The morphology and physiology of a “mini-ommatidium” in the median optic nerve of Limulus polyphemus

1995 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Faramarz H. Samie ◽  
Robert N. Jinks ◽  
William W. Weiner ◽  
Steven C. Chamberlain

AbstractExamination of the Limulus median optic nerve with low-magnification light microscopy allows clear visualization of an ultraviolet-sensitive mini-ommatidium enshrouded by pigment cells, glial cells, and guanophores. Serial 1-μm sections of median optic nerves containing mini-ommatidia revealed the presence of a single, heavily pigmented photoreceptor (retinular) cell and a single, unpigmented arhabdomeric cell. Computer-assisted serial reconstructions from 1-μm sections confirmed the presence of two cells, each bearing a nucleus, and two axons leaving the mini-ommatidium. The retinular cell is morphologically similar to retinular cells from the median and lateral eyes. Its rhabdomere appears to be a continuous sheet of microvilli with much infolding. The structure of the arhabdomeric cell is nearly identical to those found in the median ocellus. As in other photoreceptors in Limulus, the retinular cell of the mini-ommatidium is innervated by efferent fibers from the brain. Each mini-ommatidium generates a single train of nerve impulses in response to light, presumably from the arhabdomeric cell. Measurement of the spectral sensitivity of the mini-ommatidium based upon a constant-response criterion indicated that the retinular cell is maximally sensitive to near ultraviolet light with λmax = 380 nm. Comparison of intensity-response functions revealed that those of the mini-ommatidium are significantly steeper than those of the ocellus almost certainly as the result of neural processing in the ocellus which is absent in the mini-ommatidium.

1987 ◽  
Vol 89 (3) ◽  
pp. 353-378 ◽  
Author(s):  
R B Barlow ◽  
E Kaplan ◽  
G H Renninger ◽  
T Saito

The sensitivity of the lateral eye of the horseshoe crab, Limulus polyphemus, is modulated by efferent optic nerve impulses transmitted from a circadian clock located in the brain (Barlow, R. B., Jr., S. J. Bolanowski, and M. L. Brachman. 1977. Science. 197:86-89). At night, the efferent impulses invade the retinular, eccentric, and pigment cells of every ommatidium, inducing multiple anatomical and physiological changes that combine to increase retinal sensitivity as much as 100,000 times. We developed techniques for recording transmembrane potentials from a single cell in situ for several days to determine what circadian changes in retinal sensitivity originate in the primary phototransducing cell, the retinular cell. We found that the direct efferent input to the photoreceptor cell decreases its noise and increases its response. Noise is decreased by reducing the rate of spontaneous bumps by up to 100%. The response is increased by elevating photon catch (photons absorbed per flash) as much as 30 times, and increasing gain (response per absorbed photon) as much as 40%. The cellular mechanism for reducing the rate of spontaneous quantum bumps is not known. The mechanism for increasing gain appears to be the modulation of ionic conductances in the photoreceptor cell membrane. The mechanism for increasing photon catch is multiple changes in the anatomy of retinal cells. We combine these cellular events in a proposed scheme for the circadian rhythm in the intensity coding of single photoreceptors.


1975 ◽  
Vol 188 (1091) ◽  
pp. 121-138 ◽  

The cercaria of Cryptocotyle lingua possesses a pair of pigmented rhabdomeric photoreceptors situated antero-dorsally, and a median unpigmented rhabdomeric photoreceptor lying slightly ventral to the middle region of the body immediately anterior to the transverse commissure. Each pigmented photoreceptor consists of two asymmetrical pigment cells containing two symmetrical back-to-back pigment cups facing respectively antero-laterally and postero-medianly, with one retinular cell associated with each pigment cup. The microvilli of the rhabdomere in each cup are radially arranged around a triradiate dendritic process; in the centre of each microvillus is a strand presumably the visual pigment. The retinular cell and dendritic process contain a large number of mitochondria. The rhabdomere of the median unpigmented photoreceptor is enclosed in a thin-walled unpigmented cup opening posteriorly and giving off processes, some of which contain mitochondria, into the surrounding parenchyma. This rhabdomere resembles the equivalent of two rhabdomeres of the paired photoreceptors. Axonal processes from the retinular cells of the paired and unpaired photoreceptors enter the neuropile of the cerebral ganglia and transverse commissure respectively. The cercaria is markedly photopositive and responds also to shadow by active bursts of swimming. It is suggested that the paired dorsal photoreceptors may be sensitive to light of higher intensity and the median more ventral photoreceptor to light of lower intensity and to shadow.


Viruses ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Andréia Veras Gonçalves ◽  
Demócrito de B. Miranda-Filho ◽  
Líbia Cristina Rocha Vilela ◽  
Regina Coeli Ferreira Ramos ◽  
Thalia V. B. de Araújo ◽  
...  

Congenital viral infections and the occurrence of septo-optic dysplasia, which is a combination of optic nerve hypoplasia, abnormal formation of structures along the midline of the brain, and pituitary hypofunction, support the biological plausibility of endocrine dysfunction in Zika-related microcephaly. In this case series we ascertained the presence and describe endocrine dysfunction in 30 children with severe Zika-related microcephaly from the MERG Pediatric Cohort, referred for endocrinological evaluation between February and August 2019. Of the 30 children, 97% had severe microcephaly. The average age at the endocrinological consultation was 41 months and 53% were female. The most frequently observed endocrine dysfunctions comprised short stature, hypothyroidism, obesity and variants early puberty. These dysfunctions occurred alone 57% or in combination 43%. We found optic nerve hypoplasia (6/21) and corpus callosum hypoplasia (20/21). Seizure crises were reported in 86% of the children. The most common—and clinically important—endocrine dysfunctions were pubertal dysfunctions, thyroid disease, growth impairment, and obesity. These dysfunctions require careful monitoring and signal the need for endocrinological evaluation in children with Zika-related microcephaly, in order to make early diagnoses and implement appropriate treatment when necessary.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chih-Wei Lin ◽  
Yu Hong ◽  
Jinfu Liu

Abstract Background Glioma is a malignant brain tumor; its location is complex and is difficult to remove surgically. To diagnosis the brain tumor, doctors can precisely diagnose and localize the disease using medical images. However, the computer-assisted diagnosis for the brain tumor diagnosis is still the problem because the rough segmentation of the brain tumor makes the internal grade of the tumor incorrect. Methods In this paper, we proposed an Aggregation-and-Attention Network for brain tumor segmentation. The proposed network takes the U-Net as the backbone, aggregates multi-scale semantic information, and focuses on crucial information to perform brain tumor segmentation. To this end, we proposed an enhanced down-sampling module and Up-Sampling Layer to compensate for the information loss. The multi-scale connection module is to construct the multi-receptive semantic fusion between encoder and decoder. Furthermore, we designed a dual-attention fusion module that can extract and enhance the spatial relationship of magnetic resonance imaging and applied the strategy of deep supervision in different parts of the proposed network. Results Experimental results show that the performance of the proposed framework is the best on the BraTS2020 dataset, compared with the-state-of-art networks. The performance of the proposed framework surpasses all the comparison networks, and its average accuracies of the four indexes are 0.860, 0.885, 0.932, and 1.2325, respectively. Conclusions The framework and modules of the proposed framework are scientific and practical, which can extract and aggregate useful semantic information and enhance the ability of glioma segmentation.


Development ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 123 (1) ◽  
pp. 329-344 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.F. Schilling ◽  
T. Piotrowski ◽  
H. Grandel ◽  
M. Brand ◽  
C.P. Heisenberg ◽  
...  

Jaws and branchial arches together are a basic, segmented feature of the vertebrate head. Seven arches develop in the zebrafish embryo (Danio rerio), derived largely from neural crest cells that form the cartilaginous skeleton. In this and the following paper we describe the phenotypes of 109 arch mutants, focusing here on three classes that affect the posterior pharyngeal arches, including the hyoid and five gill-bearing arches. In lockjaw, the hyoid arch is strongly reduced and subsets of branchial arches do not develop. Mutants of a large second class, designated the flathead group, lack several adjacent branchial arches and their associated cartilages. Five alleles at the flathead locus all lead to larvae that lack arches 4–6. Among 34 other flathead group members complementation tests are incomplete, but at least six unique phenotypes can be distinguished. These all delete continuous stretches of adjacent branchial arches and unpaired cartilages in the ventral midline. Many show cell death in the midbrain, from which some neural crest precursors of the arches originate. lockjaw and a few mutants in the flathead group, including pistachio, affect both jaw cartilage and pigmentation, reflecting essential functions of these genes in at least two neural crest lineages. Mutants of a third class, including boxer, dackel and pincher, affect pectoral fins and axonal trajectories in the brain, as well as the arches. Their skeletal phenotypes suggest that they disrupt cartilage morphogenesis in all arches. Our results suggest that there are sets of genes that: (1) specify neural crest cells in groups of adjacent head segments, and (2) function in common genetic pathways in a variety of tissues including the brain, pectoral fins and pigment cells as well as pharyngeal arches.


2018 ◽  
Vol 115 (50) ◽  
pp. E11817-E11826 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nina Milosavljevic ◽  
Riccardo Storchi ◽  
Cyril G. Eleftheriou ◽  
Andrea Colins ◽  
Rasmus S. Petersen ◽  
...  

Information transfer in the brain relies upon energetically expensive spiking activity of neurons. Rates of information flow should therefore be carefully optimized, but mechanisms to control this parameter are poorly understood. We address this deficit in the visual system, where ambient light (irradiance) is predictive of the amount of information reaching the eye and ask whether a neural measure of irradiance can therefore be used to proactively control information flow along the optic nerve. We first show that firing rates for the retina’s output neurons [retinal ganglion cells (RGCs)] scale with irradiance and are positively correlated with rates of information and the gain of visual responses. Irradiance modulates firing in the absence of any other visual signal confirming that this is a genuine response to changing ambient light. Irradiance-driven changes in firing are observed across the population of RGCs (including in both ON and OFF units) but are disrupted in mice lacking melanopsin [the photopigment of irradiance-coding intrinsically photosensitive RGCs (ipRGCs)] and can be induced under steady light exposure by chemogenetic activation of ipRGCs. Artificially elevating firing by chemogenetic excitation of ipRGCs is sufficient to increase information flow by increasing the gain of visual responses, indicating that enhanced firing is a cause of increased information transfer at higher irradiance. Our results establish a retinal circuitry driving changes in RGC firing as an active response to alterations in ambient light to adjust the amount of visual information transmitted to the brain.


2016 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eyyup Karahan ◽  
Ayse Tulin Berk

Aim: To describe the associated ocular, neurologic, and systemic findings in a population of children with optic nerve hypoplasia (ONH) and to evaluate the relationship between ocular signs and neurologic findings. Method: A retrospective chart review of 53 patients with the diagnosis of ONH seen between December 1998 and September 2012 was performed. All neurodevelopmental anomalies, neuroradiologic findings, endocrinologic and systemic findings were recorded. Poor vision was defined as the visual acuity poorer than logMAR 1.0 or inadequate central steady maintained fixation. Results: Thirty (56.6%) of the 53 children with ONH were boys. Mean age at presentation was 56.2±46.8 months (range; 3 months to 18 years). Poor vision defined for the purpose of this study was found in 47.2% of 53 patients. Thirty-three (62.3%) children had nystagmus. Thirty-four (64.2%) children had strabismus. Thirteen (38.2%) of those with strabismus had esotropia, 20 (58.8%) had exotropia. The total number of the children with neurodevelopmental deficit was 22 (41.5%) in our study. Conclusion: The vision of young children with ONH should be monitored at least annually, and any refractive errors should be treated. Neuroimaging of the brain and endocrinologic evaluation is necessary in all cases with ONH.


Development ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 102 (3) ◽  
pp. 537-553
Author(s):  
M.A. Wilson ◽  
J.S. Taylor ◽  
R.M. Gaze

The structure of the optic chiasma in Xenopus tadpoles has been investigated by light and electron microscopy. Where the optic nerve approaches the chiasma, a tongue of cells protrudes from the periventricular cell mass into the dorsal part of the nerve. Glial processes from this tongue of cells ensheath fascicles of optic axons as they enter the brain. Coincident with this partitioning, the annular arrangement of axons in the optic nerve changes to the laminar organization of the optic tract. Beyond the site of this rearrangement, all newly growing axons accumulate in the ventral-most part of the nerve and pass into the region between the periventricular cells and pia which we have called the ‘bridge’. This region is characterized by a loose meshwork of glial cell processes, intercellular spaces and the presence of both optic and nonoptic axons. In the bridge, putative growth cones of retinal ganglion cell axons are found in the intercellular spaces in contact with both the glia and with other axons. The newly growing axons from each eye cross in the bridge at the midline and pass into the superficial layers of the contralateral optic tracts. As the system continues to grow, previous generations of axon, which initially crossed in the existing bridge, are displaced dorsally and caudally, forming the deeper layers of the chiasma. At their point of crossing in the deeper layers, these fascicles of axons from each eye interweave in an intimate fashion. There is no glial segregation of the older axons as they interweave within the chiasma.


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