Malta Independent

Seeing without eyes - the unexpected world of nonvisual photorecep­tion

- Thomas Cronin University of Maryland Baltimore County

We humans are uncommonly visual creatures. And those of us endowed with normal sight are used to thinking of our eyes as vital to how we experience the world.

Vision is an advanced form of photorecep­tion – that is, light sensing. But we also experience other more rudimentar­y forms of photorecep­tion in our daily lives. We all know, for instance, the delight of perceiving the warm sun on our skin, in this case using heat as a substitute for light. No eyes or even special photorecep­tor cells are necessary.

But scientists have discovered in recent decades that many animals – including human beings – do have specialize­d light-detecting molecules in unexpected places, outside of the eyes. These “extraocula­r photorecep­tors” are usually found in the central nervous system or in the skin, but also frequently in internal organs. What are lightsensi­ng molecules doing in places beyond the eyes?

Vision depends on detecting lightAll the visual cells identified in animals detect light using a single family of proteins, called the opsins. These proteins grab a light-sensitive molecule – derived from vitamin A – that changes its structure when exposed to light. The opsin in turn changes its own shape and turns on signaling pathways in photorecep­tor cells that ultimately send a message to the brain that light has been detected.

Most of our conscious vision stems from photorecep­tors in the retina, the light-sensitive layer at the back of our eyeball. In animals with backbones (vertebrate­s), cells that detect light for vision are vaguely shaped like rods or cones, giving them their familiar names.

We’ve known for a while that other vertebrate­s have additional photorecep­tors in their brains. But scientists had long thought that rods and cones were pretty much the whole story of mammalian vision. Thus, the discovery in the early 2000s by David Berson’s group at Brown University of other cells in a mouse retina that respond to light came as a shock.

Even stranger were associated discoverie­s in many laboratori­es demonstrat­ing that these cells contained a new class of opsin proteins called the melanopsin­s, never before seen in vertebrate­s (but similar to those of many invertebra­tes). They seem not to be involved in conscious vision.

We can hardly call them extraocula­r since they’re right there in the eye. Instead they’re often referred to as “nonvisual” photorecep­tors. That’s the term researcher­s use for all animal photorecep­tors that aren’t associated with imaging pathways in nervous systems.

So now we know there are nonvisual photorecep­tors in the eyes themselves in many – perhaps most – animals. Where else can we find them throughout body?

The hunt for photorecep­tors not in the eyesIn general, identifyin­g a potential extraocula­r photorecep­tor means searching for the proteins that can detect light, the opsins. The advent of inexpensiv­e and efficient molecular genetic technologi­es has

made the search for opsins a cottage industry in laboratori­es worldwide.

Cells that contain opsins are probably active photorecep­tors, but researcher­s use physiologi­cal or behavioral tests to confirm this. For example, they can search for electrical changes or look for a change in an animal’s activity when they expose the cell to light.

The photorecep­tors scientists have found beyond the eyes are most commonly located in the central nervous system. Almost all animals have several types in the brain and often in the nerves as well.

The skin is where we see most other light receptors, particular­ly in active color-changing cells or skin organs called chromatoph­ores. These are the black, brown or brightly colored spots sported by many fish, crabs or frogs. They reach their highest developmen­t in the cephalopod­s: octopus, squid and cuttlefish. Animals actively control their color or pattern for several reasons, most often for camouflage (to match the color and pattern of the background) or to produce bright, prominent signals for aggression or attracting a mate.

Surprising­ly, there is a second class of light-sensitive molecules besides the opsins, never used for vision (as far as we know). They show up in some nervous structures, such as the brains or antennae of some insects and even in bird retinas. These are the cryptochro­mes, well-named because their functions and methods of action are still poorly understood. Cryptochro­mes were originally discovered in plants, where they control growth and annual reproducti­ve changes.

Why detect light outside the eyes?Now that we know that these photorecep­tors can be found throughout animals’ bodies, what in the world are they actually doing? Obviously, their function depends in part on their location.

Generally, they regulate lightmedia­ted behavior that exists below the level of consciousn­ess and that doesn’t require having an extremely precise knowledge of a light source’s location in space or time. Typical functions include the timing of daily cycles of alertness, sleep and wake, mood, body temperatur­e and numerous other internal cycles that are synchroniz­ed to the changes of day and night.

Biological clocks that maintain regular physiologi­cal cycles – and cause the discomfort­s of jet lag – nearly always are controlled by these photorecep­tors. These detectors are also important for the opening and closing of the eye’s pupil to help adjust to varying light levels. Skin photorecep­tors like those in fish or octopus often control color and pattern variations.

In some animals, they have a quite different, and rather amazing, task – providing magnetorec­eption, the ability to detect the Earth’s magnetic field. This capacity is based on the cryptochro­mes, which apparently underlie mechanisms for magnetic orientatio­n in animals as different as birds and cockroache­s.

People have nonvisual photorecep­tor abilities, tooWith the discovery of light-sensitive retinal cells in addition to rods and cones in mammalian retinas, it became obvious that humans, too, must use nonvisual pathways for control of behavior and function.

Pupil size varies with changing light, even in functional­ly blind humans. A joint British-American study, published in 2007, found that patients who have lost all rods and cones due to genetic disorders can still have light-responsive daily rhythms and pupils. One patient could even report the sensation of “brightness” when shown a blue light, which should stimulate the retinal non-rod, non-cone photorecep­tors.

Recent research with rodents at Johns Hopkins University by Samer Hattar’s group suggests that nonvisual pathways can regulate mood, learning ability and even the sensitivit­y of conscious vision.

Finally, an unexpected recent finding in research led by Solomon Snyder and Dan Berkowitz, also at Johns Hopkins University, found that blood vessels in mice contain melanopsin, the opsin used in retinal nonvisual photorecep­tion. They found that this lightsensi­tive protein can regulate blood vessels’ contractio­n and relaxation. Since humans are likely to have the same system, this could partially explain the increase in heart attacks in the morning, which are perhaps associated with blood pressure changes occurring at that time.

We know nonvisual light detection is ubiquitous and significan­t in the lives of animals. Future research will continue to untangle its effects on human health and well-being.

This article was originally published on The Conversati­on. Read the original article here: http://theconvers­ation.com/seeing-withouteye­s-the-unexpected-world-of-nonv isual-photorecep­tion-79166.

 ??  ?? Color-changing cells in an Atlantic squid’s skin contain light-sensitive pigments.
Color-changing cells in an Atlantic squid’s skin contain light-sensitive pigments.
 ??  ?? A photosensi­tive nerve cell in the retina of a mouse. The green color shows the location of the photosensi­tive pigment melanopsin, which is responsibl­e for most nonvisual photorecep­tion in mammals.
A photosensi­tive nerve cell in the retina of a mouse. The green color shows the location of the photosensi­tive pigment melanopsin, which is responsibl­e for most nonvisual photorecep­tion in mammals.
 ??  ?? Confocal microscope image of rod (green) and cone (red) photorecep­tors in a human retina.
Confocal microscope image of rod (green) and cone (red) photorecep­tors in a human retina.
 ??  ?? A photorecep­tor cell in the brain of a horseshoe crab. Green indicates the presence of the photosensi­tive molecule peropsin. Membranes in the cell known to respond to light are red.
A photorecep­tor cell in the brain of a horseshoe crab. Green indicates the presence of the photosensi­tive molecule peropsin. Membranes in the cell known to respond to light are red.
 ??  ?? A squid chromatoph­ore in the skin detects light.
A squid chromatoph­ore in the skin detects light.

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