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1.
The cricket Modicogryllus siamensis Chopard shows photoperiod‐dependent changes in the duration of nymphal development: nymphs become adult within 60 days after hatching, undergoing seven moults under long‐day conditions, whereas, under short‐day conditions, nymphal development takes much longer (approximately 180 days) with an increased number of moults. Because removal of the compound eyes alters this photoperiodic response, the eyes may be involved in light detection during the photoperiodic response. The role of opsins, expressed in the compound eye, is examined in the present study with reference to the photoperiodic response. Molecular cloning identifies cDNAs of three opsins, opsin‐Ultra Violet (Ms'op‐UV), opsin‐Blue (Ms'op‐B) and opsin‐Long Wave (Ms'op‐LW), and in situ hybridization reveals that the opsin genes are expressed in specific regions of the compound eye in a gene‐specific manner. RNA interference (RNAi) technology using the opsin genes results in a partial disruption in the long‐day responses; most of the treated crickets showed eight or more moults and up to 23.5% show a prolonged nymphal period that is typical of short‐day responses. Under short‐day conditions, op‐UV RNAi crickets show earlier adult development, whereas no distinct alterations are observed in op‐B and op‐LW RNAi insects. The results suggest that the opsin genes may play differential roles in the photoperiodic response in the cricket and that the results can be at least partially explained in terms of the external coincidence model of photoperiodic time measurement.  相似文献   

2.
We report the expression of three visual opsins in the retina of the little brown bat (Myotis lucifugus, Vespertilionidae). Gene sequences for a rod-specific opsin and two cone-specific opsins were cloned from cDNA derived from bat eyes. Comparative sequence analyses indicate that the two cone opsins correspond to an ultraviolet short-wavelength opsin (SWS1) and a long-wavelength opsin (LWS). Immunocytochemistry using antisera to visual opsins revealed that the little brown bat retina contains two types of cone photoreceptors within a rod-dominated background. However, unlike other mammalian photoreceptors, M. lucifugus cones and rods are morphologically indistinguishable by light microscopy. Both photoreceptor types have a thin, elongated outer segment. Using microspectrophotometry we classified the absorption spectrum for the ubiquitous rods. Similar to other mammals, bat rhodopsin has an absorption peak near 500 nm. Although we were unable to confirm a spectral range, cellular and molecular analyses indicate that M. lucifugus expresses two types of cone visual pigments located within the photoreceptor layer. This study provides important insights into the visual capacity of a nocturnal microchiropteran species.  相似文献   

3.
Lepidopterans display biological rhythms associated with egg laying, eclosion and flight activity but the photoreceptors that mediate these behavioural patterns are largely unknown. To further our progress in identifying candidate light-input channels for the lepidopteran circadian system, we have developed polyclonal antibodies against ultraviolet (UV)-, blue- and extraretinal long-wavelength (LW)-sensitive opsins and examined opsin immunoreactivity in the adult optic lobes of four hawkmoths, Manduca sexta, Acherontia atropos, Agrius convolvuli and Hippotion celerio. Outside the retina, UV and blue opsin protein expression is restricted to the adult stemmata, with no apparent expression elsewhere in the brain. Melatonin, which is known to have a seasonal influence on reproduction and behaviour, is expressed with opsins in adult stemmata together with visual arrestin and chaoptin. By contrast, the LW opsin protein is not expressed in the retina or stemmata but rather exhibits a distinct and widespread distribution in dorsal and ventral neurons of the optic lobes. The lamina, medulla, lobula and lobula plate, accessory medulla and adjacent neurons innervating this structure also exhibit strong LW opsin immunoreactivity. Together with the adult stemmata, these neurons appear to be functional photoreceptors, as visual arrestin, chaoptin and melatonin are also co-expressed with LW opsin. These findings are the first to suggest a role for three spectrally distinct classes of opsin in the extraretinal detection of changes in ambient light and to show melatonin-mediated neuroendocrine output in the entrainment of sphingid moth circadian and/or photoperiodic rhythms.This work was partially supported by the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (A.D.B.) and the National Science Foundation (grant nos. IBN-0082700 and IBN-0346765; A.D.B.).  相似文献   

4.
Vision frequently mediates critical behaviours, and photoreceptors must respond to the light available to accomplish these tasks. Most photoreceptors are thought to contain a single visual pigment, an opsin protein bound to a chromophore, which together determine spectral sensitivity. Mechanisms of spectral tuning include altering the opsin, changing the chromophore and incorporating pre-receptor filtering. A few exceptions to the use of a single visual pigment have been documented in which a single mature photoreceptor coexpresses opsins that form spectrally distinct visual pigments, and in these exceptions the functional significance of coexpression is unclear. Here we document for the first time photoreceptors coexpressing spectrally distinct opsin genes in a manner that tunes sensitivity to the light environment. Photoreceptors of the cichlid fish, Metriaclima zebra, mix different pairs of opsins in retinal regions that view distinct backgrounds. The mixing of visual pigments increases absorbance of the corresponding background, potentially aiding the detection of dark objects. Thus, opsin coexpression may be a novel mechanism of spectral tuning that could be useful for detecting prey, predators and mates. However, our calculations show that coexpression of some opsins can hinder colour discrimination, creating a trade-off between visual functions.  相似文献   

5.
Blue-light responses in higher plants are mediated by specific photoreceptors, which are thought to be flavoproteins; one such flavin-type blue-light receptor, CRY1 (for cryptochrome), which mediates inhibition of hypocotyl elongation and anthocyanin biosynthesis, has recently been characterized. Prompted by classical photobiological studies suggesting possible co-action of the red/far-red absorbing photoreceptor phytochrome with blue-light photoreceptors in certain plant species, the role of phytochrome in CRY1 action in Arabidopsis was investigated. The activity of the CRY1 photoreceptor can be substantially altered by manipulating the levels of active phytochrome (Pfr) with red or far-red light pulses subsequent to blue-light treatments. Furthermore, analysis of severely phytochrome-deficient mutants showed that CRY1-mediated blue-light responses were considerably reduced, even though Western blots confirmed that levels of CRY1 photoreceptor are unaffected in these phytochrome-deficient mutant backgrounds. It was concluded that CRY1-mediated inhibition of hypocotyl elongation and anthocyanin production requires active phytochrome for full expression, and that this requirement can be supplied by low levels of either phyA or phyB.  相似文献   

6.
Mammalian retinae have rod photoreceptors for night vision and cone photoreceptors for daylight and colour vision. For colour discrimination, most mammals possess two cone populations with two visual pigments (opsins) that have absorption maxima at short wavelengths (blue or ultraviolet light) and long wavelengths (green or red light). Microchiropteran bats, which use echolocation to navigate and forage in complete darkness, have long been considered to have pure rod retinae. Here we use opsin immunohistochemistry to show that two phyllostomid microbats, Glossophaga soricina and Carollia perspicillata, possess a significant population of cones and express two cone opsins, a shortwave-sensitive (S) opsin and a longwave-sensitive (L) opsin. A substantial population of cones expresses S opsin exclusively, whereas the other cones mostly coexpress L and S opsin. S opsin gene analysis suggests ultraviolet (UV, wavelengths <400 nm) sensitivity, and corneal electroretinogram recordings reveal an elevated sensitivity to UV light which is mediated by an S cone visual pigment. Therefore bats have retained the ancestral UV tuning of the S cone pigment. We conclude that bats have the prerequisite for daylight vision, dichromatic colour vision, and UV vision. For bats, the UV-sensitive cones may be advantageous for visual orientation at twilight, predator avoidance, and detection of UV-reflecting flowers for those that feed on nectar.  相似文献   

7.
Various photoreceptors in plants are used to monitor important environmental light signals and regulate plant development. Despite their functional importance, recent studies have demonstrated that red/far-red absorbing phytochromes or blue/UV-A absorbing cryptochromes are involved in local adaptation within a species’ range. In the present study, to exemplify the intraspecific photoreceptor evolutionary pattern, the genetic structures of cryptochrome genes (CRY1 and CRY2) in Cardamine nipponica (Brassicaceae), of which PHYE, a gene coding one of the phytochromes, was found to be involved in local adaptation between central and northern Japanese populations. Although clear genetic differentiations between central and northern Japan were detected (CRY1: F ST = 0.63, CRY2: F ST = 0.53), overall nucleotide diversity was very low (CRY1: π Total = 0.0014, CRY2: π Total = 0.0013), and the polymorphism patterns were neutral (CRY1: Tajima’s D = 0.084, P = 0.32, CRY2: D = −0.014, P = 0.39). Therefore, the involvement of cryptochromes in the adaptation to local environments is difficult to postulate. Consequently, this study along with our previous findings suggest that intraspecific photoreceptor gene polymorphisms in C. nipponica were mostly suppressed by purifying selection due to their functional importance as photoreceptors, while some of the photoreceptors may play substantial roles in adaptation to local environments.  相似文献   

8.
The chicken retina contains five visual photoreceptor subtypes, based on the specific opsin gene they express. In addition to the central role they play in vision, some or all of these photoreceptors translate photoperiodic information into a day-night rhythm of melatonin production. This indolic hormone plays an important role in the photoperiodic regulation of retinal physiology. Previous studies have stopped short of establishing whether melatonin synthesis takes place in all the photoreceptor spectral subtypes. Another issue that has been left unsettled by previous studies is when during development are retinal precursor cells committed to a specific photoreceptor subtype and to a melatoninergic phenotype? To address the first question, in situ hybridization of the five opsins was combined with immunofluorescent detection of the melatonin-synthesizing enzyme hydroxyindole O-methyltransferase (HIOMT, EC.2.1.1.4). Confocal microscopy clearly indicated that all photoreceptor spectral subtypes are involved in melatonin synthesis. To tackle the second question, retinal precursor cells were dissociated between embryonic day 6 (E6) and E13 and cultured in serum-free medium for 4 days to examine their ability to autonomously activate the expression of opsins and HIOMT. Real-time PCR on cultured precursors indicated that red-, green- and violet-sensitive cones are committed at E6, rods at E10 and blue-sensitive cones at E12. HIOMT gene expression was programmed at E6, probably reflecting the differentiation of early cones. The present study provides a better characterization of photoreceptor subtypes in the chicken retina and describes a combination of serum-free culture and real-time PCR that should facilitate further developmental studies.  相似文献   

9.
In 1936, Erwin Bünning suggested that photoperiodic time measurement was a function of the circadian system. Colin Pittendrigh became an ardent supporter of Bünning's hypothesis, drawing parallels between photoperiodism and his own group's investigations of adult eclosion rhythmicity in the fruit fly Drosophila pseudoobscura. They developed several more modern versions of Bünning's general hypothesis based on the entrainment of circadian oscillations to the light cycle, including ‘external coincidence’, which is a derivation of Bünning's original model, and ‘internal coincidence’, which relied upon seasonal changes in the mutual phase relationship of oscillators within a multi‐oscillator circadian system. This review considers the experimental evidence for the central role of the circadian system in photoperiodic timing and, in some species, for both external and internal coincidence. Pittendrigh, however, pursued the idea of internal coincidence further with his analysis of the pacemaker–slave organization of eclosion rhythmicity in D. pseudoobscura and proposed a similar theoretical model for photoperiodism comprising a group of slave oscillators driven by a light‐sensitive pacemaker. In this model, the phase relationships of the slaves to the pacemaker were affected by (i) the relative periods of the pacemaker and slave(s); (ii) the strength(s) of the coupling between the two; and (iii) the dampening coefficients of the various slaves. Manipulation of these variables showed that the slaves adopted different internal phase relationships (both to each other and to the pacemaker) under the influence of changes in daily photophase, the period of the Zeitgeber and phase shifts of the entraining light cycle.  相似文献   

10.
In an attempt to identify the brain photoreceptors that mediate the photoperiodic response of the vetch aphid, Megoura viciae, we utilised immunocytochemical techniques and employed 20 antibodies directed against invertebrate and vertebrate opsins and phototransduction proteins. A sub-set of these antibodies (to Drosophila rhodopsin 1: RH1-1; vertebrate cone opsins: COS-1; CERN-874; CERN-933; vertebrate rod opsin: CERN-901; vertebrate arrestin: AB-Arr; vertebrate transducin+arrestin+rhodopsin kinase+cGMP phosphodiesterase: CERN-911; and vertebrate cellular retinoid binding protein: CRALBP) consistently labelled an anterior ventral neuropile region of the protocerebrum. These anatomical findings, coupled with previous localised illumination and micro-lesion studies, provide strong evidence that this region of the aphid brain houses the photoperiodic photoreceptors. The present study also confirms that the medial (Group I) neurosecretory cells are not the photoperiodic photoreceptors.  相似文献   

11.
Most species use daily light in one way or the other in regulation of their short and/or long term activities. Light is perceived by pigment(s) present in the retinal (RP) and/or extra-retinal photoreceptors (ERPs). ERPs may be located at various sites in the body but in non-mammalian vertebrates they are found predominantly in the pineal body and hypothalamic region of the brain, Light radiations directly penetrate brain tissues to reach and stimulate the hypothalamic (deep-brain) photoreceptors. How does light information finally reach to the clock is not fully understood in many vertebrate groups? In mammals, however, the light information from the retina to the clock (the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nuclei, SCN) is relayed through the retino-hypothalamic tract (RHT) which originates from the retinal ganglion cells, and through the geniculo-hypothalamic tract (GHT) which originates from the photically responsive cells of a portion of the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN), called the intergeniculate leaflet (IGL). A response to light (the photoperiodic response) is the result of the interpretation of light information by the photoperiodic system. Apart from the duration, the animals use the gradual shifts in the intensity and wavelength of daily light to regulate their photoperiodic clock system. The wavelengths to which photoreceptors are maximally sensitive or the wavelengths which have greater access to the photoreceptors can induce a maximal response. There can also be differential effects of wavelength and intensity of light on circadian process(es) involved in the entrainment and induction of the photoperiodic clock. This may have some adaptive implications. Entrainment to daily light-dark (LD) cycle may be achieved at dawn or dusk, depending whether the animal is day- or night-active, when there is relatively low intensity of light. By contrast, photoperiodic induction in many species occurs during long days of spring and summer when plenty of daylight at higher intensity is available later in the day.  相似文献   

12.
The tiered ommatidia of the Eastern Pale Clouded yellow butterfly, Colias erate, contain nine photoreceptor cells, four of which contribute their rhabdomeral microvilli to the distal tier of the rhabdom. We analyzed the visual pigments and spectral sensitivities of these distal photoreceptors in both sexes of Colias erate. A subset of photoreceptor cells expresses a newly discovered middle wavelength-absorbing opsin, C olias e rate Blue (CeB), in addition to two previously described middle wavelength-absorbing opsins, CeV1 and CeV2. The other photoreceptors either coexpress CeV1 and CeV2, or exclusively express a short wavelength-absorbing opsin, CeUV, or a long wavelength-absorbing opsin, CeL. Males and females have the same visual pigment expression patterns, but the photoreceptor spectral sensitivities are sexually dimorphic. The photoreceptors coexpressing three middle wavelength-absorbing opsins are broad-blue receptors in males, but in females they are narrow-blue receptors. Those with CeV1 and CeV2 are violet receptors in females, while they are shouldered-blue receptors in males. The sexual dimorphism in spectral sensitivity is caused by a sex-specific distribution of fluorescent pigment that functions as a spectral filter.  相似文献   

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16.
The study aimed to determine the influence of repeated natural dawn and dusk twilight pulses in entraining the circadian flight activity rhythm of the microchiropteran bat, Hipposideros speoris, free‐running in constant darkness in a natural cave. The bats were exposed to repeated dawn or dusk twilight pulses at eight circadian phases. All bats exposed to dawn twilight pulses were entrained by advancing transients, and the stable entrainment was reached when the onset of activity occurred about 12 h before the lights‐on of the pulses, irrespective of the initial phase at which the bats were exposed to twilight. All bats exposed to dusk twilight pulses, however, were entrained by delaying transients, and the stable entrainment was reached when the onset of activity occurred about 1.6 h after the lights‐on of the pulses. The entrainment caused by dawn and dusk twilight pulses is discussed in the context of the postulated two photoreceptors: the short wavelength sensitive (S) photoreceptors mediating entrainment via dusk twilight, and the medium wavelength sensitive (M) photoreceptors mediating entrainment via dawn twilight.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Davies WI  Collin SP  Hunt DM 《Molecular ecology》2012,21(13):3121-3158
In craniates, opsin‐based photopigments expressed in the eye encode molecular ‘light sensors’ that constitute the initial protein in photoreception and the activation of the phototransduction cascade. Since the cloning and sequencing of the first vertebrate opsin gene (bovine rod opsin) nearly 30 years ago (Ovchinnikov Yu 1982, FEBS Letters, 148, 179–191; Hargrave et al. 1983, Biophysics of Structure & Mechanism, 9, 235–244; Nathans & Hogness 1983, Cell, 34, 807–814), it is now well established that variation in the subtypes and spectral properties of the visual pigments that mediate colour and dim‐light vision is a prevalent mechanism for the molecular adaptation to diverse light environments. In this review, we discuss the origins and spectral tuning of photopigments that first arose in the agnathans to sample light within the ancient aquatic landscape of the Early Cambrian, detailing the molecular changes that subsequently occurred in each of the opsin classes independently within the main branches of extant jawed gnathostomes. Specifically, we discuss the adaptive changes that have occurred in the photoreceptors of craniates as they met the ecological challenges to survive in quite differing photic niches, including brightly lit aquatic surroundings; the deep sea; the transition to and from land; diurnal, crepuscular and nocturnal environments; and light‐restricted fossorial settings. The review ends with a discussion of the limitations inherent to the ‘nocturnal‐bottleneck’ hypothesis relevant to the evolution of the mammalian visual system and a proposition that transition through a ‘mesopic‐bottleneck’ may be a more appropriate model.  相似文献   

19.
Circadian rhythms are the endogenous oscillations, occurring with a periodicity of approximately twenty-four hours, in the biochemical and behavioral functions of organisms. In mammals, the phase and period of the rhythm are synchronized to the daily light-dark cycle by light input through the eye. Certain retinal degenerative diseases affecting the photoreceptor cells, both rods and cones, in the outer retina reveal that classical opsins (i.e., rhodopsin and color opsins located in these cells) are essential for vision, but are not required for circadian photoreception. The mammalian cryptochromes and melanopsin (and possibly other opsin family pigments) have been proposed as circadian photoreceptor pigments that exist in the inner retina. Genetic analysis indicates that the cryptochromes, which contain flavin and folate as the light-absorbing cofactors, are the primary circadian photoreceptors. The classical photoreceptors in the outer retina, and melanopsin or other minor opsins in the inner retina, may perform redundant functions in circadian rhythmicity.  相似文献   

20.
Plant photoreceptors transduce environmental light cues to downstream signaling pathways, regulating a wide array of processes during growth and development. Two major plant photoreceptors with critical roles in photomorphogenesis are phytochrome B (phyB), a red/far-red absorbing photoreceptor, and cryptochrome 1 (CRY1), a UV-A/blue photoreceptor. Despite substantial genetic evidence for cross-talk between phyB and CRY1 pathways, a direct interaction between these proteins has not been observed. Here, we report that Arabidopsis phyB interacts directly with CRY1 in a light-dependent interaction. Surprisingly, the interaction is light-dissociated; CRY1 interacts specifically with the dark/far-red (Pr) state of phyB, but not with the red light-activated (Pfr) or the chromophore unconjugated form of the enzyme. The interaction is also regulated by light activation of CRY1; phyB Pr interacts only with the unstimulated form of CRY1 but not with the photostimulated protein. Further studies reveal that a small domain extending from the photolyase homology region (PHR) of CRY1 regulates the specificity of the interaction with different conformational states of phyB. We hypothesize that in plants, the phyB/CRY1 interaction may mediate cross-talk between the red/far-red- and blue/UV-sensing pathways, enabling fine-tuning of light responses to different spectral inputs.  相似文献   

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