Abstract
AbstractIn mice, ZP3r/sp56 is a binding partner to the egg coat protein ZP3 and may mediate induction of the acrosome reaction. ZP3r, as a member of the RCA cluster, is surrounded by paralogs, some of which have been shown to be evolving under positive selection. Sequence divergence paired with paralogous relationships with neighboring genes, has complicated the accurate identification of the human ZP3r ortholog. Here, we phylogenetically and syntenically resolve that the human ortholog of ZP3r is the pseudogene C4BPAP1. We investigate the evolution of this gene within primates. We observe independent pseudogenization events of ZP3r in all Apes with the exception of Orangutans, and many monkey species. ZP3r in both primates that retain ZP3r and rodents contains positively selected sites. We hypothesize that redundant mechanisms mediate ZP3 recognition in mammals and ZP3r’s relative importance to ZP recognition varies across species.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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