Fundamental questions and concepts about photoreception and the case of Euglena gracilis

Authors: L. Barsanti, A.M. Frassanito, , V. Passarelli, V. Evangelista, P. Gualtieri
Journal: Integrative Biology
DOI: 10.1039/c1ib00115a
Abstract:
The ability to sense light can be considered the most fundamental and presumably the most ancient property of visual systems. This ability is the basis of phototaxis, one of the most striking behavioural responses of motile photosynthetic microorganisms (i.e. microalgae) to light stimuli, which allows them to move toward or away directional light. In order to fully exploit the information content of light (intensity, direction, distribution) microorganisms need proper perceiving devices, termed photoreceptors, which must act as sensors, to perceive wavelength and direction of light, as transducers, to convert the light signal into chemical and/or electrical information, but also as amplifiers and eventually as transmitters. This review describes the universal structural, behavioural and physiological features necessary for the proper functioning of these devices in algae, and how these features have been investigated by means of different analytical techniques such as for example microspectroscopy, digital fluorescence microscopy, two photons FLIM. The insight of the photoreceptive response mechanism is explained using the unicellular alga Euglena gracilis, in which the different structural, behavioural and physiological features combine to achieve a concerted, efficient response to light stimuli.

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