Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-7-49
Title: Sequencing and comparative analysis of fugu protocadherin clusters reveal diversity of protocadherin genes among teleosts
Authors: Yu, W.-P
Yew, K
Rajasegaran, V
Venkatesh, B 
Keywords: article
behavior
comparative study
evolution
gene cluster
gene duplication
gene locus
gene sequence
genetic variability
genomics
nonhuman
nucleotide sequence
orthology
phylogeny
physiology
puffer fish
teleost
vertebrate
animal
fish
gene conversion
genetics
molecular genetics
multigene family
puffer fish
sequence homology
zebra fish
Coelacanthidae
Crossopterygii
Danio rerio
Mammalia
Takifugu
Takifugu rubripes
Teleostei
Tetraodontidae
Vertebrata
cadherin
fish protein
Animals
Cadherins
Fish Proteins
Fishes
Gene Conversion
Molecular Sequence Data
Multigene Family
Phylogeny
Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid
Takifugu
Variation (Genetics)
Zebrafish
Issue Date: 2007
Citation: Yu, W.-P, Yew, K, Rajasegaran, V, Venkatesh, B (2007). Sequencing and comparative analysis of fugu protocadherin clusters reveal diversity of protocadherin genes among teleosts. BMC Evolutionary Biology 7 : 49. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-7-49
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Background. The synaptic cell adhesion molecules, protocadherins, are a vertebrate innovation that accompanied the emergence of the neural tube and the elaborate central nervous system. In mammals, the protocadherins are encoded by three closely-linked clusters (?, ? and ?) of tandem genes and are hypothesized to provide a molecular code for specifying the remarkably-diverse neural connections in the central nervous system. Like mammals, the coelacanth, a lobe-finned fish, contains a single protocadherin locus, also arranged into ?, ? and ? clusters. Zebrafish, however, possesses two protocadherin loci that contain more than twice the number of genes as the coelacanth, but arranged only into ? and ? clusters. To gain further insight into the evolutionary history of protocadherin clusters, we have sequenced and analyzed protocadherin clusters from the compact genome of the pufferfish, Fugu rubripes. Results. Fugu contains two unlinked protocadherin loci, Pcdh1 and Pcdh2, that collectively consist of at least 77 genes. The fugu Pcdh1 locus has been subject to extensive degeneration, resulting in the complete loss of Pcdh1? cluster. The fugu Pcdh genes have undergone lineage-specific regional gene conversion processes that have resulted in a remarkable regional sequence homogenization among paralogs in the same subcluster. Phylogenetic analyses show that most protocadherin genes are orthologous between fugu and zebrafish either individually or as paralog groups. Based on the inferred phylogenetic relationships of fugu and zebrafish genes, we have reconstructed the evolutionary history of protocadherin clusters in the teleost fish lineage. Conclusion. Our results demonstrate the exceptional evolutionary dynamism of protocadherin genes in vertebrates in general, and in teleost fishes in particular. Besides the 'fish-specific' whole genome duplication, the evolution of protocadherin genes in teleost fishes is influenced by lineage-specific gene losses, tandem gene duplications and regional sequence homogenization. The dynamic protocadherin clusters might have led to the diversification of neural circuitry among teleosts, and contributed to the behavioral and physiological diversity of teleosts. © 2007 Yu et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Source Title: BMC Evolutionary Biology
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/177997
ISSN: 14712148
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-7-49
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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