| Literature DB >> 33481165 |
Peng Cao1, Qinlong Dai2,3, Cao Deng4, Xiang Zhao5, Shishan Qin4, Jian Yang4, Ran Ju6, Zhiwen Wang5, Guoqing Lu7, Xiaodong Gu8, Zhisong Yang9, Lifeng Zhu10,11.
Abstract
Animal body coverings provide protection and allow for adaptation to environmental pressures such as heat, ultraviolet radiation, water loss, and mechanical forces. Here, using a comparative genomics analysis of 39 mammal species spanning three skin covering types (hairless, scaly and spiny), we found some genes (e.g., UVRAG, POLH, and XPC) involved in skin inflammation, skin innate immunity, and ultraviolet radiation damage repair were under selection in hairless ocean mammals (e.g., whales and manatees). These signatures might be associated with a high risk of skin diseases from pathogens and ultraviolet radiation. Moreover, the genomes from three spiny mammal species shared convergent genomic regions (EPHB2, EPHA4, and NIN) and unique positively selected genes (FZD6, INVS, and CDC42) involved in skin cell polarity, which might be related to the development of spines. In scaly mammals, the shared convergent genomic regions (e.g., FREM2) were associated with the integrity of the skin epithelium and epidermal adhesion. This study identifies potential convergent genomic features among distantly related mammals with the same skin covering type.Entities:
Keywords: comparative genomics; convergent evolution; hairless mammals; scaly mammals; skin coverings; spiny mammals
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33481165 DOI: 10.1007/s11427-020-1841-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci China Life Sci ISSN: 1674-7305 Impact factor: 6.038