Identification of Nonvisual Photomotor Response Cells in the Vertebrate Hindbrain

David Kokel(Broad Institute), Timothy Dunn(Harvard University), Misha B. Ahrens(Harvard University), Rüdiger Alshut(Karlsruhe Institute of Technology), Chung Yan Cheung(Broad Institute), Louis Saint‐Amant(Université de Montréal), Giancarlo N. Bruni(Broad Institute), Rita Mateus(Broad Institute), Tjakko J. van Ham(Broad Institute), Tomoya Shiraki(The University of Tokyo), Yoshitaka Fukada(The University of Tokyo), Daisuke Kojima(The University of Tokyo), Jing-Ruey Joanna Yeh(Harvard University), Ralf Mikut(Karlsruhe Institute of Technology), Johannes von Lintig(Case Western Reserve University), Florian Engert(Harvard University), Randall T. Peterson(Broad Institute)
Journal of Neuroscience
February 27, 2013
Cited by 121Open Access
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Abstract

Nonvisual photosensation enables animals to sense light without sight. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms of nonvisual photobehaviors are poorly understood, especially in vertebrate animals. Here, we describe the photomotor response (PMR), a robust and reproducible series of motor behaviors in zebrafish that is elicited by visual wavelengths of light but does not require the eyes, pineal gland, or other canonical deep-brain photoreceptive organs. Unlike the relatively slow effects of canonical nonvisual pathways, motor circuits are strongly and quickly (seconds) recruited during the PMR behavior. We find that the hindbrain is both necessary and sufficient to drive these behaviors. Using in vivo calcium imaging, we identify a discrete set of neurons within the hindbrain whose responses to light mirror the PMR behavior. Pharmacological inhibition of the visual cycle blocks PMR behaviors, suggesting that opsin-based photoreceptors control this behavior. These data represent the first known light-sensing circuit in the vertebrate hindbrain.


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