Whale shark rhodopsin adapted to its vertically wide-ranging lifestyle

Published on
01. October 2021

Whale shark rhodopsin adapted to its vertically wide-ranging lifestyle

Kazuaki Yamaguchi, Mitsumasa Koyanagi, Keiichi Sato, Akihisa Terakita, Shigehiro Kuraku

ABSTRACT:

Spectral tuning of visual pigments often facilitates adaptation to new environments, and it is intriguing to study the visual ecology of pelagic sharks with expanded habitats. The whale shark, which dives into the deep sea of nearly 2,000 meters besides near-surface filter-feeding, was previously shown to possesses the ‘blue-shifted’ rhodopsin (RHO). In this study, our spectroscopy of recombinant whale shark RHO mutants revealed the dominant effect of the novel spectral tuning amino acid site 94, which is implicated in congenital stationary night blindness of humans, accounting for the blue shift. Thermal decay profiling revealed the reduction of the thermal stability of whale shark RHO, as typically observed for cone opsins, which was experimentally shown to be achieved by the site 178, as well as 94. The results suggest that these two sites cooperatively enhance the visual capacity in both the deep sea and the sea surface, enabling exceptionally wide vertical migration of this species.

bioRxiv. DOI: 10.1101/2021.10.01.462724

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