Efferent neurotransmission of circadian rhythms in Limulus lateral eye. I. Octopamine-induced increases in retinal sensitivity.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Octopamine increases the sensitivity of the Limulus lateral eye in situ when injected beneath the cornea during the day. The effect of octopamine is dose-dependent with a threshold concentration of about 0.1 microM injected at 1 microliter/min for 15 min. Injection of 40 microM octopamine increases lateral eye sensitivity to approximately 70% of the nighttime level normally caused by the efferent output of a circadian clock. Injections of octopamine analogues and other candidate neurotransmitters indicate that the postsynaptic receptor mediating the increase of retinal sensitivity is relatively specific for the structure of octopamine. The postsynaptic receptor is tentatively classified as a type 2B octopamine receptor (Evans, P. D. (1981) J. Physiol. (Lond.) 318: 99-122). Clozapine suppresses the effects of both exogenous octopamine and the endogenous efferent neurotransmitter. Together with the results from Barlow et al. (Barlow, R. B., Jr., S. J. Bolanowski, Jr., and M. L. Brachman (1977) Science 197: 86-89) and Battelle et al. (Batelle, B. -A., J. A. Evans, and S. C. Chamberlain (1982) Science 216: 1250-1252) our study leads to the following conclusion: retinal efferents, driven by a circadian clock in Limulus brain, release octopamine that increases visual sensitivity.
منابع مشابه
Visual efference neuromodulates retinal timing: in vivo roles of octopamine, substance P, circadian phase, and efferent activation in Limulus.
Efferent nerves coursing from the brain to the lateral eye of the horseshoe crab, Limulus polyphemus, increase its nighttime sensitivity to light. They release octopamine, which produces a categorical increase of photoreceptor response duration in vitro. Analogous in vivo timing effects on the electroretinogram (ERG) were demonstrated when octopamine was infiltrated into the eye of an otherwise...
متن کاملCircadian rhythms in Limulus photoreceptors. I. Intracellular studies
The sensitivity of the lateral eye of the horseshoe crab, Limulus polyphemus, is modulated by efferent optic nerve impulses transmitted from a circadian clock located in the brain (Barlow, R. B., Jr., S. J. Bolanowski, and M. L. Brachman. 1977. Science. 197:86-89). At night, the efferent impulses invade the retinular, eccentric, and pigment cells of every ommatidium, inducing multiple anatomica...
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A circadian clock in the Limulus brain generates efferent optic nerve activity at night. The endogenous activity begins near dusk, continues during the night, and stops near dawn. Approximately 10 to 20 efferent fibers in each lateral optic nerve trunk fire in close synchrony with one another and with the efferent fibers in the opposite nerve trunk producing bursts of nerve impulses at night. T...
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The sensitivity of the Limulus lateral eye exhibits a pronounced circadian rhythm. At night a circadian oscillator in the brain activates efferent fibers in the optic nerve, inducing multiple changes in the physiological and anatomical characteristics of retinal cells. These changes increase the sensitivity of the retina by about five orders of magnitude. We investigated whether this increase i...
متن کاملSpike firing pattern of output neurons of the Limulus circadian clock.
The lateral eyes of the horseshoe crab (Limulus polyphemus) show a daily rhythm in visual sensitivity that is mediated by efferent nerve signals from a circadian clock in the crab's brain. How these signals communicate circadian messages is not known for this or other animals. Here the authors describe in quantitative detail the spike firing pattern of clock output neurons in living horseshoe c...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
دوره 4 4 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1984