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1.
Mol Biol Evol ; 41(2)2024 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38314890

RESUMO

Intraspecific functional variation is critical for adaptation to rapidly changing environments. For visual opsins, functional variation can be characterized in vitro and often reflects a species' ecological niche but is rarely considered in the context of intraspecific variation or the impact of recent environmental changes on species of cultural or commercial significance. Investigation of adaptation in postglacial lakes can provide key insight into how rapid environmental changes impact functional evolution. Here, we report evidence for molecular adaptation in vision in 2 lineages of Nearctic fishes that are deep lake specialists: ciscoes and deepwater sculpin. We found depth-related variation in the dim-light visual pigment rhodopsin that evolved convergently in these 2 lineages. In vitro characterization of spectral sensitivity of the convergent deepwater rhodopsin alleles revealed blue-shifts compared with other more widely distributed alleles. These blue-shifted rhodopsin alleles were only observed in deep clear postglacial lakes with underwater visual environments enriched in blue light. This provides evidence of remarkably rapid and convergent visual adaptation and intraspecific functional variation in rhodopsin. Intraspecific functional variation has important implications for conservation, and these fishes are of conservation concern and great cultural, commercial, and nutritional importance to Indigenous communities. We collaborated with the Saugeen Ojibway Nation to develop and test a metabarcoding approach that we show is efficient and accurate in recovering the ecological distribution of functionally relevant variation in rhodopsin. Our approach bridges experimental analyses of protein function and genetics-based tools used in large-scale surveys to better understand the ecological extent of adaptive functional variation.


Assuntos
Evolução Molecular , Rodopsina , Animais , Rodopsina/genética , Rodopsina/metabolismo , Peixes/genética , Peixes/metabolismo , Visão Ocular , Ecossistema
2.
J Mol Evol ; 92(2): 93-103, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38416218

RESUMO

Ecological and evolutionary transitions offer an excellent opportunity to examine the molecular basis of adaptation. Fishes of the order Beloniformes include needlefishes, flyingfishes, halfbeaks, and allies, and comprise over 200 species occupying a wide array of habitats-from the marine epipelagic zone to tropical rainforest rivers. These fishes also exhibit a diversity of diets, including piscivory, herbivory, and zooplanktivory. We investigated how diet and habitat affected the molecular evolution of cone opsins, which play a key role in bright light and colour vision and are tightly linked to ecology and life history. We analyzed a targeted-capture dataset to reconstruct the evolutionary history of beloniforms and assemble cone opsin sequences. We implemented codon-based clade models of evolution to examine how molecular evolution was affected by habitat and diet. We found high levels of positive selection in medium- and long-wavelength beloniform opsins, with piscivores showing increased positive selection in medium-wavelength opsins and zooplanktivores showing increased positive selection in long-wavelength opsins. In contrast, short-wavelength opsins showed purifying selection. While marine/freshwater habitat transitions have an effect on opsin molecular evolution, we found that diet plays a more important role. Our study suggests that evolutionary transitions along ecological axes produce complex adaptive interactions that affect patterns of selection on genes that underlie vision.


Assuntos
Opsinas dos Cones , Animais , Opsinas dos Cones/genética , Filogenia , Opsinas/genética , Peixes/genética , Evolução Molecular
3.
J Mol Evol ; 92(1): 61-71, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38324225

RESUMO

Eukaryotic cells use G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) to convert external stimuli into internal signals to elicit cellular responses. However, how mutations in GPCR-coding genes affect GPCR activation and downstream signaling pathways remain poorly understood. Approaches such as deep mutational scanning show promise in investigations of GPCRs, but a high-throughput method to measure rhodopsin activation has yet to be achieved. Here, we scale up a fluorescent reporter assay in budding yeast that we engineered to study rhodopsin's light-activated signal transduction. Using this approach, we measured the mutational effects of over 1200 individual human rhodopsin mutants, generated by low-frequency random mutagenesis of the GPCR rhodopsin (RHO) gene. Analysis of the data in the context of rhodopsin's three-dimensional structure reveals that transmembrane helices are generally less tolerant to mutations compared to flanking helices that face the lipid bilayer, which suggest that mutational tolerance is contingent on both the local environment surrounding specific residues and the specific position of these residues in the protein structure. Comparison of functional scores from our screen to clinically identified rhodopsin disease variants found many pathogenic mutants to be loss of function. Lastly, functional scores from our assay were consistent with a complex counterion mechanism involved in ligand-binding and rhodopsin activation. Our results demonstrate that deep mutational scanning is possible for rhodopsin activation and can be an effective method for revealing properties of mutational tolerance that may be generalizable to other transmembrane proteins.


Assuntos
Receptores Acoplados a Proteínas G , Rodopsina , Humanos , Rodopsina/genética , Rodopsina/química , Rodopsina/metabolismo , Receptores Acoplados a Proteínas G/genética , Receptores Acoplados a Proteínas G/química , Transdução de Sinais , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína , Mutação
4.
Biol Lett ; 20(2): 20230480, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38412964

RESUMO

Active electroreception-the ability to detect objects and communicate with conspecifics via the detection and generation of electric organ discharges (EODs)-has evolved convergently in several fish lineages. South American electric fishes (Gymnotiformes) are a highly species-rich group, possibly in part due to evolution of an electric organ (EO) that can produce diverse EODs. Neofunctionalization of a voltage-gated sodium channel gene accompanied the evolution of electrogenic tissue from muscle and resulted in a novel gene (scn4aa) uniquely expressed in the EO. Here, we investigate the link between variation in scn4aa and differences in EOD waveform. We combine gymnotiform scn4aa sequences encoding the C-terminus of the Nav1.4a protein, with biogeographic data and EOD recordings to test whether physiological transitions among EOD types accompany differential selection pressures on scn4aa. We found positive selection on scn4aa coincided with shifts in EOD types. Species that evolved in the absence of predators, which likely selected for reduced EOD complexity, exhibited increased scn4aa evolutionary rates. We model mutations in the protein that may underlie changes in protein function and discuss our findings in the context of gymnotiform signalling ecology. Together, this work sheds light on the selective forces underpinning major evolutionary transitions in electric signal production.


Assuntos
Peixe Elétrico , Animais , Peixe Elétrico/genética , Órgão Elétrico/fisiologia , Filogenia , Canais de Sódio/genética , América do Sul
5.
Curr Biol ; 33(21): 4733-4740.e4, 2023 11 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37776863

RESUMO

Animals with enhanced dim-light sensitivity are at higher risk of light-induced retinal degeneration when exposed to bright light conditions.1,2,3,4 This trade-off is mediated by the rod photoreceptor sensory protein, rhodopsin (RHO), and its toxic vitamin A chromophore by-product, all-trans retinal.5,6,7,8 Rod arrestin (Arr-1) binds to RHO and promotes sequestration of excess all-trans retinal,9,10 which has recently been suggested as a protective mechanism against photoreceptor cell death.2,11 We investigated Arr-1 evolution in animals at high risk of retinal damage due to periodic bright-light exposure of rod-dominated retinas. Here, we find the convergent evolution of enhanced Arr-1/RHO all-trans-retinal sequestration in owls and deep-diving whales. Statistical analyses reveal a parallel acceleration of Arr-1 evolutionary rates in these lineages, which is associated with the introduction of a rare Arr-1 mutation (Q69R) into the RHO-Arr-1 binding interface. Using in vitro assays, we find that this single mutation significantly enhances RHO-all-trans-retinal sequestration by ∼30%. This functional convergence across 300 million years of evolutionary divergence suggests that Arr-1 and RHO may play an underappreciated role in the photoprotection of the eye, with potentially vast clinical significance.


Assuntos
Degeneração Retiniana , Estrigiformes , Animais , Estrigiformes/metabolismo , Retinaldeído/metabolismo , Baleias , Células Fotorreceptoras Retinianas Bastonetes , Retina/metabolismo , Degeneração Retiniana/genética , Degeneração Retiniana/metabolismo , Rodopsina/metabolismo
6.
Mol Ecol Resour ; 23(6): 1319-1333, 2023 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37101312

RESUMO

Detection of invasive species is critical for management but is often limited by challenges associated with capture, processing and identification of early life stages. DNA metabarcoding facilitates large-scale monitoring projects to detect establishment early. Here, we test the use of DNA metabarcoding to monitor invasive species by sequencing over 5000 fishes in bulk ichthyoplankton samples (larvae and eggs) from four rivers of ecological and cultural importance in southern Canada. We were successful in detecting species known from each river and three invasive species in two of the four rivers. This includes the first detection of early life-stage rudd in the Credit River. We evaluated whether sampling gear affected the detection of invasive species and estimates of species richness, and found that light traps outperform bongo nets in both cases. We also found that the primers used for the amplification of target sequences and the number of sequencing reads generated per sample affect the consistency of species detections. However, these factors have less impact on detections and species richness estimates than the number of samples collected and analysed. Our analyses also show that incomplete reference databases can result in incorrectly attributing DNA sequences to invasive species. Overall, we conclude that DNA metabarcoding is an efficient tool for monitoring the early establishment of invasive species by detecting evidence of reproduction but requires careful consideration of sampling design and the primers used to amplify, sequence and classify the diversity of native and potentially invasive species.


Assuntos
Biodiversidade , Espécies Introduzidas , Animais , Código de Barras de DNA Taxonômico , Peixes/genética , Larva/genética , DNA , Primers do DNA
7.
Mol Biol Evol ; 40(4)2023 04 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36763103

RESUMO

Extreme environments, such as Antarctic habitats, present major challenges for many biological processes. Antarctic icefishes (Crynotothenioidea) represent a compelling system to investigate the molecular basis of adaptation to cold temperatures. Here, we explore how the sub-zero habitats of Antarctic icefishes have impacted rhodopsin (RH1) function, the temperature-sensitive dim-light visual pigment found in rod photoreceptors. Using likelihood models and ancestral reconstruction, we find that accelerated evolutionary rates in icefish RH1 underlie unique amino acid mutations absent from other deep-dwelling fishes, introduced before (S160A) and during (V259M) the onset of modern polar conditions. Functional assays reveal that these mutations red-shift rhodopsin spectral absorbance, consistent with spectral irradiance under sea ice. These mutations also lower the activation energy associated with retinal release of the light-activated RH1, and accelerate its return to the dark state, likely compensating for a cold-induced decrease in kinetic rates. These are adaptations in key properties of rhodopsin that mediate rod sensitivity and visual performance in the cold dark seas of the Antarctic.


Assuntos
Adaptação Fisiológica , Rodopsina , Rodopsina/genética , Adaptação Fisiológica/genética , Evolução Biológica , Visão Ocular , Ambientes Extremos , Regiões Antárticas
8.
Mol Biol Evol ; 38(5): 2076-2087, 2021 05 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33481002

RESUMO

Rhodopsin, the light-sensitive visual pigment expressed in rod photoreceptors, is specialized for vision in dim-light environments. Aquatic environments are particularly challenging for vision due to the spectrally dependent attenuation of light, which can differ greatly in marine and freshwater systems. Among fish lineages that have successfully colonized freshwater habitats from ancestrally marine environments, croakers are known as highly visual benthic predators. In this study, we isolate rhodopsins from a diversity of freshwater and marine croakers and find that strong positive selection in rhodopsin is associated with a marine to freshwater transition in South American croakers. In order to determine if this is accompanied by significant shifts in visual abilities, we resurrected ancestral rhodopsin sequences and tested the experimental properties of ancestral pigments bracketing this transition using in vitro spectroscopic assays. We found the ancestral freshwater croaker rhodopsin is redshifted relative to its marine ancestor, with mutations that recapitulate ancestral amino acid changes along this transitional branch resulting in faster kinetics that are likely to be associated with more rapid dark adaptation. This could be advantageous in freshwater due to the redshifted spectrum and relatively narrow interface and frequent transitions between bright and dim-light environments. This study is the first to experimentally demonstrate that positively selected substitutions in ancestral visual pigments alter protein function to freshwater visual environments following a transition from an ancestrally marine state and provides insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying some of the physiological changes associated with this major habitat transition.


Assuntos
Adaptação Biológica/genética , Perciformes/genética , Rodopsina/genética , Seleção Genética , Visão Ocular/genética , Animais , Água Doce , Perciformes/metabolismo , Rodopsina/metabolismo , América do Sul
9.
Proc Biol Sci ; 286(1906): 20191182, 2019 07 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31288710

RESUMO

Functional variation in rhodopsin, the dim-light-specialized visual pigment, frequently occurs in species inhabiting light-limited environments. Variation in visual function can arise through two processes: relaxation of selection or adaptive evolution improving photon detection in a given environment. Here, we investigate the molecular evolution of rhodopsin in Gymnotiformes, an order of mostly nocturnal South American fishes that evolved sophisticated electrosensory capabilities. Our initial sequencing revealed a mutation associated with visual disease in humans. As these fishes are thought to have poor vision, this would be consistent with a possible sensory trade-off between the visual system and a novel electrosensory system. To investigate this, we surveyed rhodopsin from 147 gymnotiform species, spanning the order, and analysed patterns of molecular evolution. In contrast with our expectation, we detected strong selective constraint in gymnotiform rhodopsin, with rates of non-synonymous to synonymous substitutions lower in gymnotiforms than in other vertebrate lineages. In addition, we found evidence for positive selection on the branch leading to gymnotiforms and on a branch leading to a clade of deep-channel specialized gymnotiform species. We also found evidence that deleterious effects of a human disease-associated substitution are likely to be masked by epistatic substitutions at nearby sites. Our results suggest that rhodopsin remains an important component of the gymnotiform sensory system alongside electrolocation, and that photosensitivity of rhodopsin is well adapted for vision in dim-light environments.


Assuntos
Evolução Molecular , Peixes/genética , Rodopsina/genética , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Ecossistema , Luz , Filogenia , Rodopsina/química , Visão Ocular
10.
Mol Biol Evol ; 35(6): 1376-1389, 2018 06 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29800394

RESUMO

The visual systems of snakes are heavily modified relative to other squamates, a condition often thought to reflect their fossorial origins. Further modifications are seen in caenophidian snakes, where evolutionary transitions between rod and cone photoreceptors, termed photoreceptor transmutations, have occurred in many lineages. Little previous work, however, has focused on the molecular evolutionary underpinnings of these morphological changes. To address this, we sequenced seven snake eye transcriptomes and utilized new whole-genome and targeted capture sequencing data. We used these data to analyze gene loss and shifts in selection pressures in phototransduction genes that may be associated with snake evolutionary origins and photoreceptor transmutation. We identified the surprising loss of rhodopsin kinase (GRK1), despite a low degree of gene loss overall and a lack of relaxed selection early during snake evolution. These results provide some of the first evolutionary genomic corroboration for a dim-light ancestor that lacks strong fossorial adaptations. Our results also indicate that snakes with photoreceptor transmutation experienced significantly different selection pressures from other reptiles. Significant positive selection was found primarily in cone-specific genes, but not rod-specific genes, contrary to our expectations. These results reveal potential molecular adaptations associated with photoreceptor transmutation and also highlight unappreciated functional differences between rod- and cone-specific phototransduction proteins. This intriguing example of snake visual system evolution illustrates how the underlying molecular components of a complex system can be reshaped in response to changing selection pressures.


Assuntos
Colubridae/genética , Evolução Molecular , Receptor Quinase 1 Acoplada a Proteína G/genética , Seleção Genética , Visão Ocular/genética , Animais
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(28): 7385-7390, 2017 07 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28642345

RESUMO

High-altitude environments present a range of biochemical and physiological challenges for organisms through decreases in oxygen, pressure, and temperature relative to lowland habitats. Protein-level adaptations to hypoxic high-altitude conditions have been identified in multiple terrestrial endotherms; however, comparable adaptations in aquatic ectotherms, such as fishes, have not been as extensively characterized. In enzyme proteins, cold adaptation is attained through functional trade-offs between stability and activity, often mediated by substitutions outside the active site. Little is known whether signaling proteins [e.g., G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs)] exhibit natural variation in response to cold temperatures. Rhodopsin (RH1), the temperature-sensitive visual pigment mediating dim-light vision, offers an opportunity to enhance our understanding of thermal adaptation in a model GPCR. Here, we investigate the evolution of rhodopsin function in an Andean mountain catfish system spanning a range of elevations. Using molecular evolutionary analyses and site-directed mutagenesis experiments, we provide evidence for cold adaptation in RH1. We find that unique amino acid substitutions occur at sites under positive selection in high-altitude catfishes, located at opposite ends of the RH1 intramolecular hydrogen-bonding network. Natural high-altitude variants introduced into these sites via mutagenesis have limited effects on spectral tuning, yet decrease the stability of dark-state and light-activated rhodopsin, accelerating the decay of ligand-bound forms. As found in cold-adapted enzymes, this phenotype likely compensates for a cold-induced decrease in kinetic rates-properties of rhodopsin that mediate rod sensitivity and visual performance. Our results support a role for natural variation in enhancing the performance of GPCRs in response to cold temperatures.


Assuntos
Altitude , Rodopsina/química , Animais , Teorema de Bayes , Evolução Biológica , Bolívia , Peixes-Gato , Proteínas e Peptídeos de Choque Frio/química , Temperatura Baixa , Cristalografia por Raios X , Equador , Evolução Molecular , Geografia , Células HEK293 , Humanos , Cinética , Mutação , Peru , Filogenia
12.
Vis Neurosci ; 33: e002, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26750628

RESUMO

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) comprises several heritable diseases that involve photoreceptor, and ultimately retinal, degeneration. Currently, mutations in over 50 genes have known links to RP. Despite advances in clinical characterization, molecular characterization of RP remains challenging due to the heterogeneous nature of causal genes, mutations, and clinical phenotypes. In this study, we compiled large datasets of two important visual genes associated with RP: rhodopsin, which initiates the phototransduction cascade, and the retinoid isomerase RPE65, which regenerates the visual cycle. We used a comparative evolutionary approach to investigate the relationship between interspecific sequence variation and pathogenic mutations that lead to degenerative retinal disease. Using codon-based likelihood methods, we estimated evolutionary rates (d N/d S) across both genes in a phylogenetic context to investigate differences between pathogenic and nonpathogenic amino acid sites. In both genes, disease-associated sites showed significantly lower evolutionary rates compared to nondisease sites, and were more likely to occur in functionally critical areas of the proteins. The nature of the dataset (e.g., vertebrate or mammalian sequences), as well as selection of pathogenic sites, affected the differences observed between pathogenic and nonpathogenic sites. Our results illustrate that these methods can serve as an intermediate step in understanding protein structure and function in a clinical context, particularly in predicting the relative pathogenicity (i.e., functional impact) of point mutations and their downstream phenotypic effects. Extensions of this approach may also contribute to current methods for predicting the deleterious effects of candidate mutations and to the identification of protein regions under strong constraint where we expect pathogenic mutations to occur.


Assuntos
Retinite Pigmentosa/genética , Rodopsina/genética , Análise de Sequência/métodos , cis-trans-Isomerases/genética , Animais , Bases de Dados Genéticas , Evolução Molecular , Mamíferos , Filogenia , Vertebrados
13.
Mitochondrial DNA B Resour ; 1(1): 401-403, 2016 Jun 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33473497

RESUMO

Three complete mitochondrial genomes of South American electric fishes (Gymnotiformes), derived from high-throughput RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq), are reported herein. We report the complete mitochondrial genome of the bluntnose knifefish Brachyhypopomus n.sp. VERD, determined from newly sequenced data. We also provide the complete mitochondrial genomes for Sternopygus arenatus and the electric eel Electrophorus electricus, assembled from previously published transcriptome data. The mitochondrial genomes of Brachyhypopomus n.sp. VERD, Sternopygus arenatus and Electrophorus electricus have 13 protein-coding genes, 1 D-loop, 2 ribosomal RNAs and 22 transfer RNAs, and are 16,547, 16,667 and 16,906 bp in length, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis of the eight available mitochondrial genomes of gymnotiform fishes shows Apteronotus to be the sister lineage of other gymnotiformes, contradicting the "Sinusoidea" hypothesis that Apteronotidae and Sternopygidae are sister taxa.

14.
Biol Lett ; 11(7)2015 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26224386

RESUMO

Incursions of marine water into South America during the Miocene prompted colonization of freshwater habitats by ancestrally marine species and present a unique opportunity to study the molecular evolution of adaptations to varying environments. Freshwater and marine environments are distinct in both spectra and average intensities of available light. Here, we investigate the molecular evolution of rhodopsin, the photosensitive pigment in the eye that activates in response to light, in a clade of South American freshwater anchovies derived from a marine ancestral lineage. Using likelihood-based comparative sequence analyses, we found evidence for positive selection in the rhodopsin of freshwater anchovy lineages at sites known to be important for aspects of rhodopsin function such as spectral tuning. No evidence was found for positive selection in marine lineages, nor in three other genes not involved in vision. Our results suggest that an increased rate of rhodopsin evolution was driven by diversification into freshwater habitats, thereby constituting a rare example of molecular evolution mirroring large-scale palaeogeographic events.


Assuntos
Adaptação Fisiológica/genética , Evolução Molecular , Peixes/genética , Rodopsina/genética , Animais , Organismos Aquáticos , Ecossistema , Peixes/fisiologia , Água Doce , Funções Verossimilhança , Água do Mar , América do Sul
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