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1.
Mol Biol Evol ; 27(2): 453-64, 2010 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19861643

ABSTRACT

Color vision is an important characteristic of primates and, intriguingly, Neotropical monkeys are highly polymorphic for this trait. Recent field studies have challenged the conventional view that trichromatic color vision is more adaptive than dichromatic color vision. No study has investigated the pattern of genetic variation in the long to middle wavelength-sensitive (L-M or red-green) opsin gene as compared with that of other genomic regions (neutral references) in wild populations of New World monkeys to look for the signature of natural selection. Here, we report such a study conducted on spider monkeys and capuchin monkeys inhabiting Santa Rosa National Park, Costa Rica. The nucleotide sequence of the L-M opsin gene was more polymorphic than the sequences of the neutral references, although the opsin-gene sequences were not more divergent between the two species than were the sequences of the neutral references. In a coalescence simulation that took into account the observed nucleotide diversity of the neutral references, the Tajima's D value of the L-M opsin gene deviated significantly in a positive direction from the expected range. These results are the first to statistically demonstrate balancing selection acting on the polymorphic L-M opsin gene of New World monkeys. Taking the results of behavioral and genetic studies together, the balancing selection we detected may indicate that coexistence of different color-vision types in the same population, also characteristic of humans, is adaptive.


Subject(s)
Color Vision/genetics , Platyrrhini/genetics , Selection, Genetic/physiology , Animals , Atelinae/genetics , Atelinae/physiology , Cebus/genetics , Cebus/physiology , Color Vision/physiology , Evolution, Molecular , Opsins/genetics , Opsins/physiology , Platyrrhini/physiology , Polymorphism, Genetic/genetics , Selection, Genetic/genetics
2.
Am J Primatol ; 67(4): 447-61, 2005 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16342069

ABSTRACT

New World monkeys are unique in exhibiting a color-vision polymorphism due to an allelic variation of the red-green visual pigment gene. This makes these monkeys excellent subjects for studying the adaptive evolution of the visual system from both molecular and ecological viewpoints. However, the allele frequencies of the pigments within a natural population have not been well investigated. As a first step toward understanding the relationship between vision and behavior, we conducted color-vision typing by analyzing fecal DNA from two wild groups of white-faced capuchin monkeys (Cebus capucinus) and one group of black-handed spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi) inhabiting Santa Rosa National Park of Costa Rica. All color-typed monkeys were individually identified. In C. capucinus and A. geoffroyi we found three and two pigment types, respectively, and the spectral mechanism that created one of the two Ateles pigments was found to be novel. In one Cebus group and the Ateles group, all alleles were present, whereas in the other Cebus group only two alleles were found, with one allele predominating. This was likely due to the effect of close inbreeding, indicating that wild populations can exhibit a variety of allele compositions. This result also suggests that the color-vision polymorphism can be easily distorted by natural factors, such as inbreeding, skewing the population structure.


Subject(s)
Cebidae/genetics , Cebus/genetics , Color Perception/genetics , Retinal Pigments/genetics , Animals , Costa Rica , Female , Gene Frequency , Male , Phenotype , Phylogeny , Retinal Pigments/chemistry , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Spectrophotometry
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