Research
Interests
To enjoy the beauty of a spring
blossom or the fascinating fall colors, we depend upon the visual
discrimination of colors, brightness, and contrast. This type
of vision requires the classical photoreceptor cells, known
as rods and cones, and their respective visual pigments. These
light-absorbing pigments, composed of a protein moiety (opsin)
and a vitamin-A-based chromophore (11-cis-retinal), transduce
light first into a chemical signal, and eventually into an electrical
signal in the rods and cones. However, the eyes have other functions
that depend upon light but not upon image formation on the retina.
These functions include the setting of our body clocks to the
new time imposed by traveling across different time zones. The
inability to adjust our body clock leads to prolonged symptoms
of "jet-lag." Previously, the cells within the retina responsible
for transducing light for these functions were not known. A
new type of photodetecting cell in the retina was recently identified.
The main purpose of my research is to understand both the mode
of action of these newly identified photoreceptors, and the
individual contributions of the rods, cones and these novel
photoreceptors in signaling light for non-image-forming visual
functions.
To understand how these new photoreceptors function,
I have genetically engineered mice that lack the protein that
resembles the visual pigments found in these cells, a molecule
called melanopsin. We found that melanopsin, an opsin-like protein,
is absolutely necessary for the ability of these new photoreceptor
cells to detect light. Concomitant with removing melanopsin,
I added an enzyme, b-galactosidase, to
the mice. This enzyme stains the cells that would normally express
melanopsin, with a blue color. These new photoreceptor cells
are actually a subset of retinal ganglion cells, neurons that
directly connect to the brain through their axons. To trace
these axons to their brain targets, I attached a peptide moiety,
tau, to the b-galactosidase protein
that allowed the fusion protein, tau-b-galactosidase, to
be transported down the length of the axon. This allowed me
not only to stain the cell bodies of the melanopsin cells but
also their axons and their eventual targets in the brain. One
of the proposed aims in this grant is to identify all the brain
targets that receive innervation from these new photoreceptors.
Finding the innervated brain regions could uncover the multitude
of functions mediated by these photoreceptors. We have found
that these new cells, with the rods and cones, are the only
photoreceptor cells in the retina that signal light for an array
of non-image-forming visual functions including pupillary constriction,
and adjustment of the biological clock. These results were determined
by using mutant mice that lack rod and cone functions, in addition
to lacking melanopsin. Using various mouse lines that have one
or two types of photoreceptors disabled but retain the remainder
will enable us to assign the relative importance of each system
in conveying light information to the brain for each specific
non-image visual function. We also want to know whether rods
and cones connect to brain centers for non-image-forming visual
functions exclusively through the melanopsin-expressing retinal
ganglion cells. To this end, I have used a genetic technique
to deliver a Diphtheria toxin specifically to melanopsin expressing
cells. With this tool, we can ask how the loss of these cells
impacts the non-image-forming visual functions. Can we create
an animal that can see images but is not able to detect light
for non-image-forming visual functions? Finally, there is currently
very little understood about the development of these cells
and how they detect light. I hope to pursue these questions
as well.
Representative
Publications
Hattar, S., Kumar, M., Park, A., Tong, P.,
Tung, J., Yau, K.-W., Berson, D.M., Central Projections of Melanopsin-Expressing
Retinal Ganglion Cells in the Mouse. In preparation.
Mrosovsky, N., and Hattar, S., (2003). Impaired Masking Responses
to Light in Melanopsin-Knockout Mice. Chronobiol. Int.
20, 989-999.
Hattar, S., Lucas, R.J. Mrosovsky, N., Thompson, S., Douglas,
R.H., Hankins, M.W., Lem, J., Biel, M., Hofmann, F., Foster,
R.G., and Yau, K.-W., (2003). Melanopsin and Rod-Cone Photoreceptive
Systems Account for All Major Accessory Visual Functions in
Mice. Nature 424, 76-81. Advance Online Publication,
15 June 2003 (doi:10.1038/nature01761).
Lucas, R.J.*, Hattar, S.*, Takoa, M., Berson, D.M., Foster,
R.G., and Yau K.-W., (2003). Diminished Pupillary Light Reflex
at High Irradiances in Melanopsin-Knockout Mice, Science
299, 245-247. * Authors contributed equally to this work. (See
related perspective page 213; cover).
Hattar, S.*, Liao, H.-W.*, Takoa, M., Berson, D.M., and Yau,
K.-W. (2002). Melanopsin-Containing Retinal Ganglion Cells:
Architecture, Projections, and Intrinsic Photosensitivity. Science
295, 1065-70. * Authors contributed equally to this work. (See
News Focus page 955).
Hattar, S., Lyons, L.C., Dryer, L., and Eskin, A. (2002). Circadian
Regulation of the Transcription Factor, ApC/EBP in the Eye of
Aplysia Californica. J Neurochem 83, 1401-11.
Hattar, S. (2000). Role of the Transcription Factor ApC/EBP
in the Ocular Rhythm of Aplysia. Ph.D. Thesis,
University of Houston, Houston.
Zwartjes, R.E., West, H., Hattar, S., Ren, X., Noel, F., Nuņez-Regueiro,
M., MacPhee, K., Homayouni, R., Crow, M.T., Byrne, J.H., and
Eskin, A. (1998). Identification of Specific mRNAs Affected
by Treatments Producing Long-Term Facilitation in Aplysia. Learning
& Memory 4, 478-495.
Liu, Q.R., Hattar, S., Endo, S., MacPhee, K., Zhang, H., Cleary,
L.J., Byrne, J.H., and Eskin, A. (1997). A Developmental Gene
(Tolloid/BMP-1) is Regulated in Aplysia Neurons
by Treatments that Induce Long-Term Sensitization. J Neurosci.
17, 755-764. |