4.8 Article

Molecular basis of ancestral vertebrate electroreception

期刊

NATURE
卷 543, 期 7645, 页码 391-+

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature21401

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资金

  1. NIH Institutional Research Service Award [T32HL007731]
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Fellowship of the Life Sciences Research Foundation
  3. Simons Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship
  4. NIH [NS081115, NS055299]

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Elasmobranch fishes, including sharks, rays, and skates, use specialized electrosensory organs called ampullae of Lorenzini to detect extremely small changes in environmental electric fields. Electrosensory cells within these ampullae can discriminate and respond to minute changes in environmental voltage gradients through an unknown mechanism. Here we show that the voltage-gated calcium channel Ca(V)1.3 and the big conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK) channel are preferentially expressed by electrosensory cells in little skate (Leucoraja erinacea) and functionally couple to mediate electrosensory cell membrane voltage oscillations, which are important for the detection of specific, weak electrical signals. Both channels exhibit unique properties compared with their mammalian orthologues that support electrosensory functions: structural adaptations in Ca(V)1.3 mediate a low-voltage threshold for activation, and alterations in BK support specifically tuned voltage oscillations. These findings reveal a molecular basis of electroreception and demonstrate how discrete evolutionary changes in ion channel structure facilitate sensory adaptation.

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