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Genes lost during the transition from land to water in cetaceans highlight genomic changes associated with aquatic adaptations

Authors :
Matthias Huelsmann
Virag Sharma
Nikolai Hecker
Mark S. Springer
Michael Hiller
John Gatesy
Source :
Science advances, Science Advances, 5 (9), Science Advances
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Several genes lost in the ancestors of whales and dolphins likely contributed to adapting to a fully aquatic environment.<br />The transition from land to water in whales and dolphins (cetaceans) was accompanied by remarkable adaptations. To reveal genomic changes that occurred during this transition, we screened for protein-coding genes that were inactivated in the ancestral cetacean lineage. We found 85 gene losses. Some of these were likely beneficial for cetaceans, for example, by reducing the risk of thrombus formation during diving (F12 and KLKB1), erroneous DNA damage repair (POLM), and oxidative stress–induced lung inflammation (MAP3K19). Additional gene losses may reflect other diving-related adaptations, such as enhanced vasoconstriction during the diving response (mediated by SLC6A18) and altered pulmonary surfactant composition (SEC14L3), while loss of SLC4A9 relates to a reduced need for saliva. Last, loss of melatonin synthesis and receptor genes (AANAT, ASMT, and MTNR1A/B) may have been a precondition for adopting unihemispheric sleep. Our findings suggest that some genes lost in ancestral cetaceans were likely involved in adapting to a fully aquatic lifestyle.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science advances, Science Advances, 5 (9), Science Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2cf743b0afb1ea16b149a2658b36e6cd