Abstract
A system of efferent substance P-like immunoreactive fibers innervates the ommatidia of the Limulus lateral eye. Thus, we tested the physiological effects of substance P on the lateral eye by measuring the electroretinogram, a population potential reflecting the photoreceptors' response to light, under different experimental conditions. Substance P had no direct effect on the photoreceptors, but it induced an increase in their responsiveness to test flashes of light. The latency, magnitude, and duration of this reversible modulatory effect was dose-dependent. The lateral eye displays an endogenous circadian rhythm in its responsiveness to light. Application of exogenous substance P in the daytime causes an immediate rise as well as an increase in the nocturnal peak, while injection of one of its antagonists (D-Pro2, D-Phe7, D-Trp9 substance P) in the afternoon retards the normal rise in sensitivity and reduces the nighttime levels. Passive incubation with substance P antibodies at midnight caused a drop to diurnal levels of photosensitivity. Short-term changes in photosensitivity, similar in their nature to the substance P-induced ones, were caused by arousing the subjects. Arousal had an effect on the ongoing circadian rhythm similar to that of substance P application. Thus, the substance P efferent system may regulate neural responsiveness in both a short-term, environmentally induced manner, as well as for level setting in a circadian fashion. The mechanism for substance P-induced increases in photosensitivity involves changes in ommatidial structure: contraction of distal pigment cells, resulting in an increased aperture, and contraction of the retinular cells and rhabdom, resulting in a wider diameter of the latter. These structural modifications result in a greater angle of acceptance and increased light quantum catch.
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