Thorson J, Biederman-Thorson M
Science. 1974 Jan 18;183(4121):161-72. doi: 10.1126/science.183.4121.161.
Dynamic description of most receptors, even in their near-linear ranges, has not led to understanding of the underlying physical events-in many instances because their curious transfer functions are not found in the usual repertoire of integral-order control-system analysis. We have described some methods, borrowed from other fields, which allow one to map any linear frequency response onto a putative weighting over an ensemble of simpler relaxation processes. One can then ask whether the resultant weighting of such processes suggests a corresponding plausible distribution of values for an appropriate physical variable within the sensory transducer. To illustrate this approach, we have chosen the fractional-order low-frequency response of Limulus lateral-eye photoreceptors. We show first that the current "adapting-bump" hypothesis for the generator potential can be formulated in terms of local first-order relaxation processes in which local light flux, the cross section of rhodopsin for photon capture, and restoration rate of local conductance-changing capability play specific roles. A representative spatial distribution for one of these parameters, which just accounts for the low-frequency response of the receptor, is then derived and its relation to cellular properties and recent experiments is examined. Finally, we show that for such a system, nonintegral-order dynamics are equivalent to nonhyperbolic statics, and that the efficacy distribution derived to account for the small-signal dynamics in fact predicts several decades of near-logarithmic response in the steady state. Encouraged by the result that one plausible proposal can account approximately for both the low-frequency dynamics (the transfer function s(k)) and the range-compressing statics (the Weber-Fechner relationship) measured in this photoreceptor, we have described some formally similar applications of these distributed effects to the vertebrate retina and to analogous properties of mechanoreceptors and chemoreceptors.
大多数受体的动态描述,即使是在其近线性范围内,也未能使人们理解其潜在的物理过程——在许多情况下,是因为它们奇特的传递函数在积分阶控制系统分析的常规方法中并不存在。我们描述了一些从其他领域借鉴的方法,这些方法能让人们将任何线性频率响应映射到一组更简单的弛豫过程的假定权重上。然后人们可以问,这些过程的最终权重是否暗示了感觉换能器内适当物理变量的相应合理值分布。为了说明这种方法,我们选择了鲎侧眼光感受器的分数阶低频响应。我们首先表明,目前关于发生器电位的“适应峰”假说可以用局部一阶弛豫过程来表述,其中局部光通量、视紫红质捕获光子的横截面以及局部电导变化能力的恢复速率起着特定作用。然后推导出其中一个参数的代表性空间分布,该分布恰好解释了受体的低频响应,并研究了其与细胞特性和近期实验的关系。最后,我们表明,对于这样一个系统,非积分阶动力学等同于非双曲静力学,并且为解释小信号动力学而导出的功效分布实际上预测了稳态下几十年的近似对数响应。由于一个合理的提议能够大致解释该光感受器中测量到的低频动力学(传递函数s(k))和范围压缩静力学(韦伯 - 费希纳关系),受到这一结果的鼓舞,我们描述了这些分布效应在脊椎动物视网膜以及机械感受器和化学感受器类似特性方面的一些形式上类似的应用。