Evolution of the Growth Hormone Gene Duplication in Passerine Birds

Author:

Rasband Shauna A12ORCID,Bolton Peri E23ORCID,Fang Qi4ORCID,Johnson Philip L F5ORCID,Braun Michael J12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Behavior, Ecology, Evolution and Systematics Graduate Program, University of Maryland , College Park, Maryland

2. Department of Vertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution , Washington, DC

3. Department of Biology, East Carolina University , Greenville, North Carolina

4. BGI-Shenzhen, Beishan Industrial Zone , Shenzhen , China

5. Department of Biology, University of Maryland , College Park, Maryland

Abstract

AbstractBirds of the order Passeriformes represent the most speciose order of land vertebrates. Despite strong scientific interest in this super-radiation, genetic traits unique to passerines are not well characterized. A duplicate copy of growth hormone (GH) is the only gene known to be present in all major lineages of passerines, but not in other birds. GH genes plausibly influence extreme life history traits that passerines exhibit, including the shortest embryo-to-fledging developmental period of any avian order. To unravel the implications of this GH duplication, we investigated the molecular evolution of the ancestral avian GH gene (GH or GH1) and the novel passerine GH paralog (GH2), using 497 gene sequences extracted from 342 genomes. Passerine GH1 and GH2 are reciprocally monophyletic, consistent with a single duplication event from a microchromosome onto a macrochromosome in a common ancestor of extant passerines. Additional chromosomal rearrangements have changed the syntenic and potential regulatory context of these genes. Both passerine GH1 and GH2 display substantially higher rates of nonsynonymous codon change than non-passerine avian GH, suggesting positive selection following duplication. A site involved in signal peptide cleavage is under selection in both paralogs. Other sites under positive selection differ between the two paralogs, but many are clustered in one region of a 3D model of the protein. Both paralogs retain key functional features and are actively but differentially expressed in two major passerine suborders. These phenomena suggest that GH genes may be evolving novel adaptive roles in passerine birds.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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