4.8 Article

Molecular basis of infrared detection by snakes

Journal

NATURE
Volume 464, Issue 7291, Pages 1006-U66

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature08943

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award [GM080853]
  2. NIH
  3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  4. National Institutes of Health, including NCRR [P40 RR018300-06, P01 AG010770, NS047723, NS055299]

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Snakes possess a unique sensory system for detecting infrared radiation, enabling them to generate a 'thermal image' of predators or prey. Infrared signals are initially received by the pit organ, a highly specialized facial structure that is innervated by nerve fibres of the somatosensory system. How this organ detects and transduces infrared signals into nerve impulses is not known. Here we use an unbiased transcriptional profiling approach to identify TRPA1 channels as infrared receptors on sensory nerve fibres that innervate the pit organ. TRPA1 orthologues from pit-bearing snakes (vipers, pythons and boas) are the most heat-sensitive vertebrate ion channels thus far identified, consistent with their role as primary transducers of infrared stimuli. Thus, snakes detect infrared signals through a mechanism involving radiant heating of the pit organ, rather than photochemical transduction. These findings illustrate the broad evolutionary tuning of transient receptor potential (TRP) channels as thermosensors in the vertebrate nervous system.

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