Discovery of a body-wide photosensory array that matures in an adult-like animal and mediates eye-brain-independent movement and arousal

dc.contributor.author Shettigar, Nishan
dc.contributor.author Chakravarthy, Anirudh
dc.contributor.author Umashankar, Suchitta
dc.contributor.author Lakshmanan, Vairavan
dc.contributor.author Palakodeti, Dasaradhi
dc.contributor.author Gulyani, Akash
dc.date.accessioned 2022-03-27T04:56:28Z
dc.date.available 2022-03-27T04:56:28Z
dc.date.issued 2021-01-01
dc.description.abstract The ability to respond to light has profoundly shaped life. Animals with eyes overwhelmingly rely on their visual circuits for mediating light-induced coordinated movements. Building on previously reported behaviors, we report the discovery of an organized, eyeindependent (extraocular), body-wide photosensory framework that allows even a head-removed animal to move like an intact animal. Despite possessing sensitive cerebral eyes and a centralized brain that controls most behaviors, head-removed planarians show acute, coordinated ultraviolet-A (UV-A) aversive phototaxis. We find this eye-brain-independent phototaxis is mediated by two noncanonical rhabdomeric opsins, the first known function for this newly classified opsin-clade. We uncover a unique array of dualopsin- expressing photoreceptor cells that line the periphery of animal body, are proximal to a body-wide nerve net, and mediate UVA phototaxis by engaging multiple modes of locomotion. Unlike embryonically developing cerebral eyes that are functional when animals hatch, the body-wide photosensory array matures postembryonically in "adult-like animals." Notably, apart from headremoved phototaxis, the body-wide, extraocular sensory organization also impacts physiology of intact animals. Low-dose UV-A, but not visible light (ocular-stimulus), is able to arouse intact worms that have naturally cycled to an inactive/rest-like state. This wavelength selective, low-light arousal of resting animals is noncanonical-opsin dependent but eye independent. Our discovery of an autonomous, multifunctional, late-maturing, organized body-wide photosensory system establishes a paradigm in sensory biology and evolution oflight sensing.
dc.identifier.citation Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. v.118(20)
dc.identifier.issn 00278424
dc.identifier.uri 10.1073/PNAS.2021426118
dc.identifier.uri https://pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.2021426118
dc.identifier.uri https://dspace.uohyd.ac.in/handle/1/7557
dc.subject Extraocular photoreception
dc.subject Light-sensing
dc.subject Opsins
dc.subject Planarians
dc.subject UV-A
dc.title Discovery of a body-wide photosensory array that matures in an adult-like animal and mediates eye-brain-independent movement and arousal
dc.type Journal. Article
dspace.entity.type
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