Wakefield Matthew J, Anderson Mark, Chang Ellen, Wei Ke-Jun, Kaul Rajinder, Graves Jennifer A Marshall, Grützner Frank, Deeb Samir S
ARC, Centre for Kangaroo Genomics, Bioinformatics, The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute, Parkville, Australia.
Vis Neurosci. 2008 May-Jun;25(3):257-64. doi: 10.1017/S0952523808080255.
We have determined the sequence and genomic organization of the genes encoding the cone visual pigment of the platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) and the echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus), and inferred their spectral properties and evolutionary pathways. We prepared platypus and echidna retinal RNA and used primers of the middle-wave-sensitive (MWS), long-wave-sensitive (LWS), and short-wave sensitive (SWS1) pigments corresponding to coding sequences that are highly conserved among mammals; to PCR amplify the corresponding pigment sequences. Amplification from the retinal RNA revealed the expression of LWS pigment mRNA that is homologous in sequence and spectral properties to the primate LWS visual pigments. However, we were unable to amplify the mammalian SWS1 pigment from these two species, indicating this gene was lost prior to the echidna-platypus divergence (21 MYA). Subsequently, when the platypus genome sequence became available, we found an LWS pigment gene in a conserved genomic arrangement that resembles the primate pigment, but, surprisingly we found an adjacent (20 kb) SWS2 pigment gene within this conserved genomic arrangement. We obtained the same result after sequencing the echidna genes. The encoded SWS2 pigment is predicted to have a wavelength of maximal absorption of about 440 nm, and is paralogous to SWS pigments typically found in reptiles, birds, and fish but not in mammals. This study suggests the locus control region (LCR) has played an important role in the conservation of photo receptor gene arrays and the control of their spatial and temporal expression in the retina in all mammals. In conclusion, a duplication event of an ancestral cone visual pigment gene, followed by sequence divergence and selection gave rise to the LWS and SWS2 visual pigments. So far, the echidna and platypus are the only mammals that share the gene structure of the LWS-SWS2 pigment gene complex with reptiles, birds and fishes.
我们已经确定了编码鸭嘴兽(Ornithorhynchus anatinus)和针鼹(Tachyglossus aculeatus)视锥视觉色素的基因序列及基因组结构,并推断了它们的光谱特性和进化途径。我们制备了鸭嘴兽和针鼹的视网膜RNA,并使用了与哺乳动物中高度保守的编码序列相对应的中波敏感(MWS)、长波敏感(LWS)和短波敏感(SWS1)色素的引物;通过聚合酶链反应(PCR)扩增相应的色素序列。从视网膜RNA进行的扩增揭示了LWS色素mRNA的表达,其在序列和光谱特性上与灵长类动物的LWS视锥色素同源。然而,我们无法从这两个物种中扩增出哺乳动物的SWS1色素,这表明该基因在针鼹 - 鸭嘴兽分化(2100万年前)之前就已丢失。随后,当鸭嘴兽基因组序列可用时,我们在一个保守的基因组排列中发现了一个LWS色素基因,其类似于灵长类动物的色素,但令人惊讶的是,我们在这个保守的基因组排列中发现了一个相邻的(20 kb)SWS2色素基因。对针鼹基因进行测序后我们得到了相同的结果。预测编码的SWS2色素的最大吸收波长约为440 nm,并且与通常在爬行动物、鸟类和鱼类而非哺乳动物中发现的SWS色素是旁系同源的。这项研究表明,基因座控制区域(LCR)在所有哺乳动物视网膜中光感受器基因阵列的保守以及它们的空间和时间表达控制中发挥了重要作用。总之,一个祖先视锥视觉色素基因的复制事件,随后是序列分歧和选择,产生了LWS和SWS2视锥色素。到目前为止,针鼹和鸭嘴兽是仅有的与爬行动物、鸟类和鱼类共享LWS - SWS2色素基因复合体基因结构的哺乳动物。