U1 KA4- COMMUNICATION AND SIGNALLING 4) The Vertebrate Eye Flashcards

1
Q

What is the retina

A

The area within the eye which detects light / the tissue at the back of the eye which converts light into electrical signals

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2
Q

What two types of cells are there within the retina of an animal eye

A

; about 125 million rods
; 6 million cones

Named like this due to their shape (look at page 104 scholar)

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3
Q

How do rods function

- what do they contain

A

Rod cells function in dim light (they contain one type of light sensitive pigment )
- these cells are sensitive to changes in light intensity and are particularly useful in areas of low light intensity (dim light) BUT do not allow colour perception.

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4
Q

How do nocturnal animals have better vision at night

A
  • nocturnal animals have a greater proportion of rod cells in their retina which gives them a better vision at night
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5
Q

How do cone cells function / what are they responsible for

A
  • cones are responsible for colour vision in animals
  • they only function in bright light
  • they are not as sensitive to light as rod cells ; however they are particular sensitive to specific colours (wavelengths) of light : green , red , blue and (in some animals) UV.
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6
Q

Colour blind - relation to cone cells

A

People who are colour blind lack a particular type of cone cell in their retina

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7
Q

What do rod cells contain to detect light / all eukaryotes contain
- where is it derived from

A
  • each rod cell in the retina contains photoreceptor proteins that consist of a light absorbing molecule called retinal , to capture light energy
  • retinal is derived from vitamin A , which itself can be formed from Carotene in plants
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8
Q

Retinal is a __________ group

A

Retinal is a prosthetic group

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9
Q
  • What is retinal bound to
  • where is this complex in the cell
  • what is the complex called
A
  • Retinal is a prosthetic group which is covalently bound to a membrane protein called opsin.
  • the retinal - opsin complex is embedded in membranes inside photoreceptor cells.
  • in rod cells the retinal - opsin complex is called rhodopsin
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10
Q

How is generation of a nerve impulse brought about involving rhodopsin

A
  • retinal absorbs a photon of light and rhodopsin changes conformation to photoexcited rhodopsin. ( photoexcited rhodopsin triggers a cascade of proteins that will amplify a photon signal and generate a nerve impulse)
  • the photoexcited rhodopsin activates a G protein called transducin ( a single photoexcited rhodopsin activates hundreds of molecules of transducin)
  • transducin activates the enzyme phosphodiesterase (PDE) (each activated G protein activates one molecule of PDE)
  • PDE catalyses the hydrolysis of a molecule called cyclic GMP (cGMP). (Each active PDE molecule breaks down thousands of cGMP molecules per second)
  • the reduction in cGMP concentration (as a result of its hydrolysis) affects the function of ion channels in the membrane of rod cells. It results in the closure of ion channels.
  • the inward leakage of Na and Ca ++ ions is halted so the membrane potential increases( hyperpolarisation - increasing charge - triggers nerve impulses in neurons in the retina.
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11
Q

The rod cells in darkness have a mechanism that prevents generation of a _______ _________

A

The rod cells in darkeness have a mechanism that prevents generation of a nerve impulse

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12
Q

How do rod cells prevent generation of nerve impulse

A
  • rode cells in darkness have a mechanism that prevents the generation of a nerve impulse
  • the rhodopsin is inactive and the rod cells produce cyclic GMP (cGMP).
  • this binds to ligand gated Na+ channels , thus opening the channels so sodium ions leak across the membrane
  • the membrane stays depolarised and so no nerve impulse is generated
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13
Q
  • What is the cGMP handbrake

- what removes this handbrake

A

The rod could be thought as having a cGMP handbrake.

: activating rhodopsin with light , removes this “handbrake” so a nerve impulse can be generated

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14
Q

How do rod cells have high sensitivity at low light intensities

A
  • the protein cascade ( rhodopsin - G protein - enzyme - channel ) provides a high degree of amplification , so stimulation by a single photon results in a large effect on ion movement across the membrane. This gives rod cells high sensitivity at low light intensities . Rods can generate a nerve impulse from as few as ten photons of light
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15
Q

Why are cones less sensitive than rods

A

Cones are less sensitive than rods because they have fewer photoreceptor molecules in their membranes

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16
Q

How do cones photoreceptor molecules generate a nerve impulse

A
  • the photoreceptor molecule generate a nerve impulse in exactly the same way as in rods , but the cones have photopsins that are sensitive to diffrent colours
17
Q

How are photopsins made

A
  • different photopsins are made by combining retinal with different forms of opsin.
  • these opsin differ by a few amino acids in their primary structure which means their tertiary structures are different when they combine with the retinal.
18
Q

What does the change in structure (the different photopsins) (when retinal combines with different opsins) mean ?

A

The change in structure means that photopsins absorb light across a different range of wavelengths

19
Q
  • how many types of photopsins are there and what do they have
A
  • in humans each cone cell has one of three types of photopsin , each with a MAXIMAL SENSITIVITY To a specific wavelength of light.
  • in humans one type of photopsin has a maximal sensitivity to blue , one green and another to red light.
  • some species I’m other animals (such as insects / fish / reptiles and birds) have photopsins that have maximal sensitivity to UV light