Abstract

Rhodopsin mediates an essential step in image capture and is tightly associated with visual adaptations of aquatic organisms, especially species that live in dim light environments (e.g., the deep sea). The rh1 gene encoding rhodopsin was formerly considered a single-copy gene in genomes of vertebrates, but increasing exceptional cases have been found in teleost fish species. The main objective of this study was to determine to what extent the visual adaptation of teleosts might have been shaped by the duplication and loss of rh1 genes. For that purpose, homologous rh1/rh1-like sequences in genomes of ray-finned fishes from a wide taxonomic range were explored using a PCR-based method, data mining of public genetic/genomic databases, and subsequent phylogenomic analyses of the retrieved sequences. We show that a second copy of the fish-specific intron-less rh1 is present in the genomes of most anguillids (Elopomorpha), Hiodon alosoides (Osteoglossomorpha), and several clupeocephalan lineages. The phylogenetic analysis and comparisons of alternative scenarios for putative events of gene duplication and loss suggested that fish rh1 was likely duplicated twice during the early evolutionary history of teleosts, with one event coinciding with the hypothesized fish-specific genome duplication and the other in the common ancestor of the Clupeocephala. After these gene duplication events, duplicated genes were maintained in several teleost lineages, whereas some were secondarily lost in specific lineages. Alternative evolutionary schemes of rh1 and comparison with previous studies of gene evolution are also reviewed.

Highlights

  • Rhodopsin is an opsin belonging to the G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) superfamily

  • The exo-rhodopsin of ray-finned fishes was first discovered by an early study investigating gene expressions in the photosensitive pineal gland of zebrafish [41]

  • The exo-rhodopsin gene is thought to have the same role as other non-visual opsin genes that are expressed in the pineal gland and regulate the rhythmic production of melatonin and thereby regulate circadian rhythms [41,63,64]

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Summary

Introduction

Rhodopsin is an opsin belonging to the G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) superfamily. In this superfamily, different opsins can be distinguished according to their Schiff base structure and to phylogenetic relationships of genes encoding opsins [1,2]. Visual opsin genes are often expressed in either retinal cone cells (i.e., cone opsin genes) or rod cells (i.e., the rhodopsin gene) [2]. They display diverse phenotypes with a maximum wavelength absorption (λmax) in the range of the light spectrum located at wavelength ranges of visible and ultraviolet light spectra [2].

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