The second phase (negative peak) of the early receptor potential of cones has been studied in the all-cone eyes of the Mexican and antelope ground squirrels (Citellus mexicanus and Citellus leucurus) and compared with responses from the rod-dominant eyes of the rat and flying squirrel (Glaucomys volans). The responses obtained from the all-cone eyes tended to be smaller in amplitude, to have higher thresholds, and to be considerably more resistant to light adaptation than the responses from the rod-dominant eyes. The wave forms and time courses of the two types of responses were similar, although the cone potential tended to be less sensitive to temperature variations and its time constants tended to be shorter than those of the rod potential. The spectral sensitivity of the second phase of the early receptor potential of the Mexican ground squirrel closely follows the absorption spectrum of a Dartnall nomogram pigment having its absorption maximum at 540 mμ. Moreover, as in the case of the rat, the amplitude of the response appears to be linearly related to the amount of pigment bleached in a flash. Thus, in both all-rod and all-cone systems the early receptor potential appears to arise in the photoexcitation of the respective visual pigment and appears to be closely linked to the initial photochemical events. The similarity of the wave form, time course, and stimulus-response curves in the two systems suggests that the early receptor potential is produced by similar mechanisms in all-rod and all-cone systems.
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1 July 1966
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July 01 1966
Early Receptor Potentials of Rods and Cones in Rodents
WILLIAM L. PAK,
WILLIAM L. PAK
From the Departments of Biophysics and Physics, The University of Chicago. Dr. Pak's present address is the Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, Lafayette, Indiana
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THOMAS G. EBREY
THOMAS G. EBREY
From the Departments of Biophysics and Physics, The University of Chicago. Dr. Pak's present address is the Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, Lafayette, Indiana
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WILLIAM L. PAK
,
THOMAS G. EBREY
From the Departments of Biophysics and Physics, The University of Chicago. Dr. Pak's present address is the Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, Lafayette, Indiana
Received:
December 06 1965
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
© 1966 Chowdhury and Chanda
1966
J Gen Physiol (1966) 49 (6): 1199–1208.
Article history
Received:
December 06 1965
Citation
WILLIAM L. PAK, THOMAS G. EBREY; Early Receptor Potentials of Rods and Cones in Rodents. J Gen Physiol 1 July 1966; 49 (6): 1199–1208. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.0491199
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