ABSTRACT
Understanding the phenotypic consequences of naturally occurring genetic changes, as well as their impact on fitness, is fundamental to understanding how organisms adapt to an environment. This is critical when genetic variants have pleiotropic effects, as determining how each phenotype impacted by a gene contributes to fitness is essential to understand how and why traits have evolved. Here, we characterized the effects of mutations in the oca2 gene, which underlie albinism and reductions of sleep in the blind Mexican cavefish Astyanax mexicanus, on larval prey capture. We found that when surface A. mexicanus with engineered mutations in oca2 are hunting, they use cave-like, wide-angle strikes to capture prey. However, unlike cavefish or surface fish in the dark, which utilize the lateral line when hunting, oca2 mutant (oca2Δ2bp/Δ2bp) surface fish can use vision when striking at prey from wide angles. We found that when raised under lighted conditions, pigmented surface fish outcompete albino oca2Δ2bp/Δ2bp surface fish when hunting in lighted conditions. In contrast, when surface fish are reared in darkness, oca2Δ2bp/Δ2bp surface fish outcompete their wild type siblings in the dark. This raises the possibility that albinism is detrimental to larval feeding in a surface-like lighted environment, but may confer an advantage to fish in cave-like, dark environments. Together, these results demonstrate that oca2 plays a role in larval feeding behavior in A. mexicanus, and expand our understanding of the pleiotropic phenotypic consequences of oca2 in cavefish evolution.
Footnotes
Author contributions
Conceptualization: J.E.K., S.C., S.T., E.L., M.E., S.M., A.C.K.; Data curation: S.C., M.E.; Formal analysis: S.C., S.T., E.P., J.A., S.M.; Funding acquisition: J.E.K., A.C.K.; Investigation: S.C., S.T., E.P., J.A., M.E.; Methodology: S.C., S.T., E.L., M.E., N.J.; Software: Y.F.; Supervision: J.E.K., A.M., Y.F., S.M., A.C.K.; Visualization: S.C., M.E., A.M.; Writing – original draft: J.E.K., S.C., M.E.; Writing – review & editing: J.E.K., S.C., S.T., E.P., J.A., E.L., M.E., N.J., A.M., Y.F., S.M., A.C.K.
Funding
This work was funded by National Science Foundation grant award 2147597 to J.E.K. and A.C.K. and National Institutes of Health award R35GM138345 to J.E.K. Deposited in PMC for release after 12 months.
Data availability
All relevant data can be found within the article and its supplementary information. Source videos are available from the authors upon request.