AI Article Synopsis

  • Dichromatic color vision in many mammals is based on two cone visual pigments, but early cetaceans lost their violet-sensitive pigment, resulting in monochromatic vision.
  • Research shows that while some cetaceans have intact genes for middle/long wavelength-sensitive pigments, they lack spectral sensitivity, indicating a loss of cone-mediated vision.
  • Ancestral analysis suggests that the M/LWS pigments of baleen and sperm whale ancestors evolved to be more sensitive to shorter wavelengths, likely as adaptations for deep-sea living, despite further losses in their function.

Article Abstract

Dichromatic color vision is mediated by two cone visual pigments in many eutherian mammals. After reentry into the sea, early cetaceans lost their violet-sensitive visual pigment (short wavelength-sensitive 1) independently in the baleen and toothed whale ancestors and thus obtained only monochromatic cone vision. Subsequently, losses of the middle/long wavelength-sensitive (M/LWS) pigment have also been reported in multiple whale lineages, leading to rhodopsin (RH1)-mediated rod monochromatic vision. To further elucidate the phenotypic evolution of whale visual pigments, we assessed the spectral tuning of both M/LWS and RH1 from representative cetacean taxa. Interestingly, although the coding sequences for M/LWS are intact in both the pygmy right whale and the Baird's beaked whale, no spectral sensitivity was detected in vitro. Pseudogenization of other cone vision-related genes is observed in the pygmy right whale, suggesting a loss of cone-mediated vision. After ancestral sequence reconstructions, ancient M/LWS pigments from cetacean ancestors were resurrected and functionally measured. Spectral tuning of M/LWS from the baleen whale ancestor shows that it is green sensitive, with a 40-nm shift in sensitivity to a shorter wavelength. For the ancestor of sperm whales, although no spectral sensitivity could be recorded for its M/LWS pigment, a substantial sensitivity shift (20 to 30 nm) to a shorter wavelength may have also occurred before its functional inactivation. The parallel phenotypic evolution of M/LWS to shorter wavelength sensitivity might be visual adaptations in whales allowing more frequent deep-sea activities, although additional ecological differentiations may have led to their subsequent losses.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11503649PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evae223DOI Listing

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