Publication | Closed Access
Emergence of Novel Color Vision in Mice Engineered to Express a Human Cone Photopigment
221
Citations
17
References
2007
Year
EngineeringGeneticsMice EngineeredBiomedical EngineeringOptogeneticsRetinaHuman Cone PhotopigmentNovel Color VisionNative Mouse PigmentsNeurogeneticsInherent PlasticityOphthalmologyBehavioral NeurosciencePhysiological OpticBiophotonicsColor ConstancyChromatic DiscriminationPhotoreceptor CellEvolutionary BiologyMedicine
Changes in the genes encoding sensory receptor proteins are an essential step in the evolution of new sensory capacities. In primates, trichromatic color vision evolved after changes in X chromosome-linked photopigment genes. To model this process, we studied knock-in mice that expressed a human long-wavelength-sensitive (L) cone photopigment in the form of an X-linked polymorphism. Behavioral tests demonstrated that heterozygous females, whose retinas contained both native mouse pigments and human L pigment, showed enhanced long-wavelength sensitivity and acquired a new capacity for chromatic discrimination. An inherent plasticity in the mammalian visual system thus permits the emergence of a new dimension of sensory experience based solely on gene-driven changes in receptor organization.
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