Random Photon Absorption Model Elucidates How Early Gain Control in Fly Photoreceptors Arises from Quantal Sampling.

Front Comput Neurosci

Department of Biomedical Science, University of SheffieldSheffield, UK; State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning, Beijing Normal UniversityBeijing, China.

Published: July 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how fly photoreceptors adapt to light changes, focusing on the role of photon sampling limitations.
  • The model used includes microvilli that affect how well the photoreceptors can capture information from light, influenced by the number of these structures and their response time.
  • Quantum-gain-nonlinearity emerges as a factor in light adaptation, showing that in cells with fewer microvilli, the effect of simultaneous photon hits becomes more significant as light intensity increases.

Article Abstract

Many diurnal photoreceptors encode vast real-world light changes effectively, but how this performance originates from photon sampling is unclear. A 4-module biophysically-realistic fly photoreceptor model, in which information capture is limited by the number of its sampling units (microvilli) and their photon-hit recovery time (refractoriness), can accurately simulate real recordings and their information content. However, sublinear summation in quantum bump production (quantum-gain-nonlinearity) may also cause adaptation by reducing the bump/photon gain when multiple photons hit the same microvillus simultaneously. Here, we use a Random Photon Absorption Model (RandPAM), which is the 1st module of the 4-module fly photoreceptor model, to quantify the contribution of quantum-gain-nonlinearity in light adaptation. We show how quantum-gain-nonlinearity already results from photon sampling alone. In the extreme case, when two or more simultaneous photon-hits reduce to a single sublinear value, quantum-gain-nonlinearity is preset before the phototransduction reactions adapt the quantum bump waveform. However, the contribution of quantum-gain-nonlinearity in light adaptation depends upon the likelihood of multi-photon-hits, which is strictly determined by the number of microvilli and light intensity. Specifically, its contribution to light-adaptation is marginal (≤ 1%) in fly photoreceptors with many thousands of microvilli, because the probability of simultaneous multi-photon-hits on any one microvillus is low even during daylight conditions. However, in cells with fewer sampling units, the impact of quantum-gain-nonlinearity increases with brightening light.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4919358PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fncom.2016.00061DOI Listing

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