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Epistatic Adaptive Evolution of Human Color Vision
Authors:Shozo Yokoyama  Jinyi Xing  Yang Liu  Davide Faggionato  Ahmet Altun  William T. Starmer
Affiliation:1.Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America;2.Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America;3.College of Life Science, Linyi University, Linyi, Shandong, China;4.Department of Physics, Fatih University, Istanbul, Turkey;5.Department of Biology, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York, United States of America;University of Michigan, United States of America
Abstract:Establishing genotype-phenotype relationship is the key to understand the molecular mechanism of phenotypic adaptation. This initial step may be untangled by analyzing appropriate ancestral molecules, but it is a daunting task to recapitulate the evolution of non-additive (epistatic) interactions of amino acids and function of a protein separately. To adapt to the ultraviolet (UV)-free retinal environment, the short wavelength-sensitive (SWS1) visual pigment in human (human S1) switched from detecting UV to absorbing blue light during the last 90 million years. Mutagenesis experiments of the UV-sensitive pigment in the Boreoeutherian ancestor show that the blue-sensitivity was achieved by seven mutations. The experimental and quantum chemical analyses show that 4,008 of all 5,040 possible evolutionary trajectories are terminated prematurely by containing a dehydrated nonfunctional pigment. Phylogenetic analysis further suggests that human ancestors achieved the blue-sensitivity gradually and almost exclusively by epistasis. When the final stage of spectral tuning of human S1 was underway 45–30 million years ago, the middle and long wavelength-sensitive (MWS/LWS) pigments appeared and so-called trichromatic color vision was established by interprotein epistasis. The adaptive evolution of human S1 differs dramatically from orthologous pigments with a major mutational effect used in achieving blue-sensitivity in a fish and several mammalian species and in regaining UV vision in birds. These observations imply that the mechanisms of epistatic interactions must be understood by studying various orthologues in different species that have adapted to various ecological and physiological environments.
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