基因组数据显示在异种辐射中平行的牙齿退化

Christopher A Emerling, Gillian C Gibb, Marie-Ka Tilak, Jonathan J Hughes, Melanie Kuch, Ana T Duggan, Hendrik N Poinar, Michael W Nachman, Frédéric Delsuc
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摘要

最近基因组数据的大量涌入为通过基因丢失和假基因化的退化进化或退化化的分子基础提供了更深入的见解。因此,对基因降解模式的分析有可能提供对退化解剖特征的进化史的见解。我们特别将这些原理应用于异种动物辐射(食蚁兽,树懒,犰狳),其特征是分类群在退化的牙齿表型中具有梯度。目前尚不清楚,现存异种人的这种模式是由于牙齿形态的古老而逐渐的衰退,还是反复平行发生的。我们通过检查大多数Xenarthra现存物种的11个核心牙齿基因来验证这些相互矛盾的假设,表征了它们在辐射过程中共同的失活突变和放松选择模式。在这里,我们报告的证据独立和独特的事件牙齿基因丢失的主要异种亚枝。首先,我们在树懒和食蚁兽的共同祖先中发现了牙釉质完全丧失的有力证据,这表明5个牙釉质相关基因(AMELX, AMTN, MMP20, ENAM, ACP4)失活。其次,虽然树懒的牙齿退化似乎已经停止,这可能是一个最终允许适应食草生活方式的关键事件,但食蚁兽在牙齿完全脱落的道路上继续失去基因。这一事件的回声记录在所有现存食蚁兽的基因组中,其特征是对牙本质形成至关重要的基因(DSPP)缺失2个bp,与牙齿保持相关的基因(ODAPH)可能共有1个bp的插入。相比之下,在两个主要的犰狳分支中,与牙齿-牙龈连接和成釉发生有关的基因似乎在失去全部或部分牙釉质之前就独立失活了。这些基因组数据为解剖回归的多种途径和速率提供了证据,并强调了在化石稀少时使用假基因重建进化史的实用性。
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Genomic data suggest parallel dental vestigialization within the xenarthran radiation
The recent influx of genomic data has provided greater insights into the molecular basis for regressive evolution, or vestigialization, through gene loss and pseudogenization. As such, the analysis of gene degradation patterns has the potential to provide insights into the evolutionary history of regressed anatomical traits. We specifically applied these principles to the xenarthran radiation (anteaters, sloths, armadillos), which is characterized by taxa with a gradation in regressed dental phenotypes. Whether the pattern among extant xenarthrans is due to an ancient and gradual decay of dental morphology or occurred repeatedly in parallel is unknown. We tested these competing hypotheses by examining 11 core dental genes in most living species of Xenarthra, characterizing shared inactivating mutations and patterns of relaxed selection during their radiation. Here we report evidence of independent and distinct events of dental gene loss in the major xenarthran subclades. First, we found strong evidence of complete enamel loss in the common ancestor of sloths and anteaters, suggested by the inactivation of five enamel-associated genes (AMELX, AMTN, MMP20, ENAM, ACP4). Next, whereas dental regression appears to have halted in sloths, presumably a critical event that ultimately permitted adaptation to an herbivorous lifestyle, anteaters continued losing genes on the path towards complete tooth loss. Echoes of this event are recorded in the genomes of all living anteaters, being marked by a 2-bp deletion in a gene critical for dentinogenesis (DSPP) and a putative shared 1-bp insertion in a gene linked to tooth retention (ODAPH). By contrast, in the two major armadillo clades, genes pertaining to the dento-gingival junction and amelogenesis appear to have been independently inactivated prior to losing all or some enamel. These genomic data provide evidence for multiple pathways and rates of anatomical regression, and underscore the utility of using pseudogenes to reconstruct evolutionary history when fossils are sparse.
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