Liman Emily R
Neuroscience Program, Molecular and Computational Biology Program, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Southern California, 3641 Watt Way, Los Angeles, CA 90089, USA.
Pflugers Arch. 2006 Nov;453(2):125-31. doi: 10.1007/s00424-006-0120-3. Epub 2006 Aug 3.
Sensory organs provide key and, in many cases, species-specific information that allows animals to effectively forage, find mates, and avoid hazards. The primary sensors for the vertebrate senses of vision, taste, and smell are G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) expressed by sensory receptor cells that initiate intracellular signal transduction cascades in response to activation by appropriate stimuli. The identification of sensory GPCRs and their related downstream transduction components from a variety of species has provided an essential tool for understanding the molecular evolution of sensory systems. Expansion of the number of genes encoding sensory GPCRs has, in some cases, expanded the repertoire of signals that animals detect, allowing them to occupy new niches, while, in other cases, evolution has favored a reduction in the repertoire of receptors and their cognate signal transduction components when these signals no longer provide a selective advantage. This review will focus on recent studies that have identified molecular changes in vision, smell, taste, and pheromone detection during primate evolution.
感觉器官提供关键信息,而且在很多情况下是物种特异性信息,这些信息使动物能够有效地觅食、寻找配偶并躲避危险。脊椎动物视觉、味觉和嗅觉的主要传感器是感觉受体细胞表达的G蛋白偶联受体(GPCR),这些受体在受到适当刺激激活后会启动细胞内信号转导级联反应。从多种物种中鉴定感觉GPCR及其相关的下游转导成分,为理解感觉系统的分子进化提供了重要工具。在某些情况下,编码感觉GPCR的基因数量增加,扩大了动物检测的信号库,使它们能够占据新的生态位;而在其他情况下,当这些信号不再提供选择优势时,进化则倾向于减少受体及其同源信号转导成分的库。本综述将聚焦于近期的研究,这些研究已经确定了灵长类动物进化过程中视觉、嗅觉、味觉和信息素检测方面的分子变化。