Evolution of olfactory receptor superfamily in bats based on high throughput molecular modelling

Author:

Zhang Tianmin12,Jing Haohao1,Wang Jinhong1,Zhao Le3,Liu Yang1,Rossiter Stephen J.4ORCID,Lu Huimeng2,Li Gang1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Life Sciences Shaanxi Normal University Xi'an China

2. School of Life Sciences Northwestern Polytechnical University Xi'an China

3. School of Biological Science and Engineering Shaanxi University of Technology Hanzhong China

4. School of Biological and Behavioural Sciences, Queen Mary University of London London UK

Abstract

AbstractThe origin of flight and laryngeal echolocation in bats is likely to have been accompanied by evolutionary changes in other aspects of their sensory biology. Of all sensory modalities in bats, olfaction is perhaps the least well understood. Olfactory receptors (ORs) function in recognizing odour molecules, with crucial roles in evaluating food, as well as in processing social information. Here we compare OR repertoire sizes across taxa and apply a new pipeline that integrates comparative genome data with protein structure modelling and then we employ molecular docking techniques with small molecules to analyse OR functionality based on binding energies. Our results suggest a sharp contraction in odorant recognition of the functional OR repertoire during the origin of bats, consistent with a reduced dependence on olfaction. We also compared bat lineages with contrasting different ecological characteristics and found evidence of differences in OR gene expansion and contraction, and in the composition of ORs with different tuning breadths. The strongest binding energies of ORs in non‐echolocating fruit‐eating bats were seen to correspond to ester odorants, although we did not detect a quantitative advantage of functional OR repertoires in these bats compared with echolocating insectivorous species. Overall, our findings based on molecular modelling and computational docking suggest that bats have undergone olfactory evolution linked to dietary adaptation. Our results from extant and ancestral bats help to lay the groundwork for targeted experimental functional tests in the future.

Funder

Natural Science Basic Research Program of Shaanxi Province

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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