Eye color is a polygene phenotypic trait determined by two factors: the of the eye's iris and the frequency-dependence of the scattering of light by the Turbidity medium in the stroma of the iris.
In humans, the pigmentation of the iris varies from light brown to black, depending on the concentration of melanin in the iris pigment epithelium (located on the back of the iris), the melanin content within the iris stroma (located at the front of the iris), and the cellular density of the stroma.
The brightly colored eyes of many bird species result from the presence of other pigments, such as , , and . Humans and other animals have many phenotypic variations in eye color.Morris, PJ. "Phenotypes and Genotypes for human eye colors." Athro Limited website. Retrieved 10 May 2006.
The genetics and inheritance of eye color in humans is complicated. , as many as 16 genes have been associated with eye color inheritance. Some of the eye-color genes include OCA2 and HERC2. The earlier belief that blue eye color is a recessive trait has been shown to be incorrect, and the genetics of eye color are so complex that almost any parent-child combination of eye colors can occur. No Single Gene For Eye Color, Researchers Prove. Sciencedaily.com (22 February 2007). Retrieved on 2011-12-23.
In humans, eye color is a highly sexually dimorphic trait. "This effect is what may explain the fact that there seem to be comparatively higher frequencies of blue-eyed males than blue-eyed females in populations of European origin such as Iceland 10, Holland 10, Australia 18 or Poland 17, as well as in this study (see Fig. 2)." Several studies have shown that men are more likely to have blue eyes than women, while women are more likely to have darker eye colors (green and brown eyes) than men. "Several research groups have demonstrated that females have a darker eye color than males, given the same SNP profile (Martinez-Cadenas et al., 2013; Pietroni et al., 2014; Pospiech et al., 2016)." Sex is therefore a major factor in the expression of eye color genotypes. One study suggested that women's higher levels of the sex hormone estrogen may explain why women tend to have darker eyes than men.
People of European descent show the greatest variety in eye color of any population worldwide. Recent advances in ancient DNA technology have revealed some of the history of eye color in Europe. Through the analysis of ancient DNA, a 2020 study published in Experimental Dermatology suggested that the common gene for blue eye color likely originated in the Near East and arrived in Europe around 42,000 years ago, after the exodus out of Africa. "The genetic history of today's European populations is based on continuous migrations over the past 40 000 years. Homo sapiens arrived in Europe from Near East some 42 000 years ago.48, Like in their African origin, these humans had dark skin but due to variations of their OCA2 gene (causing iris depigmentation) many of them had blue eyes48,50 (Figure 2, left)." Figure 2: "Phenotype information was retrieved from supplementary files of the according publications or additionally assessed following the instructions of HirisPlex-S, which is a forensic DNA phenotyping tool based on an array of different marker SNPs providing additional support to the SNPs of the genes SLC24A5, SLC45A2 and OCA2."
There is evidence that as many as 16 different genes could be responsible for eye color in humans; however, the main two genes associated with eye color variation are OCA2 and HERC2, and both are localized in chromosome 15.
The gene OCA2 (), when in a variant form, causes the pink eye color and hypopigmentation common in human albinism. (The name of the gene is derived from the disorder it causes, oculocutaneous albinism type II.) Different SNPs within OCA2 are strongly associated with blue and green eyes as well as variations in freckling, mole counts, hair color and skin tone. The polymorphisms may be in an OCA2 regulatory sequence, where they may influence the expression of the gene product, which in turn affects pigmentation. A specific mutation within the HERC2 gene, a gene that regulates OCA2 expression, is partly responsible for blue eyes. Other genes implicated in eye color variation are SLC24A4 and Tyrosinase. A 2010 study of eye color variation in hue and saturation values using high-resolution digital full-eye photographs found three new loci for a total of ten genes, allowing the explanation of about 50% of eye color variation.
Blue eyes with a brown spot, green eyes, and gray eyes are caused by an entirely different part of the genome.
Generally, children with hazel and light brown eyes tended to experience a lightening of their eye color by adulthood. Children with green eyes often experienced a darkening of their eye color. It was also found that 11% of the children's mothers experienced an eye color change during the same period, with most developing lighter eyes, relative to their original color at the time of their child's birth.
In many parts of the world, it is nearly the only iris color present. Brown eyes are common in Europe, East Asia, Southeast Asia, Central Asia, South Asia, West Asia, Oceania, West Africa and the Americas. Dark-pigmented brown eyes are the most common variant of brown eyes due to it being found in various parts of the world such as the Americas, Africa, West Asia, South Asia, East Asia, Southeast Asia, Central Asia, Oceania, and can occasionally occur in parts of Southern Europe. Light or medium-pigmented brown eyes can also be commonly found in Europe, among the Americas, and parts of Central Asia, West Asia, South Asia, and East Africa. Light brown eyes bordering amber and hazel coloration are more common in Europe, but can also be observed in East Asia, Southeast Asia, North Africa and East Africa.
The eyes of some pigeons contain yellow fluorescing pigments known as . The bright yellow eyes of the great horned owl are thought to be due to the presence of the pteridine pigment xanthopterin within certain (called xanthophores) located in the iris stroma. In humans, yellowish specks or patches are thought to be due to the pigment lipofuscin, also known as lipochrome. Many animals such as canines, domestic cats, owls, eagles, pigeons, and fish have amber eyes, whereas in humans this color occurs less frequently. Amber is the third-rarest natural eye color after green and gray, occurring in 5% of the world's population. People with amber-colored eyes are found in Europe, and in fewer numbers in the Middle East, North Africa, and South America.
Definitions of the eye color "hazel" vary: it is sometimes considered to be synonymous with light brown or gold, as in the color of a hazelnut shell.
Around 18% of the US population and 5% of the world population have hazel eyes. 55.2% of Spanish subjects in a series of 221 photographs were judged to have hazel eyes. Hazel eyes are found in Europe, most commonly in the Netherlands and the United Kingdom, and have also been observed to be very common among the Low Saxon-speaking populations of northern Germany.
Green eyes are most common in Northern Europe, Western Europe, and Central Europe. Blue Eyes Versus Brown Eyes: A Primer on Eye Color . Eyedoctorguide.com. Retrieved on 23 December 2011. Why Do Europeans Have So Many Hair and Eye Colors?. Cogweb.ucla.edu. Retrieved on 23 December 2011. Around 8–10% of men and 18–21% of women in Iceland and 6% of men and 17% of women in the Netherlands have green eyes. Ireland is generally regarded as having the highest percentage of green eyed people in the world followed by Scotland, although the exact percentage is relatively unknown due to a lack of major research. Among European Americans, green eyes are most common among those of recent Celtic and Germanic peoples ancestry, occurring in about 16% of people with those backgrounds.
The green color is caused by the combination of: 1) an amber or light brown pigmentation in the stroma of the iris (which has a low or moderate concentration of melanin), and 2) a blue shade created by the Rayleigh scattering of reflected light. Green eyes contain the yellowish pigment lipochrome. "OCA2: The Gene for Color" . allaboutgenes.weebly.com. Retrieved on 8 September 2016.
Blue eyes are a highly sexually dimorphic eye color. Studies from various populations in Europe have shown that men are substantially more likely to have blue eyes than women.
The inheritance pattern followed by blue eyes was previously assumed to be a Mendelian recessive trait, though this has been shown to be incorrect. Eye color inheritance is now recognized as a polygenic trait, meaning that it is controlled by the interactions of several genes.
In 2008, a team of researchers from the University of Copenhagen located a single mutation that causes the phenomenon of blue eyes. The research was published in the Journal of Human Genetics. The same DNA sequence of the OCA2 gene among blue-eyed people suggests they may have a single common ancestor. The researchers hypothesized that the OCA2 mutation responsible for blue eyes arose in an individual who lived in the northwestern part of the Black Sea region in Europe sometime between 6,000 and 10,000 years ago, during the Neolithic period. "Everyone with blue eyes alive today can trace their ancestry back to one person who probably lived about 10,000 years ago in the Black Sea region, a study has found." However, more recent ancient DNA research has identified human remains much older than the Neolithic period which possess the OCA2 mutation for blue eyes. It is now believed that the OCA2 allele responsible for blue eyes dates back to the migration of modern humans out of Africa roughly 50,000 years ago, and entered Europe from western Asia.
Eiberg and colleagues suggested in a study published in Human Genetics that a mutation in the 86th intron of the HERC2 gene, which is hypothesized to interact with the OCA2 gene promoter, reduced expression of OCA2 with subsequent reduction in melanin production.
It has been proposed that blue eyes may have been adaptive to shorter day lengths at higher latitudes, as blue eyes increase intraocular light scattering, which suppresses melatonin release from the pineal gland, perhaps reducing psychological depression (which is linked to the short day length of higher latitudes).
Blue eyes are predominant in northern and eastern Europe, particularly around the Baltic Sea. Blue eyes are also found in Southern Europe, Central Asia, South Asia, North Africa, and West Asia.
Approximately 8% to 10% of the global population have blue eyes. A 2002 study found the prevalence of blue eye color among the White Americans in the United States to be 33.8% for those born from 1936 through 1951, compared with 57.4% for those born from 1899 through 1905. , one out of every six Americans, or 16.6% of the total US population, has blue eyes, including 22.3% of whites. The incidence of blue eyes continues to decline among American children. Of Slovenes, 56% have blue/green eyes. In a series of 221 photographs of Spanish subjects, 16.3% of the subjects were determined to have blue-gray eyes.
Gray eyes can also be found among the Shawia people Provincia: bulletin trimestriel de la Société de Statistique ..., Volumes 16–17 By Société de statistique, d'histoire et d'archéologie de Marseille et de Provence p. 273 l'iris gris est celui des chaouias... of the Aurès Mountains in Northwest Africa, in the Middle East/West Asia, Central Asia, and South Asia. In the Iliad, the Greek goddess Athene is said to have gray eyes (γλαυκῶπις). Iliad 1:206 http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0133%3Abook%3D1%3Acard%3D206 Under magnification, gray eyes exhibit small amounts of yellow and brown color in the iris.
Gray is the second-rarest natural eye color after green, with 3% of the world's population having it.
Although the deep blue eyes of some people such as Elizabeth Taylor can appear purple or violet at certain times, "true" violet-colored eyes occur only due to albinism. Eyes that appear red or violet under certain conditions due to albinism occur in less than 1 percent of the world's population.
Those with lighter iris color have been found to have a higher prevalence of age-related macular degeneration (ARMD) than those with darker iris color; lighter eye color is also associated with an increased risk of ARMD progression. A gray iris may indicate the presence of a uveitis, and an increased risk of uveal melanoma has been found in those with blue, green or gray eyes. However, a study in 2000 suggests that people with dark brown eyes are at increased risk of developing and therefore should protect their eyes from direct exposure to sunlight.
A chimera can have two different colored eyes just like any two siblings can—because each cell has different eye color genes. A mosaic can have two different colored eyes if the DNA difference happens to be in an eye-color gene.
There are many other possible reasons for having two different-colored eyes. For example, the film actor Lee Van Cleef was born with one blue eye and one green eye, a trait that reportedly was common in his family, suggesting that it was a genetic trait. This anomaly, which film producers thought would be disturbing to film audiences, was "corrected" by having Van Cleef wear brown contact lenses. David Bowie, on the other hand, had the appearance of different eye colors due to an injury that caused one pupil to be permanently dilated.
Another hypothesis about heterochromia is that it can result from a viral infection in utero affecting the development of one eye, possibly through some sort of genetic mutation. Occasionally, heterochromia can be a sign of a serious medical condition.
A common cause in females with heterochromia is X-inactivation, which can result in a number of heterochromatic traits, such as calico cats. Trauma and certain medications, such as some prostaglandin analogues, can also cause increased pigmentation in one eye. On occasion, a difference in eye color is caused by blood staining the iris after injury.
The Martin–Schultz scale, developed from the Martin scale, is one standard color scale used in physical anthropology to establish the eye color of an individual. It was created by the anthropologists Rudolf Martin and Bruno K Schultz in the first half of the 20th century. The scale consists of 20 colors ranging from light blue to dark brown-black, corresponding to natural eye colors caused by the amount of melanin in the iris:Piquet-Thepot M.-M. - Bulletins et Mémoires de la Société d'anthropologie de Paris, XII° Série, tome 3 fascicule 3, pg. 207,208 - (1968)
Normal eye colors range from the darkest shades of brown to the lightest tints of blue. To meet the need for standardized classification, at once simple yet detailed enough for research purposes, Seddon et al. developed a graded system based on the predominant iris color and the amount of brown or yellow pigment present. There are three pigment colors that determine, depending on their proportion, the outward appearance of the iris, along with structural color. Green irises, for example, have some yellow and the blue structural color. Brown irises contain more or less melanin. Some eyes have a dark ring around the iris, called a limbal ring.
Eye color in non-human animals is regulated differently. For example, instead of blue as in humans, Autosome recessive eye color in the skink species Corucia zebrata is black, and the autosomal dominant color is yellow-green.
As the color vision depends on viewing conditions (e.g., the amount and kind of illumination, as well as the hue of the surrounding environment), so does the perception of eye color. Color Perception . Edromanguitars.com. Retrieved on 23 December 2011.
OCA2 Associated with melanin producing cells. Central importance to eye color. HERC2 Affects function of OCA2, with a specific mutation strongly linked to blue eyes. SLC24A4 Associated with differences between blue and green eyes. Tyrosinase Associated with differences between blue and green eyes.
Changes in eye color
Eye color range
Brown
Amber
Hazel
Green
Blue
Gray
Special cases
Two different colors
Red and violet
Medical implications
Wilson's disease
Coloration of the sclera
Aniridia
Ocular albinism and eye color
Heterochromia
Limbal ring
Impact on vision
Classification of color
See also
External links
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