Juliet W. L. Parry
University College London
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Featured researches published by Juliet W. L. Parry.
Current Biology | 2005
Juliet W. L. Parry; Karen L. Carleton; Tyrone C. Spady; Aba Carboo; David M. Hunt; James K. Bowmaker
Cichlid fish of the East African Rift Lakes are renowned for their diversity and offer a unique opportunity to study adaptive changes in the visual system in rapidly evolving species flocks. Since color plays a significant role in mate choice, differences in visual sensitivities could greatly influence and even drive speciation of cichlids. Lake Malawi cichlids inhabiting rock and sand habitats have significantly different cone spectral sensitivities. By combining microspectrophotometry (MSP) of isolated cones, sequencing of opsin genes, and spectral analysis of recombinant pigments, we have established the cone complements of four species of Malawi cichlids. MSP demonstrated that each of these species predominately expresses three cone pigments, although these differ between species to give three spectrally different cone complements. In addition, rare populations of spectrally distinct cones were found. In total, seven spectral classes were identified. This was confirmed by opsin gene sequencing, expression, and in vitro reconstitution. The genes represent the four major classes of cone opsin genes that diverged early in vertebrate evolution. All four species possess a long-wave-sensitive (LWS), three spectrally distinct green-sensitive (RH2), a blue-sensitive (SWS2A), a violet-sensitive (SWS2B), and an ultraviolet-sensitive (SWS1) opsin. However, African cichlids determine their spectral sensitivity by differential expression of primarily only three of the seven available cone opsin genes. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that all percomorph fish have similar potential.
Molecular Ecology | 2005
Karen L. Carleton; Juliet W. L. Parry; James K. Bowmaker; David M. Hunt; Ole Seehausen
Lake Victoria cichlids are one of the most speciose groups of vertebrates. Selection on coloration is likely playing an important role in their rapid speciation. To test the hypothesis that sensory biases could explain species differences in mating preferences and nuptial coloration, we studied seven populations of four closely related species of the genus Pundamilia that differ in visual environment and male nuptial colour. Microspectrophotometry determined that the wavelength of maximum absorption (λmax) of the rod pigment and three cone pigments were similar in all four species. Only the long wavelength sensitive (LWS) pigment varied among species, with 3–4 nm shifts in λmax that correlated with differences in the LWS opsin sequence. These subtle shifts in λmax coincided with large shifts in male body colour, with red species having longer LWS pigments than blue species. Furthermore, we observed within and between species a correlation between water transparency and the proportion of red/red vs. red/green double cones. Individuals from turbid water had more red/red double cones than individuals from clear water. The variation in LWS λmax and in the proportion of red/red double cones could lead to differences in perceived brightness that may explain the evolution of variation in male coloration. However, other factors, such as chromophore shifts and higher order neural processing, should also be investigated to fully understand the physiological basis of differential responses to male mating hues in cichlid fish.
Vision Research | 2000
Juliet W. L. Parry; James K. Bowmaker
A protocol has been developed for reconstituting visual pigments in intact retinae by delivering synthetic isomers of retinal incorporated in phospholipid vesicles. Calibration curves have been constructed relating the lambda(max) of the native porphyropsins (visual pigments based on 11-cis 3-dehydroretinal) of the rods and four spectral classes of cone in the goldfish, and the equivalent photosensitive pigments regenerated from 11-cis retinal (rhodopsins) and the commercially available isomer, 9-cis retinal (isorhodopsins). The relationship between the lambda(max) of rhodopsins and isorhodopsins appears to be linear, such that the difference in lambda(max) changes sign at about 380 nm. We therefore conclude that the protocol for reconstituting visual pigments with 9-cis retinal is suitable for all classes of vertebrate opsin-based photopigments.
Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2004
David M. Hunt; Jill A. Cowing; Susan E. Wilkie; Juliet W. L. Parry; Subathra Poopalasundaram; James K. Bowmaker
Of the four classes of vertebrate cone visual pigments, the shortwave-sensitive SWS1 class shows the shortest lambda(max) values with peaks in different species in either the violet (390-435 nm) or ultraviolet (around 365 nm) regions of the spectrum. Phylogenetic evidence indicates that the ancestral pigment was probably UV-sensitive (UVS) and that the shifts between violet and UV have occurred many times during evolution. This is supported by the different mechanisms for these shifts in different species. All visual pigments possess a chromophore linked via a Schiff base to a Lys residue in opsin protein. In violet-sensitive (VS) pigments, the Schiff base is protonated whereas in UVS pigments, it is almost certainly unprotonated. The generation of VS from ancestral UVS pigments most likely involved amino acid substitutions in the opsin protein that serve to stabilise protonation. The key residues in the opsin protein for this are at sites 86 and 90 that are adjacent to the Schiff base and the counterion at Glu113. In this review, the different molecular mechanisms for the UV or violet shifts are presented and discussed in the context of the structural model of bovine rhodopsin.
Vision Research | 2003
Juliet W. L. Parry; Stuart N. Peirson; Horst Wilkens; James K. Bowmaker
The cave-dwelling (hypogean) form of the teleost Astyanax fasciatus is blind, having only subdermal eye rudiments, but nevertheless maintains intact opsin genes. Second generation offspring of a cross between these and the normally sighted surface (epigean) form inherit opsin genes from both ancestries. A study of the expressed hypogean opsins of the hybrids, in comparison to the epigean forms, was undertaken by microspectrophotometry. The hybrid population showed considerable variation in the visual pigments of double cones, with evidence for two groups of cells with lambda(max) intermediate to those of the epigean pigments. Possible explanations for these intermediate pigments are discussed, including the hypothesis that they may represent hybrid genes similar to the genes for anomalous cone pigments in humans. Evidence was also found for ultraviolet-sensitive single cones and for an additional MWS pigment.
Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2006
Tyrone C. Spady; Juliet W. L. Parry; Phyllis R. Robinson; David M. Hunt; James K. Bowmaker; Karen L. Carleton
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2002
Juliet W. L. Parry; James K. Bowmaker
Biochemistry | 2004
Juliet W. L. Parry; Subathra Poopalasundaram; James K. Bowmaker; David M. Hunt
The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2005
Marie A. Pointer; C.-H. Christina Cheng; James K. Bowmaker; Juliet W. L. Parry; Nelyn Soto; Glen Jeffery; Jill A. Cowing; David M. Hunt
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2004
Juliet W. L. Parry; A. Carboo; James K. Bowmaker; Ole Seehausen; Karen L. Carleton
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Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
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