The primary event of vision is the absorption of photons by photosensitive pigments, which triggers the transduction process producing the visual excitation. Although animal eyes and eyeless photoreceptive systems developed along several levels of molecular, morphological and functional complexity, image-forming rhodopsin family appears ubiquous along visual systems. Moreover, all Metazoa have supplementary extraocular photoreceptors that regulate their temporal physiology. The investigation of novel non-visual photopigments exerting extraretinal photoreception is a challenging field in vision research. To study molecular and functional differences between these pigment families, we propose the cnidarianHydra, the first metazoan owning a nervous system, as a powerful tool of investigation.Hydrashows only an extraocular photoreception lacking classic visual structures. Our findings provide the first evidence in a phylogenetically old species of both image- and non- image-forming opsins, giving new insights on the molecular biology of Hydraphotoreception and on comparative physiology of visual pigments.

Molecular and Functional Diversity of Visual Pigments: Clues from the Photosensitive Opsin-Like Proteins of the Animal Model Hydra

Silvia Santillo;Pierangelo Orlando;Luciano De Petrocellis;Luigia Cristino;Vittorio Guglielmotti;Carlo Musio
2005

Abstract

The primary event of vision is the absorption of photons by photosensitive pigments, which triggers the transduction process producing the visual excitation. Although animal eyes and eyeless photoreceptive systems developed along several levels of molecular, morphological and functional complexity, image-forming rhodopsin family appears ubiquous along visual systems. Moreover, all Metazoa have supplementary extraocular photoreceptors that regulate their temporal physiology. The investigation of novel non-visual photopigments exerting extraretinal photoreception is a challenging field in vision research. To study molecular and functional differences between these pigment families, we propose the cnidarianHydra, the first metazoan owning a nervous system, as a powerful tool of investigation.Hydrashows only an extraocular photoreception lacking classic visual structures. Our findings provide the first evidence in a phylogenetically old species of both image- and non- image-forming opsins, giving new insights on the molecular biology of Hydraphotoreception and on comparative physiology of visual pigments.
2005
Istituto di Scienze Applicate e Sistemi Intelligenti "Eduardo Caianiello" - ISASI
hydra
photoreception
visual pigments
opsins
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/118119
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