Addition of human melanopsin renders mammalian cells photoresponsive
- PMID: 15674244
- DOI: 10.1038/nature03344
Addition of human melanopsin renders mammalian cells photoresponsive
Abstract
A small number of mammalian retinal ganglion cells act as photoreceptors for regulating certain non-image forming photoresponses. These intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells express the putative photopigment melanopsin. Ablation of the melanopsin gene renders these cells insensitive to light; however, the precise role of melanopsin in supporting cellular photosensitivity is unconfirmed. Here we show that heterologous expression of human melanopsin in a mouse paraneuronal cell line (Neuro-2a) is sufficient to render these cells photoreceptive. Under such conditions, melanopsin acts as a sensory photopigment, coupled to a native ion channel via a G-protein signalling cascade, to drive physiological light detection. The melanopsin photoresponse relies on the presence of cis-isoforms of retinaldehyde and is selectively sensitive to short-wavelength light. We also present evidence to show that melanopsin functions as a bistable pigment in this system, having an intrinsic photoisomerase regeneration function that is chromatically shifted to longer wavelengths.
Comment in
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Neurobiology: bright blue times.Nature. 2005 Feb 17;433(7027):698-9. doi: 10.1038/433698a. Nature. 2005. PMID: 15716938 No abstract available.
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