Detection of Light (Edexcel A Level Biology (A) SNAB): Revision Note
Detection of Light
The eye is a sense organ containing receptors sensitive to light intensity and wavelength
Receptors are specialised cells that can generate an electrical impulse in a sensory neurone when stimulated by a particular stimulus e.g. light receptors are stimulated when light falls on them
Light enters the eye through the pupil and is focused onto a region of the retina called the fovea
The amount of light that enters the eye is controlled by the muscles of the iris
Light is focused using the lens, the shape of which is controlled by ciliary muscles attached to the lens by suspensory ligaments
The muscles change the shape of the lens to allow it to focus light reflected from objects at different distances from the eye
The fovea contains many light receptors, or photoreceptors
The retina contains two types of photoreceptors
Rod cells
Primarily located around the outer retina
Sensitive to light intensity so can detect the presence and brightness of light
Images generated using information from only rod cells is black and white
Cone cells
Mostly found grouped together in the fovea
Sensitive to different wavelengths of visible light and so detect colour
Cone cells can be red-sensitive, green-sensitive, or blue-sensitive
The number of red-, green-, and blue-sensitive cone cells stimulated will determine the colours seen
Images generated using information from cone cells will be in colour
Action potentials generated in the photoreceptor are transmitted to the brain via the optic nerve
The optic nerve leaves the back of the eye from a region known as the blind spot
The blind spot contains no photoreceptors
The eye focuses light on the retina, which contains many light receptors
Photoreceptors generate nerve impulses
Photoreceptors in the eye generate action potentials when stimulated by bright enough light (rods), or by light of a particular wavelength (cones)
Light-sensitive pigments inside the photoreceptors are bleached when light falls on them e.g.
Rod cells contain a light-sensitive pigment called rhodopsin
When light hits rhodopsin it breaks apart into constituent parts retinal and opsin
The breaking apart of rhodopsin is known as bleaching
The bleaching of light-sensitive pigments causes a chemical change in the photoreceptor that results in the generation of a nerve impulse
Nerve impulses travel along a bipolar neurone to the optic nerve, which carries information to the brain
Information passes from rod and cone cells to the optic nerve via bipolar neurones. Note that you do not need to know about ganglion cells here
The action of rod cells
The way in which rod cells pass information to the optic nerve is a bit back-to-front in comparison to the action of other nerve cells; rather than initiating an action potential when they are depolarised, rod cells initiate action potentials in neighbouring bipolar neurones when they are hyperpolarised
In the dark the following occurs inside rod cells
Sodium ions are actively pumped out of rod cells, generating a concentration gradient
Sodium ions (Na+) are positively charged ions, also known as cations
Sodium ions diffuse back down this concentration gradient into the rod cell via sodium channels
Sodium channels are also known as cation channels because they allow the movement of positively charged ions
At this stage there is little difference in charge between the outside and inside of the rod cell, and the cell is said to be depolarised
In reality the inside of the rod cell is slightly negative in comparison to the outside
The depolarised rod cell releases neurotransmitters which diffuse across a synapse to a bipolar neurone
Rather than initiating an action potential in the bipolar neurone this neurotransmitter inhibits the generation of an action potential, preventing a nerve impulse from being sent to the optic nerve
This neurotransmitter is said to be an inhibitory neurotransmitter
In the light the following occurs inside rod cells
Light bleaches rhodopsin, causing it to break apart into retinal and opsin
The bleaching of rhodopsin causes the sodium ion channels in the cell surface membrane of the rod cell to close, preventing sodium ions from diffusing back into the rod cell
The active transport of sodium ions out of the cell is still taking place, so sodium ions are removed from the cell but not able to return
The lack of positively charged ions entering the rod cell causes its interior to become more negative until it reaches a hyperpolarised state
A membrane that is hyperpolarised has a more negative potential difference across it than the resting -70 mV
The hyperpolarised rod cell stops releasing an inhibitory neurotransmitter, so the generation of an action potential in the neighbouring bipolar neurone is no longer inhibited
An action potential is generated in the bipolar neurone attached to the rod cell and an impulse is sent to the optic nerve
Rod cell membranes are depolarised in the dark and hyperpolarised in the light
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