Authors
Maxime Policarpo, Maude W Baldwin, Didier Casane, Walter Salzburger
Publication date
2024/2/15
Journal
Nature Communications
Volume
15
Issue
1
Pages
1421
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Chemoreception – the ability to smell and taste – is an essential sensory modality of most animals. The number and type of chemical stimuli that animals can perceive depends primarily on the diversity of chemoreceptors they possess and express. In vertebrates, six families of G protein-coupled receptors form the core of their chemosensory system, the olfactory/pheromone receptor gene families OR, TAAR, V1R and V2R, and the taste receptors T1R and T2R. Here, we study the vertebrate chemoreceptor gene repertoire and its evolutionary history. Through the examination of 1,527 vertebrate genomes, we uncover substantial differences in the number and composition of chemoreceptors across vertebrates. We show that the chemoreceptor gene families are co-evolving, highly dynamic, and characterized by lineage-specific expansions (for example, OR in tetrapods; TAAR, T1R in teleosts; V1R in mammals; V2R …
Total citations
Scholar articles
M Policarpo, MW Baldwin, D Casane, W Salzburger - Nature Communications, 2024