Retinal rods make light work of night visionScientists have uncovered a previously overlooked trick used by nocturnal animals to allow them to see in the dark.
The solution, it turns out, was found lurking in their DNA, which is, ironically, also inside out. DNA is normally tightly packed inside the nucleus of a cell in such a way that the dense, highly-active parts of the genome are clustered centrally and the inactive (junk) is scattered around the outside. In the rod cells of night-active animals, however, this situation is reversed, but no one could originally work out why. Now, by studying rod cells under a microscope and building a computer model of their observations, the German team have found that this arrangement of DNA behaves like a lens, helping to focus light into the light-sensitive tips of the rod cells. When the team initially proposed the idea some were hard to convince, "people laughed at first," says Joffe. 19th Apr 2009 |
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