Literature DB >> 15496549

Evolution of bitter taste receptors in humans and apes.

Anne Fischer1, Yoav Gilad, Orna Man, Svante Pääbo.   

Abstract

Bitter taste perception is crucial for the survival of organisms because it enables them to avoid the ingestion of potentially harmful substances. Bitter taste receptors are encoded by a gene family that in humans has been shown to contain 25 putatively functional genes and 8 pseudogenes and in mouse 33 putatively functional genes and 3 pseudogenes. Lineage-specific expansions of bitter taste receptors have taken place in both mouse and human, but very little is known about the evolution of these receptors in primates. We report the analysis of the almost complete repertoires of bitter taste receptor genes in human, great apes, and two Old World monkeys. As a group, these genes seem to be under little selective constraint compared with olfactory receptors and other genes in the studied species. However, in contrast to the olfactory receptor gene repertoire, where humans have a higher proportion of pseudogenes than apes, there is no evidence that the rate of loss of bitter taste receptor genes varies among humans and apes.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15496549     DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msi027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Evol        ISSN: 0737-4038            Impact factor:   16.240


  41 in total

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6.  Diet shapes the evolution of the vertebrate bitter taste receptor gene repertoire.

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Review 8.  Explaining human uniqueness: genome interactions with environment, behaviour and culture.

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10.  The repertoire of G-protein-coupled receptors in Xenopus tropicalis.

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