It has been hypothesized that the light-evoked rod hyperpolarization (the receptor potential) initiates the light-evoked decrease in extracellular potassium ion concentration, [K+]0, in the distal retina. The hypothesis was tested using the isolated, superfused retina of the toad, Bufo marinus; the receptor potential was recorded intracellularly from red rods, and [K+]0 was measured in the photoreceptor layer with K+-specific microelectrodes. In support of the hypothesis, variations in stimulus irradiance or duration, or in retinal temperature, produced qualitatively similar effects on both the receptor potential and the decrease in [K+]0. A mechanism for the relationship between the receptor potential and the decrease in [K+]G was suggested by Matsuura et al. (1978. Vision Res. 18: 767-775). In the dark, the passive efflux of K+ out of the rod is balanced by an equal influx of K+ from the Na+/K+ pump. The light-evoked rod hyperpolarization is assumed to reduce the passive efflux, with little effect on the pump. Thus, the influx will exceed the efflux, and [K+]0 will decrease. Consistent with this mechanism, the largest and most rapid decrease in [K+]0 was measured adjacent to the rod inner segments, where the Na+/K+ pump is most likely located; in addition, inhibition of the pump with ouabain abolished the decrease in [K+]0 more rapidly than the rod hyperpolarization. Based upon this mechanism, Matsuura et al. (1978) developed a mathematical model: over a wide range of stimulus irradiance, this model successfully predicts the time-course of the decrease in [K+]0, given only the time-course of the rod hyperpolarization. © 1979, Rockefeller University Press., All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Oakley, B., Flaming, D. G., & Brown, K. T. (1979). Effects of the rod receptor potential upon retinal extracellular potassium concentration. Journal of General Physiology, 74(6), 713–737. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.74.6.713
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