| Literature DB >> 31221829 |
Zeshan Lin1, Lei Chen1, Xianqing Chen1, Yingbin Zhong2,3, Yue Yang1, Wenhao Xia1, Chang Liu1, Wenbo Zhu1, Han Wang2,3, Biyao Yan1, Yifeng Yang4, Xing Liu5, Kjersti Sternang Kvie6, Knut Håkon Røed6, Kun Wang1, Wuhan Xiao5, Haijun Wei4, Guangyu Li4, Rasmus Heller7, M Thomas P Gilbert8,9, Qiang Qiu10, Wen Wang10,11,12, Zhipeng Li13.
Abstract
The reindeer is an Arctic species that exhibits distinctive biological characteristics, for which the underlying genetic basis remains largely unknown. We compared the genomes of reindeer against those of other ruminants and nonruminant mammals to reveal the genetic basis of light arrhythmicity, high vitamin D metabolic efficiency, the antler growth trait of females, and docility. We validate that two reindeer vitamin D metabolic genes (CYP27B1 and POR) show signs of positive selection and exhibit higher catalytic activity than those of other ruminants. A mutation upstream of the reindeer CCND1 gene endows an extra functional binding motif of the androgen receptor and thereby may result in female antlers. Furthermore, a mutation (proline-1172→threonine) in reindeer PER2 results in loss of binding ability with CRY1, which may explain circadian arrhythmicity in reindeer.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31221829 DOI: 10.1126/science.aav6312
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728