Agree. Generally speaking, all stem plants (Wisteria is a stem plant) are higher light requiring because they are fast growing plants, and this means more light and more nutrients to balance. This is why most of them do not do well long-term in lower light situations. There are a few exceptions perhaps, and Brazilian Pennywort is one that I find does fine with moderate light and weekly fertilization. Another might be Egeria densa, commonly called Anacharis. But Wisteria (Hygrophyla difformis) is not one of these.
Water Sprite, if the floating variety (Ceratopteris cornuta) can manage as it is under the tank light, provided of course this light is sufficient (again, "low light" and similar terms are rather subjective). But the species that are planted in the substrate would need more light. Vallisneria is fast growing and moderate light is the minimum, and in moderately hard or harder water. Water Sprite does better in softer water.
If you have a tank with a light presently, giving us the data might allow us to narrow things down a bit more. Tank size, type of light, number of bulbs/tubes, wattage, Kelvin, etc.
Byron.