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Gene loss and relaxed selection of plaat1 in vertebrates adapted to low-light environments.

Danielle H DrabeckJonathan WieseErin N GilbertsonJairo ArroyaveMelanie L J StiassnyS Elizabeth AlterRichard BorowskyDean A HendricksonDahiana ArcilaSuzanne E McGaugh
Published in: Proceedings. Biological sciences (2024)
Gene loss is an important mechanism for evolution in low-light or cave environments where visual adaptations often involve a reduction or loss of eyesight. The plaat gene family encodes phospholipases essential for the degradation of organelles in the lens of the eye. These phospholipases translocate to damaged organelle membranes, inducing them to rupture. This rupture is required for lens transparency and is essential for developing a functioning eye. Plaat3 is thought to be responsible for this role in mammals, while plaat1 is thought to be responsible in other vertebrates. We used a macroevolutionary approach and comparative genomics to examine the origin, loss, synteny and selection of plaat1 across bony fishes and tetrapods. We showed that plaat1 (probably ancestral to all bony fish + tetrapods) has been lost in squamates and is significantly degraded in lineages of low-visual-acuity and blind mammals and fishes. Our findings suggest that plaat1 is important for visual acuity across bony vertebrates, and that its loss through relaxed selection and pseudogenization may have played a role in the repeated evolution of visual systems in low-light environments. Our study sheds light on the importance of gene-loss in trait evolution and provides insights into the mechanisms underlying visual acuity in low-light environments.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • dna methylation
  • high intensity
  • genome wide identification
  • single cell