Evolutionary dynamics of olfactory receptor genes in fishes and tetrapods

  1. Yoshihito Niimura* and
  2. Masatoshi Nei
  1. Institute of Molecular Evolutionary Genetics and Department of Biology, Pennsylvania State University, 328 Mueller Laboratory, University Park, PA 16802
  1. Contributed by Masatoshi Nei, March 9, 2005

Abstract

Olfaction, which is an important physiological function for the survival of mammals, is controlled by a large multigene family of olfactory receptor (OR) genes. Fishes also have this gene family, but the number of genes is known to be substantially smaller than in mammals. To understand the evolutionary dynamics of OR genes, we conducted a phylogenetic analysis of all functional genes identified from the genome sequences of zebrafish, pufferfish, frogs, chickens, humans, and mice. The results suggested that the most recent common ancestor between fishes and tetrapods had at least nine ancestral OR genes, and all OR genes identified were classified into nine groups, each of which originated from one ancestral gene. Eight of the nine group genes are still observed in current fish species, whereas only two group genes were found from mammalian genomes, showing that the OR gene family in fishes is much more diverse than in mammals. In mammals, however, one group of genes, γ, expanded enormously, containing ≈90% of the entire gene family. Interestingly, the gene groups observed in mammals or birds are nearly absent in fishes. The OR gene repertoire in frogs is as diverse as that in fishes, but the expansion of group γ genes also occurred, indicating that the frog OR gene family has both mammal- and fish-like characters. All of these observations can be explained by the environmental change that organisms have experienced from the time of the common ancestor of all vertebrates to the present.

Footnotes

  • * To whom correspondence should be sent at the present address: Department of Bioinformatics, Medical Research Institute, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, 1-5-45 Yushima, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-8510, Japan. E-mail: niimura{at}bioinfo.tmd.ac.jp.

  • Author contributions: Y.N. and M.N. designed research; Y.N. performed research; Y.N. analyzed data; and Y.N. and M.N. wrote the paper.

  • Abbreviations: OR, olfactory receptor; NJ, neighbor-joining; MRCA, most recent common ancestor; GPCR, G protein-coupled receptor; DDBJ, DNA Databank of Japan.

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