Normal photoreceptor cells on the ventral nerve of
Limulus respond to a moderately intense flash
with a large receptor potential or current. Occasionally,
cells are found in which the same flash evokes only a small
receptor potential or current. Our investigations reveal
physiological reasons for the poor light sensitivity in
these “unusual cells.” In unusual cells prolonged
illumination with intense light evokes a step-like inward
current with an amplitude of some nanoamperes, but without
a large transient peak. The current appears to be summed
up of single photon responses with amplitudes smaller than
about 50 pA. Their time course is similar to that of small
single photon responses forming the so-called macroscopic
C1 component in normal cells. The macroscopic
current evoked by an intense flash has slow activation
and deactivation kinetics and reaches a saturated amplitude
of about 4–5 nanoamperes. The light-intensity dependence
of the current evoked by flashes or by prolonged illumination
has a slope of about 1 in log–log plots. The decay
kinetics of the current is similar to that of the C1
component measured in normal cells after the block of the
C2 component. Occasionally, the step-like current
is superposed by large standard bumps. These bumps are
blocked by the Ca2+-ATPase inhibitor cyclopiazonic
acid, while the sustained inward current persists. We conclude
that in unusual cells the light-activated current is identical
to the C1 component of normal cells. The phospholipase
C pathway that in normal cells presumably gives rise to
the C2 component functions only with a low efficiency
in unusual cells.