AI Article Synopsis

  • Most vertebrates typically have one layer of rod photoreceptors for dim-light vision, but over 100 fish species, including deep-sea and nocturnal reef fish, exhibit a multibank retina with multiple rod layers.
  • Researchers used a combination of histology, electrophysiology, and amino acid analysis on three species of nocturnal reef fish to study how these multiple rod layers affect sensory advantages.
  • Findings revealed that fish with multibank retinas have faster vision and better responses to different light intensities, providing the first functional evidence that these retinas enhance both dim-light sensitivity and the speed of vision.

Article Abstract

Most vertebrates have one layer of the dim-light active rod photoreceptors. However, multiple rod layers, known as a multibank retina, can be found in over 100 species of fish, including several deep-sea species and one family of nocturnally active reef fish, the Holocentridae. Although seemingly associated with increased photon catch, the function of multibank retinas remained unknown. We used an integrative approach, combining histology, electrophysiology and amino acid sequence analysis, applied to three species of nocturnal reef fishes, two holocentrids with a multibank retina ( and ) and an apogonid with a single rod bank (), to determine the sensory advantage of multiple rod layers. Our results showed that fish with multibank retinas have both faster vision and enhanced responses to bright- and dim-light intensities. Faster vision was indicated by higher flicker fusion frequencies during temporal resolution electroretinography as well as faster retinal release rates estimated from their rhodopsin proteins. Enhanced sensitivity was demonstrated by broadened intensity-response curves derived from luminous sensitivity electroretinography. Overall, our findings provide the first functional evidence for enhanced dim-light sensitivity using a multibank retina while also suggesting novel roles for the adaptation in enhancing bright-light sensitivity and the speed of vision.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10688437PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2023.1749DOI Listing

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