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Evolutionary signatures of photoreceptor transmutation in geckos reveal potential adaptation and convergence with snakes
Author(s) -
Schott Ryan K.,
Bhattacharyya Nihar,
Chang Belinda S.W.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.84
H-Index - 199
eISSN - 1558-5646
pISSN - 0014-3820
DOI - 10.1111/evo.13810
Subject(s) - visual phototransduction , biology , opsin , transducin , evolutionary biology , adaptation (eye) , gecko , melanopsin , microbiology and biotechnology , retina , zoology , rhodopsin , retinal , neuroscience , botany , photopigment
Most vertebrates use a combination of rod and cone photoreceptors to enable vision in conditions ranging from starlight to direct sunlight. Nocturnal geckos, however, have simplex retinas that contain only rods in terms of morphology and physiology, but these rods are thought to be derived from cones through an evolutionary process known as photoreceptor transmutation. To investigate this, we generated eye transcriptomes and analyzed patterns of phototransduction gene evolution in geckos in comparison to other reptiles. We confirm that geckos have lost several major components of the rod phototransduction pathway, including rod opsin (RH1), which we identified as a pseudogene in multiple genomes. We also identified a partial rod transducin transcript, but found no evidence of the protein in retinal sections. However, we find that geckos express several complete rod phototransduction transcripts in the eye, which may contribute to the rod‐like physiology of nocturnal gecko photoreceptors. Finally, we found surprising evidence that even though photoreceptor transmutation evolved independently in geckos and snakes, they have experienced parallel shifts in selective constraint on phototransduction genes. These results implicate adaptive change in the underlying molecular machinery of visual transduction, in addition to the convergent changes in cellular morphology, during photoreceptor transmutation.

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