The visual system of the longest-living vertebrate, the Greenland shark

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Abstract

The Greenland shark ( Somniosus microcephalus ) is the longest-living vertebrate and inhabits the extremely dim and cold waters of the Arctic deep sea. This has led to speculations that it may have lost functional vision. Here, we present genomic, transcriptomic, histological and functional evidence that the Greenland shark retains an intact visual system well-adapted for life in dim light. Histology and in vitro opsin expression revealed visual adaptations typical of deep-sea species, including densely packed, elongated rods and a short-wavelength shift in rod visual pigment sensitivity. RNAscope confirmed the presence of essential visual cell types, such as rods, Müller glia, and bipolar, amacrine, and ganglion cells. Moreover, despite being centuries old, the examined specimens showed no signs of retinal degeneration. Using whole genome and retinal RNA-sequencing, we further show that dim-light (rod-based) vision genes are intact and robustly expressed, while many bright-light (cone-based) vision genes have become pseudogenized and/or are no longer expressed. Finally, our data suggest that efficient DNA repair mechanisms may contribute to the long-term preservation of retinal function over centuries in the Greenland shark.

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  1. Interesting study with evidence of functional rod-dominant vision on the basis of phototransduction genes present (and comparable optic tectum). I see in figures 1 and 2 there is an intact RPE and wonder if you have higher resolution of the morphology there? Also, I guess I would expect for there to be less disc shedding and RPE phagocytosis if there is a lower demand for chromophore regeneration. Curious about molecular evolution of retinal cycle and phagocytosis genes in the RPE that might show evidence of adaptation in a circumstance without light-dependent circadian cycling but retained functional phototransduction.