17 resultados para Transmitted-light intensity


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Using a 9.4 T MRI instrument, we have obtained images of the mouse brain response to photic stimulation during a period between deep anesthesia and the early stages of arousal. The large image enhancements we observe (often >30%) are consistent with literature results extrapolated to 9.4 T. However, there are also two unusual aspects to our findings. (i) The visual area of the brain responds only to changes in stimulus intensity, suggesting that we directly detect operations of the M visual system pathway. Such a channel has been observed in mice by invasive electrophysiology, and described in detail for primates. (ii) Along with the typical positive response in the area of the occipital portion of the brain containing the visual cortex, another area displays decreased signal intensity upon stimulation.

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Previously we showed that an Escherichia coli hemH mutant, defective in the ultimate step of heme synthesis, ferrochelatase, is somewhat better than 100-fold more sensitive than its wild-type parent in tumbling to blue light. Here we explore the effect of a hemG mutant, defective in the penultimate step, protoporphyrinogen oxidase. We found that a hemG mutant also is somewhat better than 100-fold more sensitive in tumbling to blue light compared to its wild-type parent. The amount of non-iron porphyrins accumulated in hemG or hemH mutants was more than 100-fold greater than in wild type. The nature of these accumulated porphyrins is described. When heme was present, as in the wild type, the non-iron (non-heme) porphyrins were maintained at a relatively low concentration and tumbling to blue light at an intensity effective for hemG or hemH did not occur. The function of tumbling to light is most likely to allow escape from the lethality of intense light.