Acquisition of bioluminescent trait by non-luminous organisms from luminous organisms through various origins.

Photochem Photobiol Sci

Institute for Advanced Research, Nagoya University Furo-Cho, Chikusa-ku, Nagoya, Aichi, 464-8601, Japan.

Published: November 2021


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Bioluminescence is a natural light emitting phenomenon that occurs due to a chemical reaction between luciferin and luciferase. It is primarily an innate and inherited trait in most terrestrial luminous organisms. However, most luminous organisms produce light in the ocean by acquiring luminous symbionts, luciferin (substrate), and/or luciferase (enzyme) through various transmission pathways. For instance, coelenterazine, a well-known luciferin, is obtained by cnidarians, crustaceans, and deep-sea fish through multi-level dietary linkages from coelenterazine producers such as ctenophores, decapods, and copepods. In contrast, some non-luminous Vibrio bacteria became bioluminescent by obtaining lux genes from luminous Vibrio species by horizontal gene transfer. Various examples detailed in this review show how non-luminescent organisms became luminescent by acquiring symbionts, dietary luciferins and luciferases, and genes. This review highlights three modes (symbiosis, ingestion, and horizontal gene transfer) that allow organisms lacking genes for autonomous bioluminescent systems to obtain the ability to produce light. In addition to bioluminescence, this manuscript discusses the acquisition of other traits such as pigments, fluorescence, toxins, and others, to infer the potential processes of acquisition.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s43630-021-00124-9DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

luminous organisms
12
organisms luminous
8
produce light
8
horizontal gene
8
gene transfer
8
organisms
6
luminous
5
acquisition bioluminescent
4
bioluminescent trait
4
trait non-luminous
4

Similar Publications

Many species use camouflage to dissimulate their true form and avoid detection or recognition. In natural habitats, the three-dimensional structure of an organism's body can present challenges for camouflage, as overhead illumination creates luminance gradients ('self-shadows') across the body surface and cast shadows (when light is blocked by the object itself) on the surface behind the object. While self-shadows are known to increase prey detectability to predators, it is unclear whether this is also the case for cast shadows.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The visual systems of animals work in diverse and constantly changing environments where organism survival requires effective senses. To study the hierarchical brain networks that perform visual information processing, vision scientists require suitable tools, and Motion Clouds (MCs)-a dense mixture of drifting Gabor textons-serve as a versatile solution. Here, we present an open toolbox intended for the bespoke use of MC functions and objects within modeling or experimental psychophysics contexts, including easy integration within Psychtoolbox or PsychoPy environments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Coelenterazine is the most common substrate for light-emitting reactions identified in luminous marine organisms. Among bioluminescent proteins engaging coelenterazine as a luciferin, Ca-regulated photoproteins form stable enzyme-substrate complexes offering thereby a unique opportunity to study their bioluminescence reactions in detail. Here, we used stopped-flow kinetics to investigate the formation of the emitters of recombinant aequorin, obelin, and W92F obelin activated with coelenterazine, as well as aequorin activated with coelenterazine-e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bioluminescence in fireflies is dependent on luciferin metabolism in luminous organs. Our study applied RNA-seq to compare the transcriptome profiles between the luminous and non-luminous tissues from the larvae of the firely Pyrocoelia pectoralis. Genes that were differentially expressed between the two tissue samples were screened to identify candidate genes involved in luciferin metabolism.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Prevalence, diversity, and parasitism of tailed prophages in .

mSphere

August 2025

Archaeal Biology Center, Synthetic Biology Research Center, Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Marine Microbiome Engineering, Key Laboratory of Marine Microbiome Engineering of Guangdong Higher Education Institutes, Institute for Advanced Study, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, China.

, a pathogenic bacterium, contains prophages that significantly influence its pathogenesis and evolutionary traits. Investigating the prevalence, evolution, and ecological roles of these prophages is of great importance as is responsible for luminous bacteriosis in aquatic organisms. In this study, 13 tailed prophages were identified from 55 globally sourced genomes, with prophage-bacterium junctions precisely annotated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF