The evolution of bitter taste receptor gene in primates: Gene duplication and selection

Author:

Feng Ping12ORCID,Liang Xinyue12,Yu Hongling12,Dong Xiaoyan12,Liang Qiufang12,Dai Chuanyin12

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Ecology of Rare and Endangered Species and Environmental Protection, Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China Guangxi Normal University Guilin Guangxi China

2. Guangxi Key Laboratory of Rare and Endangered Animal Ecology Guangxi Normal University Guilin Guangxi China

Abstract

AbstractBitter taste perception plays an important role in preventing animals from digesting poisonous and harmful substances. In primates, especially the Cercopithecidae species, most species feed on plants; thus, it is reasonable to speculate that most of the bitter taste receptor genes (T2Rs) of primates are under purifying selection to maintain the functional stability of bitter taste perception. Gene duplication has happened inT2Rs frequently, and what will be the fate ofT2Rs copies is another question we are concerned about. To answer these questions, we selected theT2Rs of primates reported in another study and conducted corresponding selective pressure analyses to determine what kind of selective pressure was acting on them. Further, we carried out selective pressure analyses on gene copies and their corresponding ancestors by considering several possible situations. The results showed that among the 25 gene groups examined here, 15 groups are subject to purifying selection and others are under relaxed selection, with many positively selected sites detected. Gene copies existed in several groups, but only some groups (clade1_a1‐b2, clade1_c‐c2, clade1_d1‐d3, clade1_f1‐f2,T2R10,T2R13, andT2R42) have positively selected sites, inferring that they may have some relation to functional divergence. Taken together,T2Rs in primates are under diverse selective pressures, and most gene copies are subject to the same selective pressures. In such cases, the copies may be just to keep the function conservative, and more copies can increase the quantity of the bitter taste receptor, raise the efficiency of bitter substance recognition, and finally enhance the fitness of feeding during the evolutionary course of primates. This study can improve our understanding ofT2Rs evolution in primates.

Funder

Guangxi Normal University

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Guangxi Province

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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