Skip to main content
Weiter zur Homepage der Europäischen Kommission (öffnet in neuem Fenster)
Deutsch Deutsch
CORDIS - Forschungsergebnisse der EU
CORDIS

From light detection to vision – revealing diversity of function of simple eyes and light-responsive behaviours to enlighten eye evolution

Periodic Reporting for period 2 - PROTOEYE (From light detection to vision – revealing diversity of function of simple eyes and light-responsive behaviours to enlighten eye evolution)

Berichtszeitraum: 2023-02-01 bis 2024-07-31

Complex animal eyes evolved many times independently from simpler forms. As already suggested by Darwin, the path to vision may have led from non-directional to directional light sensing and then to low-resolution spatial vision. Simple eyes in extant animals show a remarkable diversity of form and function and may hold the key to the origin of eyes and vision. We do not know why this diversity evolved when the organisms all respond to the same physical cue. Although we have a detailed molecular-centric view of eye evolution across animals, we lack corresponding knowledge of the physical mechanics and neuronal circuits coordinating the responses. In PROTOEYE, we study the diversity of simple non-visual and visual eyes and map the phase space of light-guided behaviours across animals. This will inform general principles of sensory system evolution and our understanding of the origin and evolution of eyes and visual circuits. The project builds on our long-term expertise in neural circuits and mechanistic photo-biology. We study a range of aquatic invertebrates with distinct behavioural strategies, unified by the presence of simple eyes and non-visual photoreceptors. Instead of looking at eyes in isolation, we investigate light responses from a whole-organism perspective focusing on circuits, behaviour and the biophysics of motion. In order to obtain entire neuronal circuits driving photic behaviours, we use whole-body serial electron microscopy and connectomics. With laser ablation, we explore strategies of light-seeking or light-avoidance behaviours. In high-throughput behavioural assays we test navigation strategies and sensitivities to different wavelengths. With high-speed imaging and flow tracing, we investigate how animal movement is shaped by light.
We have established robust protocols for the fixation and electron microscopic imaging of tiny zooplankton larvae. We optimised a technique called serial EM by array tomography that uses long ribbons of ultrathin sections of a fixed specimen followed by namometer-resolution imaging in an electron microscopy. During various field trips to marine stations in Europe, we have collected several marine planktonic specimens that we brought back to the lab in Heidelberg for behavioural and anatomical analysis. We have published several papers on novel aspects of photosensory responses and an unusual new function for a photoreceptor cell in pressure sensation.
Our comparative and multi-disciplinary project is expected to chart the functional diversity of simple eyes and provide a new framework for understanding the evolution of animal vision.
Mein Booklet 0 0