4.8 Article

The evolution of red color vision is linked to coordinated rhodopsin tuning in lycaenid butterflies

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2008986118

Keywords

molecular evolution; ecological adaptation; visual system; spectral sensitivity; insects

Funding

  1. Mind Brain Behavior Interfaculty grant
  2. Knut and Alice Wallenberg postdoctoral fellowship at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
  3. Royal Physiographic Society of Lund
  4. Lars Hierta Memorial Foundation
  5. NSF graduate research fellowship
  6. NSF [DEB-1541560, PHY-1411445]
  7. NIH [1R01-HG009761, 1R01-MH110049, 1DP1-HL141201]
  8. Open Philanthropy Project
  9. Harold G. and Leila Mathers Foundation
  10. Edward Mallinckrodt, Jr. Foundation
  11. Poitras Center for Psychiatric Disorders Research at MIT
  12. Hock E. Tan and K. Lisa Yang Center for Autism Research at MIT
  13. Phillips family
  14. Wetmore Colles Fund

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This study focuses on the spectral sensitivity of visual systems in invertebrates, revealing the interplay between molecular basis and regulatory and adaptive evolution, which enhances insect visual adaptation at blue and red wavelengths.
Color vision has evolved multiple times in both vertebrates and invertebrates and is largely determined by the number and variation in spectral sensitivities of distinct opsin subclasses. However, because of the difficulty of expressing long-wavelength (LW) invertebrate opsins in vitro, our understanding of the molecular basis of functional shifts in opsin spectral sensitivities has been biased toward research primarily in vertebrates. This has restricted our ability to address whether invertebrate G(q) protein-coupled opsins function in a novel or convergent way compared to vertebrate G(t) opsins. Here we develop a robust heterologous expression system to purify invertebrate rhodopsins, identify specific amino acid changes responsible for adaptive spectral tuning, and pinpoint how molecular variation in invertebrate opsins underlie wavelength sensitivity shifts that enhance visual perception. By combining functional and optophysiological approaches, we disentangle the relative contributions of lateral filtering pigments from red-shifted LW and blue short-wavelength opsins expressed in distinct photoreceptor cells of individual ommatidia. We use in situ hybridization to visualize six ommatidial classes in the compound eye of a lycaenid butterfly with a four-opsin visual system. We show experimentally that certain key tuning residues underlying green spectral shifts in blue opsin paralogs have evolved repeatedly among short-wavelength opsin lineages. Taken together, our results demonstrate the interplay between regulatory and adaptive evolution at multiple G(q) opsin loci, as well as how coordinated spectral shifts in LW and blue opsins can act together to enhance insect spectral sensitivity at blue and red wavelengths for visual performance adaptation.

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