstract
Microspectrophotometric measurements of isolated crayfish rhabdoms illuminated transversely show that their photosensitive absorption exhibits a dichroic ratio of 2 in situ. The major absorption axis matches the axial direction of the closely parallel microvilli comprising the receptor organelle. Since these microvilli are regularly oriented transversely in about 24 layers, with the axes of the microvilli at 90° in alternate layers, transverse illumination of a properly oriented rhabdom displays alternate dichroic and isotropic bands. Because all the microvilli from any one cell share the same orientation, the layers of microvilli constitute two sets of orthogonal polarization analyzers when illuminated along the normal visual axis. Furthermore, since the dichroic ratio is 2 and transverse absorption in isotropic bands is the same as that in the minor absorbing axis of dichroic bands, the simplest explanation of the analyzer action is that the absorbing dipoles of the chromophores, as in rod and cone outer segments, lie parallel to the membrane surface but are otherwise randomly oriented. The rhabdom's functional dichroism thus arises from its specific fine structural geometry.

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI

Microspectrophotometry of Photoreceptors

P. A. Liebman
TL;DR: In nearly thirty intervening years we have not overcome the exasperation so poetically expressed by Gordon Walls, for in achieving the conditions of illumination under which our own cones “see” color, the important somethings of the cones we observe are inevitably destroyed.
Book ChapterDOI

The visual system of insects

TL;DR: This chapter focuses on the structural organization of compound eyes, which are the principal photoreceptors of adult insects and is characterized by markedly different sizes and pigmentation of ommatidia.
Book ChapterDOI

The Physiology of Invertebrate Visual Pigments

K. Hamdorf
TL;DR: The visual pigments of all invertebrates investigated so far are membrane-coupled chromoproteids having similar spectral absorption characteristics, the chromophore of which has been, in certain species, shown to be the same as that of the vertebrate rhodopsin (11-cis-retinal).
Journal ArticleDOI

Polarization sensitivity of individual retinula cells

TL;DR: The influence of the structure of a rhabdom on the polarization sensitivity of its retinula cells is elucidates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Restrictions on Rotational and Translational Diffusion of Pigment in the Membranes of a Rhabdomeric Photoreceptor

TL;DR: Quantitative comparison of photodichroism with mathematical models indicates that the pigment absorption vectors are aligned within +/- 50 degrees of the microvillar axes and are tilted into the surface of the membrane at an average value of about 20 degrees, suggesting that the bifunctional reagent quiets some molecular motion that is present after treatment with formaldehyde.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Physiological Solution for Freshwater Crustaceans

TL;DR: An attempt was made to find a better physiological solution for the freshwater crayfish and two species of freshwater crustaceans, Astacus trowbridgii and Cambarus clarkii were investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

The problem of visual excitation

TL;DR: This paper attempts to come to grips with the problem, how the action of light on a visual pigment results in a nervous excitation, and examines several new aspects of structure of rods and cones.
Journal ArticleDOI

In Situ Microspectrophotometric Studies on the Pigments of Single Retinal Rods

TL;DR: Spectra were similar from rod to rod and from point to point on the same rod showing that frog rods are spectrally homogeneous both individually and collectively.
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