Evolution of phototransduction, vertebrate photoreceptors and retina

Jun 25, 2013Progress in retinal and eye research

How light detection and eye cells evolved in vertebrates

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Abstract

The ancestral opsin originated more than 700 million years ago and led to the evolution of cones and rods in vertebrates.

  • Three branches of opsins formed before the divergence of cnidarians from vertebrates.
  • Cone photoreceptors with a modern-like transduction cascade existed before the '2R' genome duplications.
  • These early cones had SWS and LWS opsins and connected directly to ganglion cells, resembling a two-layered retina.
  • The initial retina likely facilitated circadian timing rather than spatial vision due to the absence of a lens.
  • Retinal bipolar cells evolved later, enhancing the retina's computational capacity.
  • The evolution of a lens and extraocular muscles enabled spatial vision in vertebrates over 500 million years ago.

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