Abstract

Abstract— The ciliate Blepharisma japonicum was exposed to artificial polychromatic and monochromatic UV radiation to evaluate the relative roles of UVB (280–315 nm UV radiation) and UVA (315–400 nm UV radiation) in altering its motility and photobehavior and to determine absolute weighting coefficients for these effects in the UVB range. Under polychromatic UV irradiation B. japonicum cells showed a severe reduction of cell speed and of the capability to respond to light stimuli. At low doses, however, UV caused a significant increase in the average velocity of a cell population. The UVB exclusion experiments indicated that UVA does not significantly alter motility and photoresponsiveness. The increase and the subsequent decrease in cell velocity was observed also under monochromatic irradiation at 281, 290 and 300 nm, whereas at 310 nm cells swim faster up to the highest photon flux density used. The cell capability of reacting to photic stimuli, conversely, steadily declined with increasing photon flux density at all the tested UVB wavelengths. The action spectra for the alteration of cell velocity and the impairment of photoresponsiveness show that the lower the irradiation wavelength, the more remarkable are the UVB effects and suggest different targets for the increase and the decrease in cell velocity.

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