Background: Eyes in bilaterian metazoans have been described as being composed of either ciliary or rhabdomeric photoreceptors. Phylogenetic distribution, as well as distinct morphologies and characteristic deployment of different photopigments (ciliary vs. rhabdomeric opsins) and transduction pathways argue for the co-existence of both of these two photoreceptor types in the last common bilaterian ancestor. Both receptor types exist throughout the Bilateria, but only vertebrates are thought to use ciliary photoreceptors for directional light detection in cerebral eyes, while all other invertebrate bilaterians studied utilize rhabdomeric photoreceptors for this purpose. In protostomes, ciliary photoreceptors that express c-opsin have been d...
Ciliary and rhabdomeric photoreceptor cells represent two main lines of photoreceptor-cell evolution...
Posterior eyespots in larval chitons have a molecular identity similar to anterior cerebral eyes in ...
Eye evolution is driven by the evolution of visually guided behavior. Accumulation of gradually more...
Background: Eyes in bilaterian metazoans have been described as being composed of either ciliary or ...
Background: Development of cerebral eyes is generally based on fine-tuned networks and closely inter...
Evidence that a larval brachiopod has ciliary photoreceptors that are directionally selective, and t...
Recent findings shed light on the steps underlying the evolution of vertebrate photoreceptors and re...
This is the final version.Available from eLife Publications via the DOI in this record.All data gene...
One of the signatures of evolutionarily related cell types is the expression of similar combinations...
Photoreceptors in metazoans can be grouped into two classes, with their photoreceptive membrane deri...
AbstractEvidence is reviewed from a wide range of studies relevant to the evolution of vertebrate ph...
SummaryCnidaria are the most basal animal phylum possessing complex eyes [1]. Their eyes predominant...
In comparison to complex visual systems, non-directional photoreception—the most primitive form of b...
All known visual pigments in Neuralia (Cnidaria, Ctenophora, and Bilateria) are composed of an opsi...
Photoreceptors in animals are generally of two kinds: the ciliary or c-type and the rhabdomeric or r...
Ciliary and rhabdomeric photoreceptor cells represent two main lines of photoreceptor-cell evolution...
Posterior eyespots in larval chitons have a molecular identity similar to anterior cerebral eyes in ...
Eye evolution is driven by the evolution of visually guided behavior. Accumulation of gradually more...
Background: Eyes in bilaterian metazoans have been described as being composed of either ciliary or ...
Background: Development of cerebral eyes is generally based on fine-tuned networks and closely inter...
Evidence that a larval brachiopod has ciliary photoreceptors that are directionally selective, and t...
Recent findings shed light on the steps underlying the evolution of vertebrate photoreceptors and re...
This is the final version.Available from eLife Publications via the DOI in this record.All data gene...
One of the signatures of evolutionarily related cell types is the expression of similar combinations...
Photoreceptors in metazoans can be grouped into two classes, with their photoreceptive membrane deri...
AbstractEvidence is reviewed from a wide range of studies relevant to the evolution of vertebrate ph...
SummaryCnidaria are the most basal animal phylum possessing complex eyes [1]. Their eyes predominant...
In comparison to complex visual systems, non-directional photoreception—the most primitive form of b...
All known visual pigments in Neuralia (Cnidaria, Ctenophora, and Bilateria) are composed of an opsi...
Photoreceptors in animals are generally of two kinds: the ciliary or c-type and the rhabdomeric or r...
Ciliary and rhabdomeric photoreceptor cells represent two main lines of photoreceptor-cell evolution...
Posterior eyespots in larval chitons have a molecular identity similar to anterior cerebral eyes in ...
Eye evolution is driven by the evolution of visually guided behavior. Accumulation of gradually more...