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      Adult plasticity in African Cichlids: Rapid changes in opsin expression in response to environmental light differences

      research-article
      , ,
      Molecular ecology
      opsin, gene expression, plasticity, cichlid, vision

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          Abstract

          Phenotypic plasticity allows organisms to adapt quickly to local environmental conditions and could facilitate adaptive radiations. Cichlids have recently undergone an adaptive radiation in Lake Malawi where they inhabit diverse light environments and tune their visual sensitivity through differences in cone opsin expression. While cichlid opsin expression is known to be plastic over development, whether adults remain plastic is unknown. Adult plasticity in visual tuning could play a role in cichlid radiations by enabling survival in changing environments and facilitating invasion into novel environments. Here we examine the existence of and temporal changes in adult visual plasticity of two closely related species. In complementary experiments, wild adult Metriaclima mbenji from Lake Malawi were moved to the lab under UV-deficient fluorescent lighting; while lab raised M. benetos were placed under UV-rich lighting designed to mimic light conditions in the wild. Surprisingly, adult cichlids in both experiments showed significant changes in the expression of the UV-sensitive single cone opsin, SWS1, in only three days. Modeling quantum catches in the light environments revealed a possible link between the light available to the SWS1 visual pigment and SWS1 expression. We conclude that adult cichlids can undergo rapid and significant changes in opsin expression in response to environmental light shifts that are relevant to their habitat and evolutionary history in Lake Malawi. This could have contributed to the rapid divergence characteristic of these fantastic fishes.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9214478
          2614
          Mol Ecol
          Mol. Ecol.
          Molecular ecology
          0962-1083
          1365-294X
          19 September 2017
          09 October 2017
          November 2017
          01 November 2018
          : 26
          : 21
          : 6036-6052
          Affiliations
          University of Maryland, College Park
          Author notes
          [+ ]Address of correspondence: Karen Carleton, Department of Biology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, 20742, USA., Phone: 301-405-6929
          [*]

          equal contribution to the work;

          MISS SRI PRATIMA NANDAMURI (Orcid ID : 0000-0003-1445-7426)

          Article
          PMC5690868 PMC5690868 5690868 nihpa907045
          10.1111/mec.14357
          5690868
          28926160
          e083dfbf-7ab2-401b-89db-ac7b30d12709
          History
          Categories
          Article

          vision,cichlid,plasticity,gene expression,opsin
          vision, cichlid, plasticity, gene expression, opsin

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