Limulus lateral eyes shed and renew a portion of their
photosensitive membrane (rhabdom) daily. Shedding, in many species
including Limulus, is regulated by complex interactions
between circadian rhythms and light. Little is known about how
circadian clocks and photoreceptors communicate to regulate
shedding. Limulus photoreceptors do not contain an
endogenous circadian oscillator, but rely upon efferent outflow
from a central clock for circadian timing. To investigate whether
the putative efferent neurotransmitter octopamine (OA) communicates
circadian rhythms that prime the lateral eye for transient rhabdom
shedding, we decoupled photoreceptors from the clock by transecting
the lateral optic nerve (contains the retinal efferent fibers).
Overnight (6 h) intraretinal injections of 40 μM OA restored
transient shedding to lateral eyes with transected nerves to
levels comparable to those of intact internal control eyes.
To determine whether OA acts alone in communicating circadian
rhythms that prime the lateral eye for transient shedding, we
“primed” eyes with intact nerves for transient shedding
with exogenous OA during subjective day. In nature, lateral
eyes shed their rhabdoms only once a day at dawn following
overnight efferent priming. Eyes in animals placed in darkness
during subjective day, when the retinal efferents are quiescent,
and injected for 6 h with 40 μM OA shed their rhabdoms in
response to a second introduction to light. Untreated control
eyes of the same animals did not. The same results were observed
in vitro in lateral eyes treated similarly. Octopamine
is the only efferent neurotransmitter/messenger required to
make lateral eyes competent for transient shedding. Phentolamine,
an OA receptor antagonist, reduced the number of photoreceptors
primed for transient shedding and the amount of rhabdom shed
in those photoreceptors suggesting that OA acts via
a specific OA receptor.