Neural control of tuneable skin iridescence in squid

dc.contributor.author Wardill, Trevor J. en_US
dc.contributor.author Gonzalez-Bellido, Paloma T.
dc.contributor.author Crook, Robyn J.
dc.contributor.author Hanlon, Roger T.
dc.date.accessioned 2012-07-25T20:56:18Z
dc.date.available 2012-07-25T20:56:18Z
dc.date.issued 2012-07-25
dc.description In addition to the Introduction readme document, find also the Materials and Methods readme document that describes the methods used to collect the data for this paper. The final readme, File Descriptions, describes how the files are arranged in various Zip files. The data within these zip files should be considered the gold standard data, although considerably more data exists than is reported in this repository. Please contact the authors directly (twardill@mbl.edu and paloma@mbl.edu) for any additional data.
dc.description.abstract Fast dynamic control of skin coloration is rare in the animal kingdom, whether it be pigmentary or structural. Iridescent structural coloration results when nanoscale structures disrupt incident light and selectively reflect specific colours. Unlike animals with fixed iridescent coloration (e.g. butterflies), squid iridophores (i.e. aggregations of iridescent cells in the skin), produce dynamically tuneable structural coloration, as exogenous application of acetylcholine (ACh) changes the colour and brightness output. Previous efforts to stimulate iridophores neurally or to identify the source of endogenous ACh were unsuccessful, leaving researchers to question the activation mechanism. We developed a novel neurophysiological preparation in the squid Doryteuthis pealeii and demonstrated that electrical stimulation of neurons in the skin shifts the spectral peak of the reflected light to shorter wavelengths (>145 nm) and increases the peak reflectance (>245 %) of innervated iridophores. We show ACh is released within the iridophore layer and that extensive nerve branching is seen within the iridophore. The dynamic colour shift is significantly faster (17 s) than the peak reflectance increase (32 s) revealing two distinct mechanisms. Responses from a structurally altered preparation indicate that the reflectin protein condensation mechanism explains peak reflectance change, while an undiscovered mechanism causes the fast colour shift.
dc.format.mimetype application/zip
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/1912/5277
dc.subject Structural coloration
dc.subject Neural stimulation
dc.subject Skin patterning
dc.title Neural control of tuneable skin iridescence in squid en_US
dc.type Dataset
dspace.entity.type Publication
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