Regressive Evolution in the Mexican Cave Tetra, Astyanax mexicanus

Meredith E. Protas, Melissa Conrad, Joshua B. Gross, Clifford Tabin, Richard Borowsky

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Cave adapted animals generally have reduced pigmentation and eyes, but the evolutionary forces driving the reductions are unknown; Darwin famously questioned the role of natural selection in eye loss in cave fishes; “As it is difficult to imagine that eyes, although useless, could be in any way injurious to animals living in darkness, I attribute their loss wholly to disuse” [1]. We studied the genetic basis of this phenomenon in the Mexican cave tetra, Astyanax mexicanus, by mapping the quantitative trait loci (QTL) determining differences in eye/lens sizes and melanophore number between cave and surface fish. In addition, we mapped QTL for the putatively constructive traits of jaw size, tooth number, and numbers of taste buds. The data suggest that eyes and pigmentation regressed through different mechanisms. Cave alleles at each eye/lens QTL we detected caused size reductions. This uniform negative polarity is consistent with evolution by natural selection and inconsistent with evolution by drift. In contrast, QTL polarities for melanophore number were mixed, consistent with evolution by genetic drift or indirect selection through pleiotropy. Past arguments against a role for selection in regression of cave fish eyes cited the insignificant cost of their development [2,3], but we argue that the energetic cost of their maintenance is sufficiently high for eyes to be detrimental in the cave environment. Regression, a ubiquitous aspect of all evolutionary change, can be caused either by selection or genetic drift/pleiotropy.

Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)452-454
Number of pages3
JournalCurrent Biology
Volume17
Issue number5
StatePublished - Feb 15 2007
Externally publishedYes

Funding

This study was supported by grants from the United States National Science Foundation (IBN0217178; C.T. and R.B.) and the United States National Institutes of Health (1RO3EYE016783-01; R.B.). We thank A. Korol for invaluable advice on the analyses, L. Mekiou for numerous contributions to the maintenance and phenotyping of the animals, B. Borowsky, C. Desplan, D. Fitch, M. Purugganan, M. Siegal, and A. Swaroop for fruitful discussion and criticism, and H. Ajmera and L. Nirenstein for phenotyping.

FundersFunder number
United States National Institutes of Health1RO3EYE016783-01
United States National Science FoundationIBN0217178
National Eye InstituteR03EY016783

    Keywords

    • eye pigmentation
    • cave adapted animals
    • cave fishes
    • astyanax mexicanus

    Disciplines

    • Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
    • Genetics and Genomics

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