Contrasting Gene Decay in Subterranean Vertebrates: Insights from Cavefishes and Fossorial Mammals
Author(s) -
Maxime Policarpo,
Julien Fumey,
Philippe Lafargeas,
Delphine Naquin,
Claude Thermes,
Magali Naville,
Corentin Dechaud,
JeanNicolas Volff,
Cédric Cabau,
Christophe Klopp,
Peter Rask Møller,
Louis Bernatchez,
Erik GarcíaMachado,
Sylvie Rétaux,
Didier Casañe
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
molecular biology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.637
H-Index - 218
eISSN - 1537-1719
pISSN - 0737-4038
DOI - 10.1093/molbev/msaa249
Subject(s) - biology , fossorial , pseudogene , gene , evolutionary biology , genome , cave , population , genetics , zoology , ecology , demography , sociology
Evolution sometimes proceeds by loss, especially when structures and genes become dispensable after an environmental shift relaxes functional constraints. Subterranean vertebrates are outstanding models to analyze this process, and gene decay can serve as a readout. We sought to understand some general principles on the extent and tempo of the decay of genes involved in vision, circadian clock, and pigmentation in cavefishes. The analysis of the genomes of two Cuban species belonging to the genus Lucifuga provided evidence for the largest loss of eye-specific genes and nonvisual opsin genes reported so far in cavefishes. Comparisons with a recently evolved cave population of Astyanax mexicanus and three species belonging to the Chinese tetraploid genus Sinocyclocheilus revealed the combined effects of the level of eye regression, time, and genome ploidy on eye-specific gene pseudogenization. The limited extent of gene decay in all these cavefishes and the very small number of loss-of-function mutations per pseudogene suggest that their eye degeneration may not be very ancient, ranging from early to late Pleistocene. This is in sharp contrast with the identification of several vision genes carrying many loss-of-function mutations in ancient fossorial mammals, further suggesting that blind fishes cannot thrive more than a few million years in cave ecosystems.
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