The light emitted by Noctiluca has its origin in 1 to 5 x 104 organelles ("microsources") which are scattered throughout the perivacuolar cytoplasm, and which appear to be the elementary functional units of bioluminescence. Microscopical techniques, image intensification, and microphotometry were employed in their investigation. Microsources are fluorescent, strongly phase-retarding, and range widely in diameter below 1.5 microns. The number of quanta emitted in a flash from a microsource ("microflash") is of the order of 105 photons. However, microflashes show a wide range of intensities, which are correlated with the size of the organelles from which they arise. Each organelle responds repetitively and with reproducible time course to a succession of invading triggering potentials. Reversible changes in the intensity of the flash emitted by the whole cell ("macroflash") occur because of graduations in intensity of microflashes rather than as a result of changes in the number of responsive organelles. The shape of the flash emitted by individual microsources resembles that of the macroflash except for slightly shorter rise and decay times. It is concluded that the macroflash results from somewhat asynchronous, but otherwise parallel summation of microflashes.
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1 May 1967
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May 01 1967
The Subcellular Origin of Bioluminescence in Noctiluca miliaris
Roger Eckert,
Roger Eckert
From the Department of Zoology, Syracuse University, New York, the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and the Palmer Physical Laboratory, Princeton University, New Jersey
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George T. Reynolds
George T. Reynolds
From the Department of Zoology, Syracuse University, New York, the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and the Palmer Physical Laboratory, Princeton University, New Jersey
Search for other works by this author on:
Roger Eckert
From the Department of Zoology, Syracuse University, New York, the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and the Palmer Physical Laboratory, Princeton University, New Jersey
George T. Reynolds
From the Department of Zoology, Syracuse University, New York, the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and the Palmer Physical Laboratory, Princeton University, New Jersey
Received:
July 21 1966
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
Copyright © 1967 by The Rockefeller University Press
1967
J Gen Physiol (1967) 50 (5): 1429–1458.
Article history
Received:
July 21 1966
Citation
Roger Eckert, George T. Reynolds; The Subcellular Origin of Bioluminescence in Noctiluca miliaris . J Gen Physiol 1 May 1967; 50 (5): 1429–1458. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.50.5.1429
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