Light-induced pigment granule migration in the retinular cells of Drosophila melanogaster. Comparison of wild type with ERG-defective mutants.
Open Access
- 1 February 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 77 (2) , 155-175
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.77.2.155
Abstract
The dependence of pigment granule migration (PGM) upon the receptor potential was examined using several strains of electroretinogram (ERG)-defective mutants of Drosophila melanogaster. The mutants that have a defective lamina component but a normal receptor component of the ERG (no on-transient A [nonA] and tan) exhibited normal pigment granule migration. The mutants that have very small or no receptor potentials (certain no receptor potential A [norpA] alleles), on the other hand, exhibited no PGM. In the case of the temperature-sensitive norpA mutant, norpAH52, normal PGM was present at 17 degrees but not at 32 degrees C or above, corresponding to its electrophysiological phenotype. In the transient receptor potential (trp) mutant, whose receptor potential decays to the baseline within a few seconds during a sustained light stimulus, the pigment granules initially moved close to the rhabdomere when light was turned on but moved away after about 5 s during a sustained light stimulus. All these results lend strong support to the notion that PGM is initiated by a light-evoked depolarization of the receptor membrane, i.e., the receptor potential. However, under certain experimental conditions, the receptor potentials failed to induce PGM in the trp mutant. The depolarization of the receptor, thus, appears to be closely associated with PGM but is not a sufficient condition for PGM.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transformations in the structure of the cytoplasmic ground substance in erythrophores during pigment aggregation and dispersion. I. A study using whole-cell preparations in stereo high voltage electron microscopy.The Journal of cell biology, 1977
- Persistence of prolonged light-induced conductance change in arthropod photoreceptors on recovery from anoxiaNature, 1976
- Photoreceptor Mutant of Drosophila : Is Protein Involved in Intermediate Steps of Phototransduction?Science, 1976
- Induction of photoreceptor voltage noise in the dark in Drosophila mutantNature, 1975
- Photopigment conversions expressed in receptor potential and membrane resistance of blowfly visual sense cellsNature, 1975
- Photopigment conversions expressed in pupil mechanism of blowfly visual sense cellsNature, 1975
- Ultraviolet-Induced Sensitivity to Visible Light in Ultraviolet Receptors of Limulus The Journal of general physiology, 1972
- On-Transient of Insect Electroretinogram: Its Cellular OriginScience, 1971
- Abnormal Electroretinogram from a Drosophila MutantNature, 1969
- Submicroscopic structure of the compound eye as revealed by electron microscopyJournal of Ultrastructure Research, 1958