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Publication : Ultraviolet light provides a major input to non-image-forming light detection in mice.

First Author  van Oosterhout F Year  2012
Journal  Curr Biol Volume  22
Issue  15 Pages  1397-402
PubMed ID  22771039 Mgi Jnum  J:199506
Mgi Id  MGI:5502858 Doi  10.1016/j.cub.2012.05.032
Citation  van Oosterhout F, et al. (2012) Ultraviolet light provides a major input to non-image-forming light detection in mice. Curr Biol 22(15):1397-402
abstractText  The change in irradiance at dawn and dusk provides the primary cue for the entrainment of the mammalian circadian pacemaker. Irradiance detection has been ascribed largely to melanopsin-based phototransduction [1-5]. Here we examine the role of ultraviolet-sensitive (UVS) cones in the modulation of circadian behavior, sleep, and suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) electrical activity. UV light exposure leads to phase-shifting responses comparable to those of white light. Moreover, UV light exposure induces sleep in wild-type and melanopsin-deficient (Opn4(-/-)) mice with equal efficacy. Electrical recordings from the SCN of wild-type mice show that UV light elicits irradiance-dependent sustained responses that are similar to those induced by white light, with characteristic fast transient components occurring at the light transitions. These responses are retained in Opn4(-/-) mice and preserved under saturating photopic conditions. The sensitivity of phase-shifting responses to UV light is unaffected by the loss of rods but is severely attenuated by the additional loss of cones. Our data show that UVS cones play an important role in circadian and sleep regulation in mice.
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