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Parietal-Eye Phototransduction Components and Their Potential Evolutionary Implications
160
Citations
25
References
2006
Year
CryptochromeParietal-eye PhotoreceptorCellular PhysiologyPhototropinParietal-eye Phototransduction ComponentsCone PhototransductionPhotosynthesisCell SignalingHealth SciencesLight RegulationMolecular PhysiologyParietopsin-go Signaling PairOphthalmologyPhotochemistryMorphogenesisCell BiologyBiologyPhotoreceptor CellSignal TransductionMedicine
The parietal-eye photoreceptor is unique because it has two antagonistic light signaling pathways in the same cell-a hyperpolarizing pathway maximally sensitive to blue light and a depolarizing pathway maximally sensitive to green light. Here, we report the molecular components of these two pathways. We found two opsins in the same cell: the blue-sensitive pinopsin and a previously unidentified green-sensitive opsin, which we name parietopsin. Signaling components included gustducin-alpha and Galphao, but not rod or cone transducin-alpha. Single-cell recordings demonstrated that Go mediates the depolarizing response. Gustducin-alpha resembles transducin-alpha functionally and likely mediates the hyperpolarizing response. The parietopsin-Go signaling pair provides clues about how rod and cone phototransduction might have evolved.
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