Convergent spectral shifts to blue-green vision in mammals extends the known sensitivity of vertebrate M/LWS pigments

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Abstract

Daylight vision in most mammals is mediated predominantly by a middle/long wavelength-sensitive (M/LWS) pigment. Although spectral sensitivity and associated shifts in M/LWS are mainly determined by five critical sites, predicted phenotypic variation is rarely validated, and its ecological significance is unclear. We experimentally determine spectral tuning of M/LWS pigments and show that two highly divergent taxa, the gerbil and the elephant-shrew, have undergone independent dramatic blue-green shifts to 490 nm. By generating mutant proteins, we identify additional critical sites contributing to these shifts. Our results, which extend the known range of spectral tuning of vertebrate M/LWS, provide a compelling case of functional convergence, likely related to parallel adaptive shifts from nocturnal to brighter light conditions in similar habitats.

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Chi, H., Cui, Y., Rossiter, S. J., & Liu, Y. (2020). Convergent spectral shifts to blue-green vision in mammals extends the known sensitivity of vertebrate M/LWS pigments. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 117(15), 8303–8305. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2002235117

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