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The evolution of early vertebrate photoreceptors
Authors:Shaun P. Collin  Wayne L. Davies  Nathan S. Hart  David M. Hunt
Affiliation:1.School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane 4072, Queensland, Australia;2.Nuffield Laboratory of Ophthalmology, University of Oxford, The John Radcliffe Hospital, Headley Way, Oxford OX3 9DU, UK;3.UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, 11–43 Bath Street, London EC1V 9EL, UK
Abstract:Meeting the challenge of sampling an ancient aquatic landscape by the early vertebrates was crucial to their survival and would establish a retinal bauplan to be used by all subsequent vertebrate descendents. Image-forming eyes were under tremendous selection pressure and the ability to identify suitable prey and detect potential predators was thought to be one of the major drivers of speciation in the Early Cambrian. Based on the fossil record, we know that hagfishes, lampreys, holocephalans, elasmobranchs and lungfishes occupy critical stages in vertebrate evolution, having remained relatively unchanged over hundreds of millions of years. Now using extant representatives of these ‘living fossils’, we are able to piece together the evolution of vertebrate photoreception. While photoreception in hagfishes appears to be based on light detection and controlling circadian rhythms, rather than image formation, the photoreceptors of lampreys fall into five distinct classes and represent a critical stage in the dichotomy of rods and cones. At least four types of retinal cones sample the visual environment in lampreys mediating photopic (and potentially colour) vision, a sampling strategy retained by lungfishes, some modern teleosts, reptiles and birds. Trichromacy is retained in cartilaginous fishes (at least in batoids and holocephalans), where it is predicted that true scotopic (dim light) vision evolved in the common ancestor of all living gnathostomes. The capacity to discriminate colour and balance the tradeoff between resolution and sensitivity in the early vertebrates was an important driver of eye evolution, where many of the ocular features evolved were retained as vertebrates progressed on to land.
Keywords:photoreception   cones   rods   opsin genes   visual pigments   spectral sensitivity
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