4.8 Article

Blue light responses in Cancer borealis stomatogastric ganglion neurons

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 6, Pages 1439-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.01.064

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R35NS 097343]

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In this study, the researchers serendipitously discovered that the crab STG exhibits increased neuronal activity upon exposure to blue light. They found that this response may be mediated by cryptochromes, which are blue-light photoreceptors involved in circadian behaviors.
In many animals, the daily cycling of light is a key environmental cue, encoded in part by specialized light-sensitive neurons without visual functions. We serendipitously discovered innate light-responsiveness while imaging the extensively studied stomatogastric ganglion (STG) of the crab, Cancer borealis. The STG houses a motor circuit that controls the rhythmic contractions of the foregut, and the system has facilitated deep understanding of circuit function and neuromodulation. We illuminated the crab STG in vitro with different wavelengths and amplitudes of light and found a dose-dependent increase in neuronal activity upon exposure to blue light (lambda 460-500 nm). The response was elevated in the absence of neuromodulatory inputs to the STG. The pacemaker kernel that drives the network rhythm was responsive to light when synaptically isolated, and light shifted the threshold for slow wave and spike activity in the hyperpolarized direction, accounting for the increased activity patterns. Cryptochromes are evolutionarily conserved blue-light photoreceptors that are involved in circadian behaviors.(1) Their activation by light can lead to enhanced neuronal activity.(2) We identified cryptochrome sequences in the C. borealis transcriptome as potential mediators of this response and confirmed their expression in pyloric dilator (PD) neurons, which are part of the pacemaker kernel, by single-cell RNA-seq analysis.

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