Non-visual functions of Opsins in Crustacea
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2023-02-23Autor
Botello Camacho, Alejandro
Pérez-Leon, JorgeAlberto
Pérez-Calderón, José Ricardo
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Opsins are transmembrane proteins that have a covalent bond with a chromophore 11-cis-retinal in the intracellular region, opsins transiently
bind to a G protein, which in turn is alternatively coupled to GTP or GDP. These characteristics allow opsins to function as photopigments and,
after reacting with light, they launch the cascade of intracellular communication processes known as phototransduction. Commonly referred to
as the starting point of the visual pathway, phototransduction as initiated by opsins, can also mediate physiological processes as varied as taxis,
metabolic synchronization, and seasonal migration. This review analyzes such functions performed by opsins in crustaceans, a group with a huge
diversity of species that, owing to their plasticity, have been able to invade habitats that other arthropods or terrestrial vertebrates have been
unable to occupy. Our analysis emphasizes the way in which opsins take part in crustacean behavioral display under extreme habitat conditions
as in the case of cave fauna), as well as in essential ontogenic events. The many functions of opsins have been scarcely investigated due to bias
generated by their participation in visual processes. Attention to the non-visual activity of opsins can break new grounds towards an integrative
understanding of animal physiology.
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