魚はどのようにして背景に溶け込むべきタイミングを知るのか(How a fish knows when to blend in)

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2025-11-10 マックス・プランク研究所

マックス・プランク生物知能研究所の研究チームは、ゼブラフィッシュが背景に応じて体色を変化させる仕組みを解明した。明るい背景では体色を薄く、暗い背景では濃くするこの適応行動は、視覚とホルモンの連携で制御されている。研究では、魚の網膜神経節細胞が明るさを感知し、その信号を脳へ伝達、視床下部・下垂体系が二種のホルモン分泌を切り替えて皮膚のメラノフォア(色素細胞)を制御することを発見した。具体的には、明るい環境では体を明るくするホルモンが活性化し、暗くするホルモンが抑制され、皮膚中のメラニン粒子が集中して体色が薄く見える。一方、暗所では逆の反応が起きる。さらに、明暗を感知するのは従来の錐体・桿体ではなく、メラノプシンを持つ特定の網膜細胞であることも判明した。この研究は、感覚入力からホルモン応答への変換機構を示すもので、動物の環境適応や進化的色変化の理解を深める成果となった。

魚はどのようにして背景に溶け込むべきタイミングを知るのか(How a fish knows when to blend in)
When swimming across bright surroundings, zebrafish get pale over tens of minutes. Researchers now identified which cells in the eye and brain control this background adaption.© MPI for Biological Intelligence/ Krasimir Slanchev

<関連情報>

ゼブラフィッシュにおける網膜依存性光神経内分泌経路の分子的描写 Molecular delineation of a retina-dependent photoneuroendocrine pathway in zebrafish

Krasimir Slanchev ∙ Eva Laurell ∙ Irene Arnold-Ammer ∙ Enrico Kuehn ∙ Uyyashrinila Pandiarajan ∙ Herwig Baier
Current Biology  Published:November 5, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2025.10.025

Highlights

  • Intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells control background adaptation
  • Onecut1+ ipRGCs project to the AF1 neuropil region of the preoptic hypothalamus
  • Onecut1+ ipRGCs increase transcription of MCHL and repress ⍺-MSH
  • Ablation of onecut1+ ipRGCs or pmchl+ hypothalamic neurons blocks background adaption

Summary

Many vertebrates, including fish, amphibians, and reptiles, dynamically adjust their body color to the perceived brightness of the ambient background. This response takes tens of minutes and involves the aggregation or dispersion of pigment granules within the melanophores of the skin, resulting in the pale or dark appearance of the animal, respectively.1 In teleosts, ambient light detection depends on the retina, which transmits the signal to the hypothalamus, leading to the secretion of peptide hormones via the pituitary gland into the bloodstream. Melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) is released upon light stimulation, resulting in the blanching of the skin. Alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH, encoded by the pomca gene and produced in the hypothalamus and pituitary) has the opposite effect: light inhibits its secretion, leading to melanin dispersion in the skin.1,2,3,4,5 Because “dark appearance” is an easy-to-score phenotype in larval zebrafish, defective visual background adaptation (VBA) has been used in genetic screens as a proxy for retinal defects,6,7 but the responsible neuroendocrine circuit remained elusive. Here, we identified the molecular and cellular components underlying this response. We found that intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs), expressing the homeobox transcription factor Onecut1, project to the neuropil region of the preoptic area, where their axons overlap with the dendrites of pmchl-expressing hypothalamic neurons. Signals from these ipRGCs increase the transcription of pmchl, one of two genes encoding MCH isoforms, and repress pomca. Ablation of either onecut1-positive ipRGCs or pmchl-expressing hypothalamic neurons prevents the fish larva from adapting to a bright background.

生物環境工学
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