The evolutionary history and spectral tuning of vertebrate visual opsins
Many animals depend on the sense of vision for survival. In eumetazoans, vision requires specialized, light-sensitive cells called photoreceptors. Light reaches the photoreceptors and triggers the excitation of light-detecting proteins called opsins. Here, we describe the story of visual opsin evolu...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Developmental biology 2023-01, Vol.493, p.40-66 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Many animals depend on the sense of vision for survival. In eumetazoans, vision requires specialized, light-sensitive cells called photoreceptors. Light reaches the photoreceptors and triggers the excitation of light-detecting proteins called opsins. Here, we describe the story of visual opsin evolution from the ancestral bilaterian to the extant vertebrate lineages. We explain the mechanisms determining color vision of extant vertebrates, focusing on opsin gene losses, duplications, and the expression regulation of vertebrate opsins. We describe the sequence variation both within and between species that has tweaked the sensitivities of opsin proteins towards different wavelengths of light. We provide an extensive resource of wavelength sensitivities and mutations that have diverged light sensitivity in many vertebrate species and predict how these mutations were accumulated in each lineage based on parsimony. We suggest possible natural and sexual selection mechanisms underlying these spectral differences. Understanding how molecular changes allow for functional adaptation of animals to different environments is a major goal in the field, and therefore identifying mutations affecting vision and their relationship to photic selection pressures is imperative. The goal of this review is to provide a comprehensive overview of our current understanding of opsin evolution in vertebrates.
•Changes in opsins and their expression underlie divergent vision in vertebrates.•Opsin sequence divergence alters color vision acuities within and between species.•Natural and sexual selection mechanisms drive spectral differences.•Convergent evolution tunes opsin subtypes toward specific wavelengths.•We provide an extensive resource of sequence changes and wavelength sensitivities. |
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ISSN: | 0012-1606 1095-564X 1095-564X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ydbio.2022.10.014 |