The genes behind vision's palette.The genes behind vision's palette The human brain visualizes the world as a mixture of three primary colors those developed from the solar beam by the prism, viz., red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet, which are reduced by some authors to three, - red, green, and violet-blue. These three are sometimes called fundamental colors. See under Color. See also: Color Primary , sensed by pigmented cells in the eye. This view of color vision evolved over centuries of investigation, but has now for the first time been directly demonstrated. Genes that correspond to the red, green and blue color-vision pigments have been identified by Jeremy Nathans, Darcy Thomas and David S. Hogness of Stanford University. Unexpected aspects of their findings give clues to how color vision evolved and may still be evolving. Tests on color-blind col·or·blind or col·or-blind adj. 1. Partially or totally unable to distinguish certain colors. 2. a. Not subject to racial prejudices. b. subjects provided critical information in the identification of the pigment genes. Color blindness color blindness, visual defect resulting in the inability to distinguish colors. About 8% of men and 0.5% of women experience some difficulty in color perception. is caused by the absence of a normal copy of one of these genes, the scientists have demonstrated in collaboration with Thomas P. Piantanida of S.R.I. International in Menlo Park, Calif., and researchers at Roswell Park Memorial Institute in Buffalo, N.Y. Furthermore, they traced a common condition of slightly altered color vision to the presence of an abnormal pigment gene. The brains of people with this condition portray colors as if they were using a slightly different set of paints. "Through the application of modern recombinant DNA recombinant DNA n. Genetically engineered DNA prepared by transplanting or splicing one or more segments of DNA into the chromosomes of an organism from a different species. Such DNA becomes part of the host's genetic makeup and is replicated. techniques and the analysis of genetic variants, a problem as old as the human effort to understand the real world has been brought to a higher, and most satisfactory, level of understanding," says David Botstein of Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business, in the April 11 SCIENCE in an essay accompanying the color-vision research reports. The key to the research success was the prediction that all the eye's pigment genes would have similarities due to a common evolutionary origin. Because one single-stranded DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. will bind to another resembling its complementary strand, an isolated gene can be used to search for related DNA sequences. Nathans and his colleagues first used a gene that had already been identified as that of the bovine visual pigment visual pigment n. Any of the photopigments in the retinal cones and rods that absorb light and photochemically initiate the phenomenon of vision. called rhodopsin rhodopsin or visual purple Light-sensitive, purple-red organic pigment contained in the rod cells of the retina that allows the eye to see in black and white in dim light. . With it they located the gene for the corresponding human pigment, which is used for vision in dim light but not for color vision. Then, with this human rhodopsin gene, they were able to identify three similar DNA sequences. They found the green- and the red-pigment genes on the X chromosome X chromosome One of the two sex chromosomes (the other is Y) that determine a person's gender. Normal males have both an X and a Y chromosome, and normal females have two X chromosomes. and the blue-pigment gene on the chromosome known as number 7. Analyses of the genes indicate that a common ancestral DNA segment produced three genes: one that evolved to become the rhodopsin gene, a second that became the blue-pigment gene, and a third that duplicated in more recent evolution to become the green-and red-pigment genes. The most surprising finding is that the X chromosome of people with normal color vision often contains two or even three copies of the green-pigment gene. The frequent presence of duplicate green-pigment genes "gives evolution some material to experiment with," says Piantanida. The variation in green-pigment gene number seems to arise from unequal exchanges of DNA between paired chromosomes. These swaps also produce the chromosomes lacking a color-vision gene, in this way creating color blindness. Sometimes the exchanges appear to occur within genes. The result is genes that are hybrids of the red-and green-pigment genes. These hybrids underlie what has been a puzzling defect in color vision. Among U.S. Caucasian men, 8 percent have defects in their red-green color vision. The most common defect is more subtle than an inability to distinguish red from green. It is observed when the men are asked to mix red and green light to match a certain shade of yellow. Those with "anomalous trichromatism tri·chro·mat·ic also tri·chrome or tri·chro·mic adj. 1. Of, relating to, or having three colors, as in photography or printing. 2. " produce a different shade than does someone with normal color vision. Nathans and his colleagues have demonstrated that these men have, instead of one normal pigment, a hybrid pigment with different light-absorption characteristics. Now that the visual pigment genes have been identified, scientists expect to be able to obtain for the first time adequate amounts of the pigments for biochemical study. The intriguing question remains: During fetal development, how does each visual cell determine which pigment it must produce? Photo: Visual pigment similarities: All four human pigments and bovine rhodopsin have the same amino acid amino acid (əmē`nō), any one of a class of simple organic compounds containing carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and in certain cases sulfur. These compounds are the building blocks of proteins. in the locations indicated by empty circles; similar amino acids at the stippled stippled /stip·pled/ (stip´'ld) marked by small spots or flecks. stippled covered with many small dots. stippled cells see basophilic stippling. circles; and at least one "nonconservative" amino acid difference at the filled circles. --J. A. Miller |
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