Abstract

Summary

This study characterizes the molecular properties of Ci-opsin1, an ascidian bistable rhodopsin, finding it has intermediate photoreaction and G protein activation efficiency between vertebrate and invertebrate visual opsins. While primarily basic science, understanding diverse opsin properties informs optogenetic tool development, which has downstream implications for light-based therapeutic interventions.
Abstract

Key Findings

  • Ci-opsin1 from Ciona intestinalis shows intermediate photoreaction properties between vertebrate and invertebrate visual opsins
  • Ci-opsin1 G protein activation efficiency is intermediate between vertebrate and invertebrate visual opsins, suggesting an evolutionary transitional role
  • Phylogenetic analysis places Ci-opsin1 closer to vertebrate visual opsins than invertebrate ones, despite its bistable rhodopsin characteristics
Categories

Categories

The Science of Light: Investigates opsin photoreceptor biology and phototransduction mechanisms in animal visual systems, with relevance to understanding photoreceptor diversity.
Authors

Author(s)

T Sugihara, M Koyanagi, A Terakita
Publication Date

Publication Year

2013
View more publications