AI Article Synopsis

  • The mid-band ommatidium in the mantis shrimp's compound eye allows it to uniquely recognize circularly polarized light (CPL), but the species Oratosquilla oratoria may have diminished this ability due to a reduced number of these structures.
  • Research examined how O. oratoria responds to different types of polarized light, showing a specific order of preference from natural light to left-circularly polarized light (LCPL) and highlighting a potential inability to respond to right-circularly polarized light (RCPL).
  • The findings reveal the genetic mechanisms involved in O. oratoria's light response, emphasizing the roles of genes and proteins related to opsin and microvilli, contributing new insights into the evolution of polarized light vision.

Article Abstract

The special rhabdom structure of the mid-band ommatidium in compound eye contributes to the mantis shrimp being the only animal species known to science that can recognize circularly polarized light (CPL). Although the number of mid-band ommatidium of Oratosquilla oratoria is reduced, the mid-band ommatidium still has orthogonal geometric interleaved rhabdom and short oval distal rhabdom, which may mean that the O. oratoria has weakened circular polarized light vision (CPLV). Here we explored the molecular mechanisms of how O. oratoria response to the polarization of light. Based on the specific expression patterns of vision-related functional genes and proteins, we suggest that the order of light response by O. oratoria compound eye was first natural light, then left-circularly polarized light (LCPL), linearly polarized light, right-circularly polarized light (RCPL) and dark. Meanwhile, we found that the expression levels of vision-related functional genes and proteins in O. oratoria compound eye under RCPL were not significantly different from those in DL, which may imply that O. oratoria cannot respond to RCPL. Furthermore, the response of LCPL is likely facilitated by the differential expression of opsin and microvilli - related functional genes and proteins (arrestin and sodium-coupled neutral amino acid transporter). In conclusion, this study systematically illustrated for the first time how O. oratoria compound eye response to the polarization of light at the genetic level, and it can improve the visual ecological theory behind polarized light vision evolution.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.129053DOI Listing

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