Lake and Sea Populations of Mysis relicta (Crustacea, Mysida) with Different Visual-Pigment Absorbance Spectra Use the Same A1 Chromophore: e88107

Glacial-relict species of the genus Mysis (opossum shrimps) inhabiting both fresh-water lakes and brackish sea waters in northern Europe show a consistent lake/sea dichotomy in eye spectral sensitivity. The absorbance peak ( lambda max) recorded by microspectrophotometry in isolated rhabdoms is inva...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2014-02, Vol.9 (2)
Hauptverfasser: Belikov, Nikolai, Yakovleva, Marina, Feldman, Tatiana, Demina, Olga, Khodonov, Andrei, Lindstrom, Magnus, Donner, Kristian, Ostrovsky, Mikhail
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Glacial-relict species of the genus Mysis (opossum shrimps) inhabiting both fresh-water lakes and brackish sea waters in northern Europe show a consistent lake/sea dichotomy in eye spectral sensitivity. The absorbance peak ( lambda max) recorded by microspectrophotometry in isolated rhabdoms is invariably 20-30 nm red-shifted in "lake" compared with "sea" populations. The dichotomy holds across species, major opsin lineages and light environments. Chromophore exchange from A1 to A2 (retinal arrow right 3,4-didehydroretinal) is a well-known mechanism for red-shifting visual pigments depending on environmental conditions or stages of life history, present not only in fishes and amphibians, but in some crustaceans as well. We tested the hypothesis that the lake/sea dichotomy in Mysis is due to the use of different chromophores, focussing on two populations of M. relicta from, respectively, a Finnish lake and the Baltic Sea. They are genetically very similar, having been separated for less than 10 kyr, and their
ISSN:1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0088107