Photocurrents from isolated rods of adults and
sub-adults of three species of amphibians, Rana pipiens,
Ambystoma tigrinum, and Xenopus laevis,
were measured with suction pipette electrodes. The intensity
for a half-maximal response was 0.91 ± 0.48 photons
μm−2 flash−1 (mean
± s.d., 10-ms flashes) for Rana,
0.92 ± 0.44 for Ambystoma, and 6.14 ±
1.33 for Xenopus. The mean number of photoisomerizations
at half-saturation was 22 ± 12 for Rana,
50 ± 24 for Ambystoma, and 221 ±
48 for Xenopus. The photocurrent per photoisomerization
is several times smaller in Xenopus rods than
in the other two species. Spectral sensitivity was measured
from 277–737 nm with light polarized both parallel
and perpendicular to the planes of the membrane disks.
Dichroism fell in the near UV and was absent in the region
of absorption by tryptophan and tyrosine. Maximum sensitivity
of Rana was at 503.9 ± 2.6 nm (n
= 86), and of Ambystoma, 505.8 ± 1.8 nm
(n = 24). Animals from these same batches that
were sampled by HPLC had no 3-dehydroretinal (retinal2).
Xenopus containing about 94% retinal2
and 6% retinal1 had λmax
at 519.3 ± 2.7 nm (n = 11). Spectral position
of the β-band, estimated by the method of Stavenga
et al. (1993), appears to be at longer wavelengths in amphibian
photoreceptors than in other vertebrates. Fits of log sensitivity
to a normalized-frequency template that tracks the long-wavelength
tail of the α-band (Lamb, 1995) show that the rod pigments
of Rana and Ambystoma are slightly narrower
than those found in the photoreceptors of fish and mammals.