Blue and Double-peaked Green Receptors Depend on Ommatidial Type in the Eye of the Japanese Yellow Swallowtail Papilio xuthus
Author(s) -
Michiyo Kinoshita,
Daisuke Kurihara,
Aiko Tsutaya,
Kentaro Arikawa
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
zoological science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.391
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 2212-3830
pISSN - 0289-0003
DOI - 10.2108/zsj.23.199
Subject(s) - ommatidium , biology , compound eye , opsin , spectral sensitivity , simple eye in invertebrates , pigment , rhodopsin , receptor , anatomy , sensory receptor , color vision , biophysics , botany , optics , genetics , retinal , wavelength , chemistry , physics , organic chemistry
The compound eye of the butterfly Papilio xuthus is composed of three spectrally distinct types of ommatidia. We investigated the blue and double-peaked green receptors that are encountered distally in type I and III ommatidia, by means of intracellular recordings, in vivo fluorescence microscopy, and histology. The blue receptors are R1 and/or R2 photoreceptors; they contain the same mRNA encoding the opsin of the blue-absorbing visual pigment. However, here we found that the sensitivity in the UV wavelength region strongly depends on the ommatidial type; the blue receptors in type I ommatidia have a distinctly depressed UV sensitivity, which is attributed to lateral filtering in the fused rhabdom. In the main, fronto-ventral part of the eye, the R3 and R4 photoreceptors of all ommatidia contain the same set of two mRNAs encoding the opsins of green-absorbing visual pigments, PxL1 and PxL2. The spectral sensitivities are double-peaked, but the UV sensitivity of the R3 and R4 photoreceptors in type I ommatidia appears to be reduced, similar to that of the co-localized blue receptors.
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