Prestin Shows Divergent Evolution Between Constant Frequency Echolocating Bats
The gene Prestin encodes a motor protein that is thought to confer the high-frequency sensitivity and selectivity that characterizes the mammalian auditory system. Recent research shows that the Prestin gene has undergone a burst of positive selection on the ancestral branch of the Old World horsesh...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of molecular evolution 2011-10, Vol.73 (3-4), p.109-115 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The gene
Prestin
encodes a motor protein that is thought to confer the high-frequency sensitivity and selectivity that characterizes the mammalian auditory system. Recent research shows that the
Prestin
gene has undergone a burst of positive selection on the ancestral branch of the Old World horseshoe and leaf-nosed bats (Rhinolophidae and Hipposideridae, respectively), and also on the branch leading to echolocating cetaceans. Moreover, these two groups share a large number of convergent amino acid sequence replacements. Horseshoe and leaf-nosed bats exhibit narrowband echolocation, in which the emitted calls are based on the second harmonic of a predominantly constant frequency (CF) component, the frequency of which is also over-represented in the cochlea. This highly specialized form of echolocation has also evolved independently in the neotropical Parnell’s mustached bat (
Pteronotus parnellii
). To test whether the convergent evolution of CF echolocation between lineages has arisen from common changes in the
Prestin
gene, we sequenced the
Prestin
coding region (~2,212 bp, >99% coverage) in
P. parnellii
and several related species that use broadband echolocation calls. Our reconstructed
Prestin
gene tree and amino acid tree showed that
P. parnellii
did not group together with Old World horseshoe and leaf-nosed bats, but rather clustered within its true sister species. Comparisons of sequences confirmed that
P. parnellii
shared most amino acid changes with its congeners, and we found no evidence of positive selection in the branch leading to the genus of
Pteronotus
. Our result suggests that the adaptive changes seen in
Prestin
in horseshoe and leaf-nosed bats are not necessary for CF echolocation in
P. parnellii
. |
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ISSN: | 0022-2844 1432-1432 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00239-011-9460-5 |