A novel function for a carotenoid: astaxanthin used as a polarizer for visual signalling in a mantis shrimp
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2011-11-17
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Tsyr-Huei Chiou, Allen R. Place, Roy L. Caldwell, et.al, A novel function for a carotenoid: astaxanthin used as a polarizer for visual signalling in a mantis shrimp, The Journal of Experimental Biology 215, 584-589, doi:10.1242/jeb.066019
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Abstract
Biological signals based on color patterns are well known, but some animals communicate by producing patterns of polarized
light. Known biological polarizers are all based on physical interactions with light such as birefringence, differential reflection or
scattering. We describe a novel biological polarizer in a marine crustacean based on linear dichroism of a carotenoid molecule.
The red-colored, dichroic ketocarotenoid pigment astaxanthin is deposited in the antennal scale of a stomatopod crustacean,
Odontodactylus scyllarus. Positive correlation between partial polarization and the presence of astaxanthin indicates that the
antennal scale polarizes light with astaxanthin. Both the optical properties and the fine structure of the polarizationally active
cuticle suggest that the dipole axes of the astaxanthin molecules are oriented nearly normal to the surface of the antennal scale.
While dichroic retinoids are used as visual pigment chromophores to absorb and detect polarized light, this is the first
demonstration of the use of a carotenoid to produce a polarizing signal. By using the intrinsic dichroism of the carotenoid
molecule and orienting the molecule in tissue, nature has engineered a previously undescribed form of biological polarizer.