Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/40521
Title: Unstable environmental conditions constrain the fine-tune between opsin sensitivity and underwater light in an Amazon forest stream fish
Authors: Borghezan, Elio de Almeida
Silva, Tiago Henrique da
Zuanon, Jansen
Sugiura, Hideki
Kohshima, Shiro
Kishida, Takushi
Keywords: Amazon waters
colour vision
igaraps
long-wavelength sensitivity
sensory-drive hypothesis
water colour
Issue Date: Feb-2024
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Abstract: Visual adaptations can stem from variations in amino acid composition, chromophore utilization, and differential opsin gene expression levels, enabling individuals to adjust their light sensitivity to environmental lighting conditions. In stable environments, adaptations often involve amino acid substitutions, whereas in unstable conditions, differential gene expression may be a more relevant mechanism. Amazon forest streams present diverse underwater lighting conditions and experience short-term water colour fluctuations. In these environments, it is less likely for genetic and amino acid sequences to undergo modifications that tailor opsin proteins to the prevailing lighting conditions, particularly in species having several copies of the same gene. The sailfin tetra, Crenuchus spilurus, inhabits black and clear water Amazon forest streams. The long-wavelength sensitivity (LWS) is an important component for foraging and courtship. Here, we investigated LWS opsin genes in the sailfin tetra. Three copies of LWS1 and two copies of LWS2 genes were found. The maximum absorbance wavelength (λmax) estimated from the amino acid sequences of LWS1 genes exhibited variation among the different copies. In contrast, the copies of LWS2 genes showed identical expected λmax values. Although the amino acid positions affecting λmax varied among LWS genes, they remained consistent among populations living in different water colours. The relative expression levels of LWS genes differed between gene copies. While not formally tested, our results suggest that in fluctuating environments, visual adaptations may primarily stem from alterations in gene expression profiles and/or chromophore usage rather than precise genetic tuning of protein light sensitivity to environmental lighting conditions. © 2024 The Author(s).
ISSN: 1010061X
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1093/jeb/voae001
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