| Literature DB >> 26569474 |
Siying Qin1, Hang Yin1, Celi Yang1, Yunfeng Dou1, Zhongmin Liu2, Peng Zhang3, He Yu4, Yulong Huang5, Jing Feng3, Junfeng Hao6, Jia Hao1, Lizong Deng3, Xiyun Yan3, Xiaoli Dong5, Zhongxian Zhao5, Taijiao Jiang3, Hong-Wei Wang2, Shu-Jin Luo4, Can Xie1.
Abstract
The notion that animals can detect the Earth's magnetic field was once ridiculed, but is now well established. Yet the biological nature of such magnetosensing phenomenon remains unknown. Here, we report a putative magnetic receptor (Drosophila CG8198, here named MagR) and a multimeric magnetosensing rod-like protein complex, identified by theoretical postulation and genome-wide screening, and validated with cellular, biochemical, structural and biophysical methods. The magnetosensing complex consists of the identified putative magnetoreceptor and known magnetoreception-related photoreceptor cryptochromes (Cry), has the attributes of both Cry- and iron-based systems, and exhibits spontaneous alignment in magnetic fields, including that of the Earth. Such a protein complex may form the basis of magnetoreception in animals, and may lead to applications across multiple fields.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26569474 DOI: 10.1038/nmat4484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841