Light adaptation and the evolution of vertebrate photoreceptors

May 11, 2017The Journal of physiology

How vertebrate light-sensing cells adapt to light and have evolved

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Abstract

Lamprey rods and cones exhibit photoreceptor responses that are nearly identical to those of amphibians and mammals.

  • Lamprey rods and cones show light response characteristics similar to those in other vertebrates.
  • Both types of photoreceptors in lamprey adapt to background light and bleaches in a manner almost identical to other vertebrates.
  • The range of light intensity that lamprey rods and cones operate over is comparable to that of amphibian and mammalian photoreceptors.
  • Rods in lamprey reach increment saturation at similar intensities as mammalian rods, while cones do not saturate.
  • These extensive similarities suggest that early vertebrate progenitors likely had photoreceptors similar to those seen in existing vertebrate species.

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