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Light modulated cnidocyte discharge predates the origins of eyes in Cnidaria
Authors:Natasha Picciani  Jamie R. Kerlin  Katia Jindrich  Nicholai M. Hensley  David A. Gold  Todd H. Oakley
Affiliation:1. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology, University of California at Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara CA, USA ; 2. School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Cardiff UK ; 3. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of California at Davis, Davis CA, USA ;4.Present address: Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven CT, USA ;5.Present address: Department of Biology, California State University, Northridge CA, USA
Abstract:Complex biological traits often originate by integrating previously separate parts, but the organismal functions of these precursors are challenging to infer. If we can understand the ancestral functions of these precursors, it could help explain how they persisted and how they facilitated the origins of complex traits. Animal eyes are some of the best studied complex traits, and they include many parts, such as opsin‐based photoreceptor cells, pigment cells, and lens cells. Eye evolution is understood through conceptual models that argue these parts gradually came together to support increasingly sophisticated visual functions. Despite the well‐accepted logic of these conceptual models, explicit comparative studies to identify organismal functions of eye precursors are lacking. Here, we investigate how precursors functioned before they became part of eyes in Cnidaria, a group formed by sea anemones, corals, and jellyfish. Specifically, we test whether ancestral photoreceptor cells regulated the discharge of cnidocytes, the expensive single‐use cells with various functions including prey capture, locomotion, and protection. Similar to a previous study of Hydra, we show an additional four distantly related cnidarian groups discharge significantly more cnidocytes when exposed to dim blue light compared with bright blue light. Our comparative analyses support the hypothesis that the cnidarian ancestor was capable of modulating cnidocyte discharge with light, which we speculate uses an opsin‐based phototransduction pathway homologous to that previously described in Hydra. Although eye precursors might have had other functions like regulating timing of spawning, our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that photoreceptor cells which mediate cnidocyte discharge predated eyes, perhaps facilitating the prolific origination of eyes in Cnidaria.
Keywords:light sensing   nematocysts   ocelli   photoreception   photosensitivity
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