Activation of mitochondrial oxidative metabolism by calcium ions in Limulusventral photoreceptor

Abstract
Cells regulate their metabolic energy production to meet the requirements of their energy consuming activities. For most animal cells the prime site of energy production, in the form of ATP, is the mitochondrion. Extensive in vitro studies of isolated mitochondria have provided detailed information about the specific biochemical reactions involved in energy production. At present there is a debate about whether respiration in excitable cells is controlled by the availability of ADP to the mitochondrion and/or by calcium ions. Using the large ventral photoreceptor of the horseshoe crab (Limulus polyphemus) we describe a method for measuring the transient increase in the mitochondrial O2 consumption (delta QO2) following a flash of light of a single photoreceptor. We then show that this delta QO2 results in part from a rise in the intracellular concentration of calcium (Cai).