Affiliation:
1. Whitney Laboratory for Marine Bioscience, University of Florida, St Augustine, FL, 32080 USA
Abstract
Many marine animals depend upon a larval phase of their life cycle to locate suitable habitat, and larvae use light detection to influence swimming behaviour and dispersal. Light detection is mediated by the
opsin
genes, which encode light-sensitive transmembrane proteins. Previous studies suggest that
r-opsins
in the eyes mediate locomotory behaviour in marine protostomes, but few have provided direct evidence through gene mutagenesis. Larvae of the marine annelid
Capitella teleta
have simple eyespots and are positively phototactic, although the molecular components that mediate this behaviour are unknown. Here, we characterize the spatio-temporal expression of the rhabdomeric
opsin
genes in
C. teleta
and show that a single rhabdomeric
opsin
gene,
Ct-r-opsin1
, is expressed in the larval photoreceptor cells. To investigate its function,
Ct-r-opsin1
was disrupted using CRISPR/CAS9 mutagenesis. Polymerase chain reaction amplification and DNA sequencing demonstrated efficient editing of the
Ct-r-opsin1
locus. In addition, the pattern of
Ct-r-opsin1
expression in photoreceptor cells was altered. Notably, there was a significant decrease in larval phototaxis, although the eyespot photoreceptor cell and associated pigment cell formed normally and persisted in
Ct-r-opsin1
-mutant animals. The loss of phototaxis owing to mutations in
Ct-r-opsin1
is similar to that observed when the entire photoreceptor and pigment cell are deleted, demonstrating that a single
r-opsin
gene is sufficient to mediate phototaxis in
C. teleta
. These results establish the feasibility of gene editing in animals like
C. teleta
, and extend previous work on the development, evolution and function of the
C. teleta
visual system
.
Our study represents one example of disruption of animal behaviour by gene editing through CRISPR/CAS9 mutagenesis, and has broad implications for performing genome editing studies in a wide variety of other understudied animals.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
27 articles.
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