Abstract
Colour vision is largely mediated by changes in number, expression, and spectral properties of rhodopsins, but the genetic mechanisms underlying adaptive shifts in spectral sensitivity remain largely unexplored. Using in vivo photochemistry, optophysiology, and in vitro functional assays, we link variation in eye spectral sensitivity at long wavelengths to species-specific absorbance spectra for LW opsins in lycaenid butterflies. In addition to loci specifying an ancestral green-absorbing rhodopsin with maximum spectral sensitivity (λmax) at 520-530 nm in Callophrys sheridanii and Celastrina ladon, we find a novel form of red-shifted LW rhodopsin at λmax = 565-570 nm in Arhopala japonica and Eumaeus atala. Furthermore, we show that Ca. sheridanii and Ce. ladon exhibit a smaller bathochromic shift at BRh2 (480-489 nm), and with the ancestral LW rhodopsin, cannot perceive visible red light beyond 600 nm. In contrast, molecular variation at the LW opsin in A. japonica and E. atala is coordinated with tuning of the blue opsin that also shifts sensitivity to longer wavelengths enabling colour discrimination up to 617 nm. We then use E. atala as a model to examine the interplay between red and blue spectral sensitivity. Owing to blue duplicate expression, the spatial distribution of opsin mRNAs within an ommatidium defines an expanded retinal stochastic mosaic of at least six opsin-based photoreceptor classes. Our mutagenesis in vitro assays with BRh1 (λmax = 435 nm) chimeric blue rhodopsins reveal four main residues contributing to the 65 nm bathochromic shift towards BRh2 (λmax = 500 nm). Adaptations in this four-opsin visual system are relevant for discrimination of conspecific reflectance spectra in E. atala. Together, these findings illustrate how functional changes at multiple rhodopsins contribute to the evolution of a broader spectral sensitivity and adaptation in visual performance.
Significance Statement Rhodopsins are photosensitive protein molecules that absorb specific wavelengths of incoming light and convey colour information in the visual system. We show that molecular evolution in a green insect opsin gene resulted in a shift in its maximal absorbance peak, enabling some lycaenid butterflies to use spectral energy of longer wavelengths (LW) to discriminate colours in the red spectrum better than relatives bearing ancestral green LW rhodopsins. Lycaenids also evolved a duplicate blue opsin gene, and we illustrate an example where species equipped with red LW rhodopsins shifted their blue sensitivity peak to longer wavelengths due to changes in several blue-tuning residues that have evolved repeatedly in different insect lineages. We demonstrate how changes at multiple vision genes in the insect eye effectively create a coordinated mechanism expanding spectral sensitivity for visually guided behaviours such as selecting host plants and mates.