There are several theories for
tetrachromacy in humans, but the most popular theory is related to females
carriers of
color blindness. Carriers will have one opsin gene (
OPN1MW or
OPN1LW) with differing alleles thereof on each chromosome, such that the alleles encode proteins with different
spectral sensitivities. Both of these alleles are expressed due to
x-inactivation (one kind of X chromosome will get expressed in some photoreceptor cells, whereas the other kind of X chromosome will get expressed in the other photoreceptor cells) so a carrier will have 4 distinct
cones with different spectral sensitivities, which is one prerequisite of tetrachromacy. This theory cannot be extended to females who have identical alleles in their OPN1MW1 genes, but a different allele in their OPN1MW2 gene, since the latter is never expressed, and if it were co-expressed with OPN1MW1, the two alleles would not be isolated in different photoreceptors. Therefore the OPN1MW2 gene is not considered a likely candidate mechanism for tetrachromacy. ==References==