keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37670767/cryptochromes-in-mammals-a-magnetoreception-misconception
#21
REVIEW
Li Zhang, E Pascal Malkemper
Cryptochromes are flavoproteins related to photolyases that are widespread throughout the plant and animal kingdom. They govern blue light-dependent growth in plants, control circadian rhythms in a light-dependent manner in invertebrates, and play a central part in the circadian clock in vertebrates. In addition, cryptochromes might function as receptors that allow animals to sense the Earth's magnetic field. As cryptochromes are also present in mammals including humans, the possibility of a magnetosensitive protein is exciting...
2023: Frontiers in Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37615682/the-presidential-symposium-at-the-international-congress-of-neuroethology-2022-in-lisbon-portugal
#22
EDITORIAL
Eric J Warrant
In this special issue of articles from leading neuroethologists-all of whom gave outstanding presentations within the Presidential Symposium of the 2022 International Congress of Neuroethology held in Lisbon, Portugal-we learn about the role of cryptochrome molecules in the magnetic sense of animals, how honeybees construct their honeycombs, why fish eyes are built the way they are in species from different depths, how archerfish intercept their newly downed prey with a swift muscular curving of the body (known as a C-start) and how birds process optic flow information to control flight...
August 24, 2023: Journal of Comparative Physiology. A, Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37588572/merkel-like-basal-cells-in-the-nasal-septal-island-of-dromedaries-ultrastructure-and-possible-functions
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ahmed I Abo-Ahmed, Fatgzim Latifi, Reda I El-Kammar, Ibrahim Girgiri
Unlike other Merkel cell types, the morphology and functions of the Merkel-like basal cells remain unclear. The aim of the present study was to investigate the ultrastructural features of Merkel-like basal cells in the nasal septal island (NSI) of dromedaries ( Camelus dromedarius ) using transmission electron microscopy and to speculate their potential functions. Ten pairs of nasal septal islands obtained from ten heads of dromedary camels were used for the current study. Interestingly, these cells have been identified in the basal layer of the neuroepithelium of the dromedary nasal septal island near the sensory nerve endings...
September 2023: Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37571041/14-3-3-proteins-and-the-plasma-membrane-h-atpase-are-involved-in-maize-zea-mays-magnetic-induction
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna Fiorillo, Ambra S Parmagnani, Sabina Visconti, Giuseppe Mannino, Lorenzo Camoni, Massimo E Maffei
The geomagnetic field (GMF) is a natural component of the biosphere, and, during evolution, all organisms experienced its presence while some evolved the ability to perceive magnetic fields (MF). We studied the response of 14-3-3 proteins and the plasma membrane (PM) proton pump H+ -ATPase to reduced GMF values by lowering the GMF intensity to a near-null magnetic field (NNMF). Seedling morphology, H+ -ATPase activity and content, 14-3-3 protein content, binding to PM and phosphorylation, gene expression, and ROS quantification were assessed in maize ( Zea mays ) dark-grown seedlings...
August 7, 2023: Plants (Basel, Switzerland)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37558871/no-evidence-for-magnetic-field-effects-on-the-behaviour-of-drosophila
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marco Bassetto, Thomas Reichl, Dmitry Kobylkov, Daniel R Kattnig, Michael Winklhofer, P J Hore, Henrik Mouritsen
Migratory songbirds have the remarkable ability to extract directional information from the Earth's magnetic field1,2 . The exact mechanism of this light-dependent magnetic compass sense, however, is not fully understood. The most promising hypothesis focuses on the quantum spin dynamics of transient radical pairs formed in cryptochrome proteins in the retina3-5 . Frustratingly, much of the supporting evidence for this theory is circumstantial, largely because of the extreme challenges posed by genetic modification of wild birds...
August 2023: Nature
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37446278/probing-transcriptional-crosstalk-between-cryptochromes-and-iron-sulfur-cluster-assembly-1-magr-in-the-magnetoresponse-of-a-migratory-insect
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yuning Zhang, Ying Zhang, Jingyu Zhao, Jinglan He, Zongjin Xuanyuan, Weidong Pan, Gregory A Sword, Fajun Chen, Guijun Wan
Many organisms can sense and respond to magnetic fields (MFs), with migratory species in particular utilizing geomagnetic field information for long-distance migration. Cryptochrome proteins (Crys) along with a highly conserved Iron-sulfur cluster assembly protein (i.e., MagR) have garnered significant attention for their involvement in magnetoresponse (including magnetoreception). However, in vivo investigations of potential transcriptional crosstalk between Crys and MagR genes have been limited. The brown planthopper, Nilaparvata lugens , is a major migratory pest insect and an emerging model for studying MF intensity-related magnetoresponse...
July 5, 2023: International Journal of Molecular Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37428840/dimerization-of-european-robin-cryptochrome-4a
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maja Hanić, Lewis M Antill, Angela S Gehrckens, Jessica Schmidt, Katharina Görtemaker, Rabea Bartölke, Tarick J El-Baba, Jingjing Xu, Karl-Wilhelm Koch, Henrik Mouritsen, Justin L P Benesch, P J Hore, Ilia A Solov'yov
Homo-dimer formation is important for the function of many proteins. Although dimeric forms of cryptochromes (Cry) have been found by crystallography and were recently observed in vitro for European robin Cry4a, little is known about the dimerization of avian Crys and the role it could play in the mechanism of magnetic sensing in migratory birds. Here, we present a combined experimental and computational investigation of the dimerization of robin Cry4a resulting from covalent and non-covalent interactions. Experimental studies using native mass spectrometry, mass spectrometric analysis of disulfide bonds, chemical cross-linking, and photometric measurements show that disulfide-linked dimers are routinely formed, that their formation is promoted by exposure to blue light, and that the most likely cysteines are C317 and C412...
July 20, 2023: Journal of Physical Chemistry. B
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37399422/upper-bound-for-broadband-radiofrequency-field-disruption-of-magnetic-compass-orientation-in-night-migratory-songbirds
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bo Leberecht, Siu Ying Wong, Baladev Satish, Sara Döge, Jakob Hindman, Lalitha Venkatraman, Shambhavi Apte, Katrin Haase, Isabelle Musielak, Glen Dautaj, Ilia A Solov'yov, Michael Winklhofer, Henrik Mouritsen, P J Hore
Night-migratory songbirds have a light-dependent magnetic compass sense, the mechanism of which is thought to depend on the photochemical formation of radical pairs in cryptochrome (Cry) proteins located in the retina. The finding that weak radiofrequency (RF) electromagnetic fields can prevent birds from orienting in the Earth's magnetic field has been regarded as a diagnostic test for this mechanism and as a potential source of information on the identities of the radicals. The maximum frequency that could cause such disorientation has been predicted to lie between 120 and 220 MHz for a flavin-tryptophan radical pair in Cry...
July 11, 2023: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37184693/insect-magnetoreception-a-cry-for-mechanistic-insights
#29
REVIEW
Christine Merlin
Migratory animals can detect and use the Earth's magnetic field for orientation and navigation, sometimes over distances spanning thousands of kilometers. How they do so remains, however, one of the greatest mysteries in all sensory biology. Here, the author reviews the progress made to understand the molecular bases of the animal magnetic sense focusing on insect species, the only species in which genetic studies have so far been possible. The central hypothesis in the field posits that magnetically sensitive radical pairs formed by photoexcitation of cryptochrome proteins are key to animal magnetoreception...
May 15, 2023: Journal of Comparative Physiology. A, Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37175925/spin-dynamics-of-flavoproteins
#30
REVIEW
Jörg Matysik, Luca Gerhards, Tobias Theiss, Lisa Timmermann, Patrick Kurle-Tucholski, Guzel Musabirova, Ruonan Qin, Frank Ortmann, Ilia A Solov'yov, Tanja Gulder
This short review reports the surprising phenomenon of nuclear hyperpolarization occurring in chemical reactions, which is called CIDNP (chemically induced dynamic nuclear polarization) or photo-CIDNP if the chemical reaction is light-driven. The phenomenon occurs in both liquid and solid-state, and electron transfer systems, often carrying flavins as electron acceptors, are involved. Here, we explain the physical and chemical properties of flavins, their occurrence in spin-correlated radical pairs (SCRP) and the possible involvement of flavin-carrying SCRPs in animal magneto-reception at earth's magnetic field...
May 4, 2023: International Journal of Molecular Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36899858/statistical-amplification-of-the-effects-of-weak-magnetic-fields-in-cellular-translation
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vladimir N Binhi
We assume that the enzymatic processes of recognition of amino acids and their addition to the synthesized molecule in cellular translation include the formation of intermediate pairs of radicals with spin-correlated electrons. The mathematical model presented describes the changes in the probability of incorrectly synthesized molecules in response to a change in the external weak magnetic field. A relatively high chance of errors has been shown to arise from the statistical enhancement of the low probability of local incorporation errors...
February 24, 2023: Cells
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36871106/c-elegans-is-not-a-robust-model-organism-for-the-magnetic-sense
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erich Pascal Malkemper, Patrycja Pikulik, Tim Luca Krause, Jun Liu, Li Zhang, Brittany Hamauei, Monika Scholz
Magnetoreception is defined as the ability to sense and use the Earth's magnetic field, for example to orient and direct movements. The receptors and sensory mechanisms underlying behavioral responses to magnetic fields remain unclear. A previous study described magnetoreception in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, which requires the activity of a single pair of sensory neurons. These results suggest C. elegans as a tractable model organism for facilitating the search for magnetoreceptors and signaling pathways...
March 4, 2023: Communications Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36813962/essential-elements-of-radical-pair-magnetosensitivity-in-drosophila
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Adam A Bradlaugh, Giorgio Fedele, Anna L Munro, Celia Napier Hansen, John M Hares, Sanjai Patel, Charalambos P Kyriacou, Alex R Jones, Ezio Rosato, Richard A Baines
Many animals use Earth's magnetic field (also known as the geomagnetic field) for navigation1 . The favoured mechanism for magnetosensitivity involves a blue-light-activated electron-transfer reaction between flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and a chain of tryptophan residues within the photoreceptor protein CRYPTOCHROME (CRY). The spin-state of the resultant radical pair, and therefore the concentration of CRY in its active state, is influenced by the geomagnetic field2 . However, the canonical CRY-centric radical-pair mechanism does not explain many physiological and behavioural observations2-8 ...
February 22, 2023: Nature
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36808184/sense-of-doubt-inaccurate-and-alternate-locations-of-virtual-magnetic-displacements-may-give-a-distorted-view-of-animal-magnetoreception-ability
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Will T Schneider, Florian Packmor, Oliver Lindecke, Richard A Holland
Virtual magnetic displacements are used to examine the magnetoreceptive ability of animals by changing the local magnetic field to emulate one that exists elsewhere. This technique can be used to test whether animals use a magnetic map. The viability of a magnetic map is dependant upon which magnetic parameters an animal's coordinate system is composed of, and how sensitive they are to those parameters. Previous research has not considered the degree to which sensitivity can change an animal's impression of where a virtual magnetic displacement is located...
February 20, 2023: Communications Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36769217/the-geomagnetic-field-gmf-is-required-for-lima-bean-photosynthesis-and-reactive-oxygen-species-production
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ambra S Parmagnani, Nico Betterle, Giuseppe Mannino, Stefano D'Alessandro, Fabio F Nocito, Kristina Ljumovic, Gianpiero Vigani, Matteo Ballottari, Massimo E Maffei
Plants evolved in the presence of the Earth's magnetic field (or geomagnetic field, GMF). Variations in MF intensity and inclination are perceived by plants as an abiotic stress condition with responses at the genomic and metabolic level, with changes in growth and developmental processes. The reduction of GMF to near null magnetic field (NNMF) values by the use of a triaxial Helmholtz coils system was used to evaluate the requirement of the GMF for Lima bean ( Phaseolus lunatus L.) photosynthesis and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production...
February 2, 2023: International Journal of Molecular Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36744464/bionic-magnetic-sensor-based-on-the-magr-cry4-complex-configured-graphene-transistor-with-an-integrated-on-chip-gate
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Qian Cheng, Jianfei Sun, Yuqing Ge, Le Xue, Hongju Mao, Lin Zhou, Jianlong Zhao
Magnetic-sensitive proteins are regarded as key factors in animals' precise perception of the geomagnetic field. Accurate feedback on the response of these tiny proteins to magnetic fields remains a challenge. Here, we first propose a real-time accurate magnetic sensor based on the MagR/Cry4 complex-configured graphene transistor with an integrated on-chip gate. A nanometer-thick denatured bovine serum albumin film was used as the bio-interface of graphene electrolyte-gated transistors (EGTs) to immobilize the MagR/Cry4 complex...
February 6, 2023: ACS Sensors
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36733826/kinetics-of-cone-specific-g-protein-signaling-in-avian-photoreceptor-cells
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chad Yee, Katharina Görtemaker, Rieke Wellpott, Karl-Wilhelm Koch
Cone photoreceptor cells of night-migratory songbirds seem to process the primary steps of two different senses, vision and magnetoreception. The molecular basis of phototransduction is a prototypical G protein-coupled receptor pathway starting with the photoexcitation of rhodopsin or cone opsin thereby activating a heterotrimeric G protein named transducin. This interaction is well understood in vertebrate rod cells, but parameter describing protein-protein interactions of cone specific proteins are rare and not available for migratory birds...
2023: Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36671157/role-of-chiral-induced-spin-selectivity-in-the-radical-pair-mechanism-of-avian-magnetoreception
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yash Tiwari, Vishvendra Singh Poonia
In this paper, we investigate the effect of chiral-induced spin selectivity (CISS) on the radical pair mechanism of avian magnetoreception. We examine the impact of spin selectivity on the avian compass sensitivity. In this analysis, we also consider the dipolar and exchange interactions and observe their interplay with CISS. We find that CISS results in a multifold increase in avian compass sensitivity. Interestingly, we also observe that CISS can counter the deleterious effect of dipolar interaction and increase system sensitivity...
December 2022: Physical Review. E
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36624156/geomagnetic-disturbance-associated-with-increased-vagrancy-in-migratory-landbirds
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Benjamin A Tonelli, Casey Youngflesh, Morgan W Tingley
Rare birds known as "accidentals" or "vagrants" have long captivated birdwatchers and puzzled biologists, but the drivers of these rare occurrences remain elusive. Errors in orientation or navigation are considered one potential driver: migratory birds use the Earth's magnetic field-sensed using specialized magnetoreceptor structures-to traverse long distances over often unfamiliar terrain. Disruption to these magnetoreceptors or to the magnetic field itself could potentially cause errors leading to vagrancy...
January 9, 2023: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36602694/magnetic-nanoparticles-in-the-body-parts-of-polistes-versicolor-and-polybia-paulista-wasps-are-biomineralized-evidence-from-magnetization-measurements-and-ferromagnetic-resonance-spectroscopy
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jilder Dandy Peña Serna, William Antonialli-Junior, Denise Sguarizi Antonio, Nathan Rodrigues Batista, Odivaldo Cambraia Alves, Fernanda Abreu, Daniel Acosta-Avalos
The detection of the geomagnetic field by animals to use as a cue in homing and migration is known as magnetoreception. The ferromagnetic hypothesis explains magnetoreception assuming that magnetic nanoparticles in cellular structures are used as magnetic field transducers. Considering magnetoreception in social insects, the most studied has been the honeybee Apis mellifera and only in two wasp species (Vespa orientalis and Polybia paulista) have been shown a magnetosensitive behavior. In the present report the body parts (abdomen, head and antennae) of Polistes versicolor and Polybia paulista wasps were studied aiming to find biomineralized magnetic nanoparticles, using magnetometry measurements and ferromagnetic resonance spectroscopy...
January 5, 2023: Biometals: An International Journal on the Role of Metal Ions in Biology, Biochemistry, and Medicine
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