Burkhardt D A, Gottesman J, Levine J S, MacNichol E F
Vision Res. 1983;23(10):1031-41. doi: 10.1016/0042-6989(83)90014-7.
Electrophysiological recording and microspectrophotometry were used to analyze retinal function in representatives of the two surviving genera of holostean grade fish--the bowfin (Amia calva) and gars (Lepisosteus sp.). The properties of the cone photopigments, horizontal cells and ganglion cells show that these holostean retinas have cellular mechanisms for color vision which are fundamentally similar to those previously described for teleosts, turtle and mammals. These findings suggest that trichromatic receptor systems and opponent color-coding mechanisms may have evolved in primitive Neopterygii or more ancient fish, before the advent of teleosts. In conjunction with other recent data on living representatives of primitive fishes, these findings also add renewed plausibility for the view that vertebrate color vision could have taken a common origin some 400 million years ago from an ancestral aquatic jawed vertebrate.
采用电生理记录和显微分光光度法分析了全骨鱼类两个现存属的代表物种——弓鳍鱼(Amia calva)和雀鳝(Lepisosteus sp.)的视网膜功能。视锥色素、水平细胞和神经节细胞的特性表明,这些全骨鱼类的视网膜具有颜色视觉的细胞机制,从根本上类似于先前描述的硬骨鱼、龟和哺乳动物的机制。这些发现表明,三色受体系统和对立颜色编码机制可能在硬骨鱼出现之前,在原始新鳍鱼类或更古老的鱼类中就已经进化出来。结合最近关于原始鱼类现存代表的其他数据,这些发现也再次支持了这样一种观点,即脊椎动物的颜色视觉可能在约4亿年前起源于一种水生有颌脊椎动物祖先。