All Light, Everywhere? Photoreceptors at Nonconventional Sites

Author:

Mat Audrey12,Vu Hong Ha3,Wolf Eva34,Tessmar-Raible Kristin156

Affiliation:

1. Max Perutz Labs, University of Vienna, Vienna BioCenter, Vienna, Austria

2. VIPS2, Vienna BioCenter, Vienna, Austria

3. Institute of Molecular Physiology, Johannes Gutenberg-University, Mainz, Germany

4. Institute of Molecular Biology, Mainz, Germany

5. Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, Germany

6. Carl-von-Ossietzky University, Oldenburg, Germany

Abstract

One of the biggest environmental alterations we have made to our species is the change in the exposure to light. During the day, we typically sit behind glass windows illuminated by artificial light that is >400 times dimmer and has a very different spectrum than natural daylight. On the opposite end are the nights that are now lit up by several orders of magnitude. This review aims to provide food for thought as to why this matters for humans and other animals. Evidence from behavioral neuroscience, physiology, chronobiology, and molecular biology is increasingly converging on the conclusions that the biological nonvisual functions of light and photosensory molecules are highly complex. The initial work of von Frisch on extraocular photoreceptors in fish, the identification of rhodopsins as the molecular light receptors in animal eyes and eye-like structures and cryptochromes as light sensors in nonmammalian chronobiology, still allowed for the impression that light reception would be a relatively restricted, localized sense in most animals. However, light-sensitive processes and/or sensory proteins have now been localized to many different cell types and tissues. It might be necessary to consider nonlight-responding cells as the exception, rather than the rule.

Funder

Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research

Austrian Science Fund

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

EC | ERC | HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology

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