Morshedian Ala, Fain Gordon L
Department of Integrative Biology and Physiology, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, 90095-7239, USA.
Jules Stein Eye Institute, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA, 90095-7000, USA.
J Physiol. 2017 Jul 15;595(14):4947-4960. doi: 10.1113/JP274211. Epub 2017 Jun 1.
Lamprey are cyclostomes, a group of vertebrates that diverged from lines leading to jawed vertebrates (including mammals) in the late Cambrian, 500 million years ago. It may therefore be possible to infer properties of photoreceptors in early vertebrate progenitors by comparing lamprey to other vertebrates. We show that lamprey rods and cones respond to light much like rods and cones in amphibians and mammals. They operate over a similar range of light intensities and adapt to backgrounds and bleaches nearly identically. These correspondences are pervasive and detailed; they argue for the presence of rods and cones very early in the evolution of vertebrates with properties much like those of rods and cones in existing vertebrate species.
The earliest vertebrates were agnathans - fish-like organisms without jaws, which first appeared near the end of the Cambrian radiation. One group of agnathans became cyclostomes, which include lamprey and hagfish. Other agnathans gave rise to jawed vertebrates or gnathostomes, the group including all other existing vertebrate species. Because cyclostomes diverged from other vertebrates 500 million years ago, it may be possible to infer some of the properties of the retina of early vertebrate progenitors by comparing lamprey to other vertebrates. We have previously shown that rods and cones in lamprey respond to light much like photoreceptors in other vertebrates and have a similar sensitivity. We now show that these affinities are even closer. Both rods and cones adapt to background light and to bleaches in a manner almost identical to other vertebrate photoreceptors. The operating range in darkness is nearly the same in lamprey and in amphibian or mammalian rods and cones; moreover background light shifts response-intensity curves downward and to the right over a similar range of ambient intensities. Rods show increment saturation at about the same intensity as mammalian rods, and cones never saturate. Bleaches decrease sensitivity in part by loss of quantum catch and in part by opsin activation of transduction. These correspondences are so numerous and pervasive that they are unlikely to result from convergent evolution but argue instead that early vertebrate progenitors of both cyclostomes and mammals had photoreceptors much like our own.
七鳃鳗属于圆口纲,是一类脊椎动物,在5亿年前的寒武纪晚期从通向有颌脊椎动物(包括哺乳动物)的谱系中分化出来。因此,通过将七鳃鳗与其他脊椎动物进行比较,有可能推断早期脊椎动物祖先中光感受器的特性。我们发现七鳃鳗的视杆细胞和视锥细胞对光的反应与两栖动物和哺乳动物的视杆细胞和视锥细胞非常相似。它们在相似的光强度范围内起作用,并且对背景光的适应以及漂白过程几乎完全相同。这些对应关系广泛而详细;它们表明在脊椎动物进化的早期就存在视杆细胞和视锥细胞,其特性与现存脊椎动物物种中的视杆细胞和视锥细胞非常相似。
最早出现的脊椎动物是无颌类——类似鱼类但没有颌的生物,最早出现在寒武纪辐射末期附近。其中一类无颌类演变成了圆口纲,包括七鳃鳗和盲鳗。其他无颌类则进化出了有颌脊椎动物或颌口类,该类包括所有其他现存的脊椎动物物种。由于圆口纲在5亿年前就与其他脊椎动物分道扬镳,通过将七鳃鳗与其他脊椎动物进行比较,有可能推断早期脊椎动物祖先视网膜的一些特性。我们之前已经表明,七鳃鳗的视杆细胞和视锥细胞对光的反应与其他脊椎动物的光感受器非常相似,并且具有相似的敏感性。我们现在表明这些相似性更加紧密。视杆细胞和视锥细胞适应背景光和漂白的方式几乎与其他脊椎动物的光感受器相同。七鳃鳗与两栖动物或哺乳动物的视杆细胞和视锥细胞在黑暗中的工作范围几乎相同;此外,在相似的环境光强度范围内,背景光会使反应强度曲线向下和向右移动。七鳃鳗的视杆细胞在与哺乳动物视杆细胞大致相同的强度下出现增量饱和,而视锥细胞从不饱和。漂白部分通过量子捕获的丧失以及部分通过转导的视蛋白激活来降低敏感性。这些对应关系如此众多且普遍,不太可能是趋同进化的结果,而是表明圆口纲和哺乳动物的早期脊椎动物祖先具有与我们人类非常相似的光感受器。