University of Plymouth, School of Biological and Marine Sciences, Drake Circus, Plymouth PL4 8AA, United Kingdom; University of Bristol, School of Biological Sciences and School of Earth Sciences, Tyndall Avenue, Bristol BS8 1TG, United Kingdom; The University of Adelaide, School of Biological Sciences, North Terrace, Adelaide, South Australia 5005, Australia.
Department of Life Sciences, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, United Kingdom.
Curr Biol. 2020 Jul 6;30(13):2608-2615.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.04.061. Epub 2020 May 28.
Snakes are descended from highly visual lizards [1] but have limited (probably dichromatic) color vision attributed to a dim-light lifestyle of early snakes [2-4]. The living species of front-fanged elapids, however, are ecologically very diverse, with ∼300 terrestrial species (cobras, taipans, etc.) and ∼60 fully marine sea snakes, plus eight independently marine, amphibious sea kraits [1]. Here, we investigate the evolution of spectral sensitivity in elapids by analyzing their opsin genes (which are responsible for sensitivity to UV and visible light), retinal photoreceptors, and ocular lenses. We found that sea snakes underwent rapid adaptive diversification of their visual pigments when compared with their terrestrial and amphibious relatives. The three opsins present in snakes (SWS1, LWS, and RH1) have evolved under positive selection in elapids, and in sea snakes they have undergone multiple shifts in spectral sensitivity toward the longer wavelengths that dominate below the sea surface. Several relatively distantly related Hydrophis sea snakes are polymorphic for shortwave sensitive visual pigment encoded by alleles of SWS1. This spectral site polymorphism is expected to confer expanded "UV-blue" spectral sensitivity and is estimated to have persisted twice as long as the predicted survival time for selectively neutral nuclear alleles. We suggest that this polymorphism is adaptively maintained across Hydrophis species via balancing selection, similarly to the LWS polymorphism that confers allelic trichromacy in some primates. Diving sea snakes thus appear to share parallel mechanisms of color vision diversification with fruit-eating primates.
蛇类起源于具有高度视觉能力的蜥蜴[1],但由于早期蛇类的暗光生活方式[2-4],其色彩视觉能力有限(可能为二色视)。然而,前端长牙的眼镜蛇科物种在生态上非常多样化,包括约 300 种陆生物种(眼镜蛇、太攀蛇等)和约 60 种完全海洋性海蛇,外加 8 种独立的海洋性、两栖性海蝰[1]。在这里,我们通过分析其视蛋白基因(负责对紫外线和可见光敏感)、视网膜感光器和眼晶状体来研究眼镜蛇科物种的光谱敏感性进化。我们发现,与它们的陆地和两栖亲属相比,海蛇的视觉色素发生了快速的适应性多样化。蛇类中存在的三种视蛋白(SWS1、LWS 和 RH1)在眼镜蛇科中经历了正选择进化,并且在海蛇中,它们的光谱敏感性发生了多次向海洋表面以下占主导地位的长波长的转变。几种相对较远的Hydrophis 海蛇在编码 SWS1 等位基因的短波敏感视觉色素上存在多态性。这种光谱位点多态性预计会赋予扩展的“UV-蓝光”光谱敏感性,其持续时间估计是选择性中性核等位基因预测存活时间的两倍。我们认为,这种多态性通过平衡选择在 Hydrophis 物种中得以保持,类似于赋予一些灵长类动物三色色觉的 LWS 多态性。因此,潜水海蛇似乎与食果的灵长类动物共享颜色视觉多样化的平行机制。