Evolution of bitter taste receptors in humans and apes |
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Authors: | Fischer Anne Gilad Yoav Man Orna Pääbo Svante |
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Institution: | * Max Plank Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany; Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520; Department of Structural Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel |
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Abstract: | Bitter taste perception is crucial for the survival of organismsbecause it enables them to avoid the ingestion of potentiallyharmful substances. Bitter taste receptors are encoded by agene family that in humans has been shown to contain 25 putativelyfunctional genes and 8 pseudogenes and in mouse 33 putativelyfunctional genes and 3 pseudogenes. Lineage-specific expansionsof bitter taste receptors have taken place in both mouse andhuman, but very little is known about the evolution of thesereceptors in primates. We report the analysis of the almostcomplete repertoires of bitter taste receptor genes in human,great apes, and two Old World monkeys. As a group, these genesseem to be under little selective constraint compared with olfactoryreceptors and other genes in the studied species. However, incontrast to the olfactory receptor gene repertoire, where humanshave a higher proportion of pseudogenes than apes, there isno evidence that the rate of loss of bitter taste receptor genesvaries among humans and apes. |
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Keywords: | bitter taste receptors selective constraint pseudogene |
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