Hierarchies in light sensing and dynamic interactions between ocular and extraocular sensory networks in a flatworm

dc.contributor.author Shettigar, Nishan
dc.contributor.author Joshi, Asawari
dc.contributor.author Dalmeida, Rimple
dc.contributor.author Gopalkrishna, Rohini
dc.contributor.author Chakravarthy, Anirudh
dc.contributor.author Patnaik, Siddharth
dc.contributor.author Mathew, Manoj
dc.contributor.author Palakodeti, Dasaradhi
dc.contributor.author Gulyani, Akash
dc.date.accessioned 2022-03-27T04:56:31Z
dc.date.available 2022-03-27T04:56:31Z
dc.date.issued 2017-07-05
dc.description.abstract Light sensing has independently evolved multiple times under diverse selective pressures but has been examined only in a handful among the millions of light-responsive organisms. Unsurprisingly, mechanistic insights into how differential light processing can cause distinct behavioral outputs are limited. We show how an organism can achieve complex light processing with a simple “eye” while also having independent but mutually interacting light sensing networks. Although planarian flatworms lack wavelength-specific eye photoreceptors, a 25 nm change in light wavelength is sufficient to completely switch their phototactic behavior. Quantitative photoassays, eye-brain confocal imaging, and RNA interference/knockdown studies reveal that flatworms are able to compare small differences in the amounts of light absorbed at the eyes through a single eye opsin and convert them into binary behavioral outputs. Because planarians can fully regenerate, eye-brain injury-regeneration studies showed that this acute light intensity sensing and processing are layered on simple light detection. Unlike intact worms, partially regenerated animals with eyes can sense light but cannot sense finer gradients. Planarians also show a “reflex-like,” eye-independent (extraocular/whole-body) response to low ultraviolet A light, apart from the “processive” eye-brain–mediated (ocular) response. Competition experiments between ocular and extraocular sensory systems reveal dynamic interchanging hierarchies. In intact worms, cerebral ocular response can override the reflex-like extraocular response. However, injury-regeneration again offers a time window wherein both responses coexist, but the dominance of the ocular response is reversed. Overall, we demonstrate acute light intensity–based behavioral switching and two evolutionarily distinct but interacting light sensing networks in a regenerating organism.
dc.identifier.citation Science Advances. v.3(7)
dc.identifier.uri 10.1126/sciadv.1603025
dc.identifier.uri https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.1603025
dc.identifier.uri https://dspace.uohyd.ac.in/handle/1/7572
dc.title Hierarchies in light sensing and dynamic interactions between ocular and extraocular sensory networks in a flatworm
dc.type Journal. Article
dspace.entity.type
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