Extraordinarily low evolutionary rates of short wavelength-sensitive opsin pseudogenes
2014
Yokoyama, Shōzō | Starmer, W. T. (William T.) | Liu, Yang | Tada, Takashi | Britt, Lyle
Aquatic organisms such as cichlids, coelacanths, seals, and cetaceans are active in UV–blue color environments, but many of them mysteriously lost their abilities to detect these colors. The loss of these functions is a consequence of the pseudogenization of their short wavelength-sensitive (SWS1) opsin genes without gene duplication. We show that the SWS1 gene (BdenS1ψ) of the deep-sea fish, pearleye (Benthalbella dentata), became a pseudogene in a similar fashion about 130million years ago (Mya) yet it is still transcribed. The rates of nucleotide substitution (~1.4×10−9/site/year) of the pseudogenes of these aquatic species as well as some prosimian and bat species are much smaller than the previous estimates for the globin and immunoglobulin pseudogenes.
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