rhabdomeric photoreceptor
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2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (11) ◽  
pp. e1008427
Author(s):  
Roman V. Frolov ◽  
Irina I. Ignatova

Phototransduction reactions in the rhabdomeric photoreceptor are profoundly stochastic due to the small number of participating molecules and small reaction space. The resulting quantum bumps (QBs) vary in their timing (latency), amplitudes and durations, and these variabilities within each cell are not correlated. Using modeling and electrophysiological recordings, we investigated how the QB properties depend on the cascade speed and how they influence signal transfer. Parametric analysis in the model supported by experimental data revealed that faster cascades elicit larger and narrower QBs with faster onsets and smaller variabilities than slower cascades. Latency dispersion was stronger affected by modification of upstream than downstream activation parameters. The variability caused by downstream modifications closely matched the experimental variability. Frequency response modeling showed that corner frequency is a reciprocal function of the characteristic duration of the multiphoton response, which, in turn, is a non-linear function of QB duration and latency dispersion. All QB variabilities contributed noise but only latency dispersion slowed and spread multiphoton responses, lowering the corner frequency. Using the discovered QB correlations, we evaluated transduction noise for dissimilar species and two extreme adaptation states, and compared it to photon noise. The noise emitted by the cascade was non-additive and depended non-linearly on the interaction between the QB duration and the three QB variabilities. Increased QB duration strongly suppressed both noise and corner frequency. This trade-off might be acceptable for nocturnal but not diurnal species because corner frequency is the principal determinant of information capacity. To offset the increase in noise accompanying the QB narrowing during light adaptation and the response-expanding effect of latency dispersion, the cascade accelerates. This explains the widespread evolutionary tendency of diurnal fliers to have fast phototransduction, especially after light adaptation, which thus appears to be a common adaptation to contain stochasticity, improve SNR and expand the bandwidth.



PLoS Genetics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. e1008890
Author(s):  
Andrew C. Zelhof ◽  
Simpla Mahato ◽  
Xulong Liang ◽  
Jonathan Rylee ◽  
Emma Bergh ◽  
...  


EvoDevo ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Javier Bernardo-Garcia ◽  
Maryam Syed ◽  
Gáspár Jékely ◽  
Simon G. Sprecher


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Javier Bernardo-Garcia ◽  
Maryam Syed ◽  
Gáspár Jékely ◽  
Simon G. Sprecher

ABSTRACTAcross metazoans, visual systems employ different types of photoreceptor neurons to detect light. These include rhabdomeric PRs, which exist in distantly related phyla and possess an evolutionarily conserved phototransduction cascade. While the development of rhabdomeric PRs has been thoroughly studied in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, we still know very little about how they form in other species. To investigate this question, we tested whether the transcription factor Glass, which is crucial for instructing rhabdomeric PR formation in Drosophila, may play a similar role in other metazoans. Glass homologues exist throughout the animal kingdom, indicating that this protein evolved prior to the metazoan radiation. Interestingly, our work indicates that glass is not expressed in rhabdomeric photoreceptors in the planarian Schmidtea mediterranea nor in the annelid Platynereis dumerilii. Combined with a comparative analysis of the Glass DNA-binding domain, our data suggest that the fate of rhabdomeric PRs is controlled by Glass-dependent and Glass-independent mechanisms in different animal clades.



eLife ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Csaba Verasztó ◽  
Martin Gühmann ◽  
Huiyong Jia ◽  
Vinoth Babu Veedin Rajan ◽  
Luis A Bezares-Calderón ◽  
...  

Ciliary and rhabdomeric photoreceptor cells represent two main lines of photoreceptor-cell evolution in animals. The two cell types coexist in some animals, however how these cells functionally integrate is unknown. We used connectomics to map synaptic paths between ciliary and rhabdomeric photoreceptors in the planktonic larva of the annelid Platynereis and found that ciliary photoreceptors are presynaptic to the rhabdomeric circuit. The behaviors mediated by the ciliary and rhabdomeric cells also interact hierarchically. The ciliary photoreceptors are UV-sensitive and mediate downward swimming in non-directional UV light, a behavior absent in ciliary-opsin knockout larvae. UV avoidance overrides positive phototaxis mediated by the rhabdomeric eyes such that vertical swimming direction is determined by the ratio of blue/UV light. Since this ratio increases with depth, Platynereis larvae may use it as a depth gauge during vertical migration. Our results revealed a functional integration of ciliary and rhabdomeric photoreceptor cells in a zooplankton larva.



Author(s):  
Csaba Verasztó ◽  
Martin Gühmann ◽  
Huiyong Jia ◽  
Vinoth Babu Veedin Rajan ◽  
Luis A Bezares-Calderón ◽  
...  


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Csaba Verasztó ◽  
Martin Gühmann ◽  
Huiyong Jia ◽  
Vinoth Babu Veedin Rajan ◽  
Luis A. Bezares-Calderón ◽  
...  

AbstractCiliary and rhabdomeric photoreceptor cells represent two main lines of photoreceptor evolution in animals. The two photoreceptor-cell types coexist in some animals, however how they functionally integrate is unknown. We used connectomics to map synaptic paths between ciliary and rhabdomeric photoreceptors in the planktonic larva of the annelid Platynereis and found that ciliary photoreceptors are presynaptic to the rhabdomeric circuit. The behaviors mediated by the ciliary and rhabdomeric cells also interact hierarchically. The ciliary photoreceptors are UV-sensitive and mediate downward swimming to non-directional UV light, a behavior absent in ciliary-opsin knockouts. UV avoidance antagonizes positive phototaxis mediated by the rhabdomeric eyes so that vertical swimming direction is determined by the ratio of blue/UV light. Since this ratio increases with depth, Platynereis larvae may use it as a depth gauge during planktonic migration. Our results revealed a functional integration of ciliary and rhabdomeric photoreceptors with implications for eye and photoreceptor evolution.



2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carmen Döring ◽  
Jasmin Gosda ◽  
Kristin Tessmar-Raible ◽  
Harald Hausen ◽  
Detlev Arendt ◽  
...  


2001 ◽  
Vol 356 (1414) ◽  
pp. 1545-1563 ◽  
Author(s):  
Detlev Arendt ◽  
Joachim Wittbrodt

The shared roles of Pax6 and Six homologues in the eye development of various bilaterians suggest that Urbilateria, the common ancestors of all Bilateria, already possessed some simple form of eyes. Here, we re–address the homology of bilaterian cerebral eyes at the level of eye anatomy, of eye–constituting cell types and of phototransductory molecules. The most widespread eye type found in Bilateria are the larval pigment–cup eyes located to the left and right of the apical organ in primary, ciliary larvae of Protostomia and Deuterostomia. They can be as simple as comprising a single pigment cell and a single photoreceptor cell in inverse orientation. Another more elaborate type of cerebral pigment–cup eyes with an everse arrangement of photoreceptor cells is found in adult Protostomia. Both inverse larval and everse adult eyes employ rhabdomeric photoreceptor cells and thus differ from the chordate cerebral eyes with ciliary photoreceptors. This is highly significant because on the molecular level we find that for phototransduction rhabdomeric versus ciliary photoreceptor cells employ divergent rhodopsins and non–orthologous G–proteins, rhodopsin kinases and arrestins. Our comparison supports homology of cerebral eyes in Protostomia; it challenges, however, homology of chordate and non–chordate cerebral eyes that employ photoreceptor cells with non–orthologous phototransductory cascades.



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