Drosophila photoreceptors and signaling mechanisms

Ben Katz, Baruch Minke*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

114 Scopus citations

Abstract

Fly eyes have been a useful biological system in which fundamental principles of sensory signaling have been elucidated. The physiological optics of the fly compound eye, which was discovered in the Musca, Calliphora and Drosophila flies, has been widely exploited in pioneering genetic and developmental studies. The detailed photochemical cycle of bistable photopigments has been elucidated in Drosophila using the genetic approach. Studies of Drosophila phototransduction using the genetic approach have led to the discovery of novel proteins crucial to many biological processes. A notable example is the discovery of the inactivation no afterpotential D scaffold protein, which binds the light-activated channel, its activator the phospholipase C and it regulator protein kinase C. An additional protein discovered in the Drosophila eye is the light-activated channel transient receptor potential (TRP), the founding member of the diverse and widely spread TRP channel superfamily. The fly eye has thus played a major role in the molecular identification of processes and proteins with prime importance.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2
JournalFrontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
Volume3
Issue numberJUN
DOIs
StatePublished - 11 Jun 2009

Keywords

  • Bistable pigments
  • G-protein
  • INAD scaffold protein
  • Optics of compound eyes
  • Phosphoinositide cycle
  • Phospholipase C
  • Phosphorylated arrestin
  • TRP channels

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