Amplification and latency in photoreceptors: Integrated or separated phenomena ? (Q1113830)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 4081352
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
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| English | Amplification and latency in photoreceptors: Integrated or separated phenomena ? |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 4081352 |
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Amplification and latency in photoreceptors: Integrated or separated phenomena ? (English)
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1989
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It is shown that the models for the transduction process in photoreceptors which treat latency and amplification as integrated phenomena (``integrated models'') yield time scales for single photon signals (``quantum bumps'') which distinctly conflict with the experimentally observed ones for the ventral nerve photoreceptor of Limulus: the ratio of bump duration/latency \(t_ b/t_{lat}\) is predicted by integrated models to be \(\approx 3\) in contrast to the experimental result of \(\approx 0.5\). Moreover, integrated models lead to a predicted value of an extinction rate of \(\approx 50 \%\), i.e., 50 \% of the absorbed photons should be expected to cause no signal in the dark adapted state of the cell. In this paper it is shown that separation of latency and amplification in such a way that the latency causing process precedes amplification in the transduction process eliminates these discrepancies. Two alternative models for the latency part of transduction are suggested which give a qualitatively much better agreement with the experimental histograms of latencies.
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transduction process
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latency
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amplification
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integrated models
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quantum bumps
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ventral nerve photoreceptor of Limulus
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0.7122806310653687
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0.7106314897537231
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0.7021815180778503
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