Abstract
Why do vertebrates use rods and cones that hyperpolarize, when in insect eyes a single depolarizing photoreceptor can function at all light levels [1, 2]? We answer this question at least in part with a comprehensive assessment of ATP consumption for mammalian rods from voltages and currents and recently published physiological and biochemical data. In darkness, rods consume 108 ATP s-1, about the same as Drosophila photoreceptors [3]. Ion fluxes associated with phototransduction and synaptic transmission dominate; as in CNS [4], the contribution of enzymes of the second-messenger cascade is surprisingly small. Suppression of rod responses in daylight closes light-gated channels and reduces total energy consumption by >75%, but in Drosophila light opens channels and increases consumption 5-fold [5]. Rods therefore provide an energy-efficient mechanism not present in rhabdomeric photoreceptors. Rods are metabolically less "costly" than cones, because cones do not saturate in bright light [6, 7] and use more ATP s-1 for transducin activation [8] and rhodopsin phosphorylation [9]. This helps to explain why the vertebrate retina is duplex, and why some diurnal animals like primates have a small number of cones, concentrated in a region of high acuity. © 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Okawa, H., Sampath, A. P., Laughlin, S. B., & Fain, G. L. (2008). ATP Consumption by Mammalian Rod Photoreceptors in Darkness and in Light. Current Biology, 18(24), 1917–1921. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2008.10.029
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