Parallelism of amino acid changes at the RH1 affecting spectral sensitivity among deep-water cichlids from Lakes Tanganyika and Malawi

Fish Proteins 0301 basic medicine 570 Malawi Pigmentation Spectrum Analysis Molecular Sequence Data Fishes Fresh Water Pigments, Biological Sequence Analysis, DNA Adaptation, Physiological 03 medical and health sciences Amino Acid Substitution Africa Consensus Sequence Animals Amino Acid Sequence Phylogeny
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0405302102 Publication Date: 2005-04-05T00:31:36Z
ABSTRACT
Many examples of the appearance of similar traits in different lineages are known during the evolution of organisms. However, the underlying genetic mechanisms have been elucidated in very few cases. Here, we provide a clear example of evolutionary parallelism, involving changes in the same genetic pathway, providing functional adaptation of RH1 pigments to deep-water habitats during the adaptive radiation of East African cichlid fishes. We determined the RH1 sequences from 233 individual cichlids. The reconstruction of cichlid RH1 pigments with 11- cis -retinal from 28 sequences showed that the absorption spectra of the pigments of nine species were shifted toward blue, tuned by two particular amino acid replacements. These blue-shifted RH1 pigments might have evolved as adaptations to the deep-water photic environment. Phylogenetic evidence indicates that one of the replacements, A292S, has evolved several times independently, inducing similar functional change. The parallel evolution of the same mutation at the same amino acid position suggests that the number of genetic changes underlying the appearance of similar traits in cichlid diversification may be fewer than previously expected.
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