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Earliest
Evolution of Vision Genes Discovered
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
'Opsin' genes
found in aquatic relatives of corals, jellyfish, sea anemones
Opsin
genes (pictured in blue) are present in the cnidarian Hydra,
the first evidence of sight in animals.
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Credit:
David Plachetzki/UCSB
By peering deep into
evolutionary history, scientists have discovered the origins of
photosensitivity in animals: vision genes called opsins that
first appeared in the aquatic animal species Hydra
magnipapillata.
The hydras have no eyes or
light-receptive organs, but they have the genetic pathways to be
able to sense light.
The findings are published in
this week's issue of the scientific journal PLoS
ONE.
The biologists--David
Plachetzki and Todd Oakley of the University of California at
Santa Barbara--are the first to look at light receptive genes in
cnidarians (corals, jellyfish and sea anemones), of which hydras
are members.
Hydras are found in most
freshwater ponds, lakes and streams in temperate and tropical
regions, and are predatory animals that feed on small aquatic
invertebrates.
The scientists speculate that
hydras use light sensitivity in order to find prey. The hydras
have opsin proteins all over their bodies, but the proteins are
concentrated in the mouth area.
"Because we don't find
opsins in earlier branching animals like sponges, we can put a
date on the evolution of light sensitivity in animals," said
Plachetzki. "We now have a time frame for the evolution of
animal light sensitivity. We know its precursors existed roughly
600 million years ago."
"These results are
significant to advancing our understanding of the early evolution
of sight in animals, and show how simple genetic changes can
produce visual pigments that begin the pathway to the evolution
of sight," said Jerry Cook, program director in NSF's
division of environmental biology, which funded the research.
Oakley said that there are only
a handful of cases where scientists have documented the very
specific mutational events that have given rise to new features
during evolution.
"We show very clearly that
these changes in a particular duplicated gene, opsin, allowed the
new genes to interact with different proteins in new ways,"
he said. "Today, these different interactions underlie the
genetic machinery of vision."
Scientist Bernie Degnan of the
University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, provided
bioinformatics tools to complete the study. The Hydra
magnipapillata genome
project is conducted by the Institute for Genomic Research, part
of the J. Craig Venter Institute.
Source:
NSF

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