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Comparative Analysis of Olfactory Receptor Repertoires Sheds Light on the Diet Adaptation of the Bamboo-Eating Giant Panda Based on the Chromosome-Level Genome

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Olfaction in animals plays important roles in many aspects, such as food recognition, mate detection and risk avoidance and social communication. Compared to other Ursidae species, the obligate bamboo feeder, giant panda, shows special diet, and how the diet transformation affects th...

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Autores principales: Zhou, Chuang, Liu, Yi, Zhao, Guangqing, Liu, Zhengwei, Chen, Qian, Yue, Bisong, Du, Chao, Zhang, Xiuyue
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10044402/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36978520
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13060979
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author Zhou, Chuang
Liu, Yi
Zhao, Guangqing
Liu, Zhengwei
Chen, Qian
Yue, Bisong
Du, Chao
Zhang, Xiuyue
author_facet Zhou, Chuang
Liu, Yi
Zhao, Guangqing
Liu, Zhengwei
Chen, Qian
Yue, Bisong
Du, Chao
Zhang, Xiuyue
author_sort Zhou, Chuang
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Olfaction in animals plays important roles in many aspects, such as food recognition, mate detection and risk avoidance and social communication. Compared to other Ursidae species, the obligate bamboo feeder, giant panda, shows special diet, and how the diet transformation affects the olfactory system remains little known. In this study, we identified the olfactory receptor (OR) genes of the giant panda based on the chromosome-level genome and conducted comparative analysis of OR genes among Ursidae species. The giant panda had 639 OR genes, and chromosome 8 had the most OR genes. The giant panda had 31 unique OR gene subfamilies (containing 35 OR genes), of which 10 genes were clustered into 8 subfamilies with 10 known human OR genes (OR8J3, OR51I1, OR10AC1, OR1S2, OR1S1, OR51S1, OR4M1, OR4M2, OR51T1 and OR5W2). Compared to other Ursidae species, the giant panda lacked OR genes similar to OR2B1, OR10G3, OR11H6 and OR11H7P, which may be related to the diet transformation from carnivore to herbivore. Hence, these results may shed light on the olfactory function and variation of the giant panda. ABSTRACT: The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) is the epitome of a flagship species for wildlife conservation and also an ideal model of adaptive evolution. As an obligate bamboo feeder, the giant panda relies on the olfaction for food recognition. The number of olfactory receptor (OR) genes and the rate of pseudogenes are the main factors affecting the olfactory ability of animals. In this study, we used the chromosome-level genome of the giant panda to identify OR genes and compared the genome sequences of OR genes with five other Ursidae species (spectacled bear (Tremarctos ornatus), American black bear (Ursus americanus), brown bear (Ursus arctos), polar bear (Ursus maritimus) and Asian black bear (Ursus thibetanus)). The giant panda had 639 OR genes, including 408 functional genes, 94 partial OR genes and 137 pseudogenes. Among them, 222 OR genes were detected and distributed on 18 chromosomes, and chromosome 8 had the most OR genes. A total of 448, 617, 582, 521 and 792 OR genes were identified in the spectacled bear, American black bear, brown bear, polar bear and Asian black bear, respectively. Clustering analysis based on the OR protein sequences of the six species showed that the OR genes distributed in 69 families and 438 subfamilies based on sequence similarity, and the six mammals shared 72 OR gene subfamilies, while the giant panda had 31 unique OR gene subfamilies (containing 35 genes). Among the 35 genes, there are 10 genes clustered into 8 clusters with 10 known human OR genes (OR8J3, OR51I1, OR10AC1, OR1S2, OR1S1, OR51S1, OR4M1, OR4M2, OR51T1 and OR5W2). However, the kind of odor molecules can be recognized by the 10 known human OR genes separately, which needs further research. The phylogenetic tree showed that 345 (about 84.56%) functional OR genes were clustered as Class-II, while only 63 (about 15.44%) functional OR genes were clustered as Class-I, which required further and more in-depth research. The potential odor specificity of some giant panda OR genes was identified through the similarity to human protein sequences. Sequences similar to OR2B1, OR10G3, OR11H6 and OR11H7P were giant panda-specific lacking, which may be related to the transformation and specialization from carnivore to herbivore of the giant panda. Since our reference to flavoring agents comes from human research, the possible flavoring agents from giant panda-specific OR genes need further investigation. Moreover, the conserved motifs of OR genes were highly conserved in Ursidae species. This systematic study of OR genes in the giant panda will provide a solid foundation for further research on the olfactory function and variation of the giant panda.
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spelling pubmed-100444022023-03-29 Comparative Analysis of Olfactory Receptor Repertoires Sheds Light on the Diet Adaptation of the Bamboo-Eating Giant Panda Based on the Chromosome-Level Genome Zhou, Chuang Liu, Yi Zhao, Guangqing Liu, Zhengwei Chen, Qian Yue, Bisong Du, Chao Zhang, Xiuyue Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Olfaction in animals plays important roles in many aspects, such as food recognition, mate detection and risk avoidance and social communication. Compared to other Ursidae species, the obligate bamboo feeder, giant panda, shows special diet, and how the diet transformation affects the olfactory system remains little known. In this study, we identified the olfactory receptor (OR) genes of the giant panda based on the chromosome-level genome and conducted comparative analysis of OR genes among Ursidae species. The giant panda had 639 OR genes, and chromosome 8 had the most OR genes. The giant panda had 31 unique OR gene subfamilies (containing 35 OR genes), of which 10 genes were clustered into 8 subfamilies with 10 known human OR genes (OR8J3, OR51I1, OR10AC1, OR1S2, OR1S1, OR51S1, OR4M1, OR4M2, OR51T1 and OR5W2). Compared to other Ursidae species, the giant panda lacked OR genes similar to OR2B1, OR10G3, OR11H6 and OR11H7P, which may be related to the diet transformation from carnivore to herbivore. Hence, these results may shed light on the olfactory function and variation of the giant panda. ABSTRACT: The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) is the epitome of a flagship species for wildlife conservation and also an ideal model of adaptive evolution. As an obligate bamboo feeder, the giant panda relies on the olfaction for food recognition. The number of olfactory receptor (OR) genes and the rate of pseudogenes are the main factors affecting the olfactory ability of animals. In this study, we used the chromosome-level genome of the giant panda to identify OR genes and compared the genome sequences of OR genes with five other Ursidae species (spectacled bear (Tremarctos ornatus), American black bear (Ursus americanus), brown bear (Ursus arctos), polar bear (Ursus maritimus) and Asian black bear (Ursus thibetanus)). The giant panda had 639 OR genes, including 408 functional genes, 94 partial OR genes and 137 pseudogenes. Among them, 222 OR genes were detected and distributed on 18 chromosomes, and chromosome 8 had the most OR genes. A total of 448, 617, 582, 521 and 792 OR genes were identified in the spectacled bear, American black bear, brown bear, polar bear and Asian black bear, respectively. Clustering analysis based on the OR protein sequences of the six species showed that the OR genes distributed in 69 families and 438 subfamilies based on sequence similarity, and the six mammals shared 72 OR gene subfamilies, while the giant panda had 31 unique OR gene subfamilies (containing 35 genes). Among the 35 genes, there are 10 genes clustered into 8 clusters with 10 known human OR genes (OR8J3, OR51I1, OR10AC1, OR1S2, OR1S1, OR51S1, OR4M1, OR4M2, OR51T1 and OR5W2). However, the kind of odor molecules can be recognized by the 10 known human OR genes separately, which needs further research. The phylogenetic tree showed that 345 (about 84.56%) functional OR genes were clustered as Class-II, while only 63 (about 15.44%) functional OR genes were clustered as Class-I, which required further and more in-depth research. The potential odor specificity of some giant panda OR genes was identified through the similarity to human protein sequences. Sequences similar to OR2B1, OR10G3, OR11H6 and OR11H7P were giant panda-specific lacking, which may be related to the transformation and specialization from carnivore to herbivore of the giant panda. Since our reference to flavoring agents comes from human research, the possible flavoring agents from giant panda-specific OR genes need further investigation. Moreover, the conserved motifs of OR genes were highly conserved in Ursidae species. This systematic study of OR genes in the giant panda will provide a solid foundation for further research on the olfactory function and variation of the giant panda. MDPI 2023-03-08 /pmc/articles/PMC10044402/ /pubmed/36978520 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13060979 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Zhou, Chuang
Liu, Yi
Zhao, Guangqing
Liu, Zhengwei
Chen, Qian
Yue, Bisong
Du, Chao
Zhang, Xiuyue
Comparative Analysis of Olfactory Receptor Repertoires Sheds Light on the Diet Adaptation of the Bamboo-Eating Giant Panda Based on the Chromosome-Level Genome
title Comparative Analysis of Olfactory Receptor Repertoires Sheds Light on the Diet Adaptation of the Bamboo-Eating Giant Panda Based on the Chromosome-Level Genome
title_full Comparative Analysis of Olfactory Receptor Repertoires Sheds Light on the Diet Adaptation of the Bamboo-Eating Giant Panda Based on the Chromosome-Level Genome
title_fullStr Comparative Analysis of Olfactory Receptor Repertoires Sheds Light on the Diet Adaptation of the Bamboo-Eating Giant Panda Based on the Chromosome-Level Genome
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Analysis of Olfactory Receptor Repertoires Sheds Light on the Diet Adaptation of the Bamboo-Eating Giant Panda Based on the Chromosome-Level Genome
title_short Comparative Analysis of Olfactory Receptor Repertoires Sheds Light on the Diet Adaptation of the Bamboo-Eating Giant Panda Based on the Chromosome-Level Genome
title_sort comparative analysis of olfactory receptor repertoires sheds light on the diet adaptation of the bamboo-eating giant panda based on the chromosome-level genome
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10044402/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36978520
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13060979
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