Mello C V, Lovell P V
Dept. Behavioral Neuroscience, Oregon Health & Science University, L470, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd., Portland, OR 97239, United States.
Gen Comp Endocrinol. 2018 Jan 15;256:123-129. doi: 10.1016/j.ygcen.2017.05.023. Epub 2017 Jun 17.
The genomics era has brought along the completed sequencing of a large number of bird genomes that cover a broad range of the avian phylogenetic tree (>30 orders), leading to major novel insights into avian biology and evolution. Among recent findings, the discovery that birds lack a large number of protein coding genes that are organized in highly conserved syntenic clusters in other vertebrates is very intriguing, given the physiological importance of many of these genes. A considerable number of them play prominent endocrine roles, suggesting that birds evolved compensatory genetic or physiological mechanisms that allowed them to survive and thrive in spite of these losses. While further studies are needed to establish the exact extent of avian gene losses, these findings point to birds as potentially highly relevant model organisms for exploring the genetic basis and possible therapeutic approaches for a wide range of endocrine functions and disorders.
基因组学时代带来了大量鸟类基因组的完整测序,这些基因组覆盖了广泛的鸟类系统发育树(超过30个目),从而为鸟类生物学和进化带来了重大的新见解。在最近的发现中,有一项发现非常有趣,即鸟类缺少大量在其他脊椎动物中以高度保守的同线性簇形式组织的蛋白质编码基因,鉴于其中许多基因的生理重要性。其中相当一部分基因发挥着重要的内分泌作用,这表明鸟类进化出了补偿性的遗传或生理机制,使它们尽管失去了这些基因仍能生存和繁衍。虽然需要进一步研究来确定鸟类基因损失的确切程度,但这些发现表明鸟类可能是探索广泛内分泌功能和疾病的遗传基础及可能治疗方法的高度相关模型生物。