4.4 Article

Elevation as a selective force on mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes of the Phrynocephalus lizards in the Tibetan plateau

Journal

CURRENT ZOOLOGY
Volume 67, Issue 2, Pages 191-199

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/cz/zoaa056

Keywords

elevation; positive selection; reptile; plateau; respiratory chain complexes

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31772447]
  2. Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research Program (STEP) [2019 QZKK0501]

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This study investigates positive selection in respiratory chain complexes and their assembly factors in 15 Chinese Phrynocephalus lizard species living in high-altitude environments. The results show that lineages evolving from low to high altitude have stronger signals of positive selection, indicating potential adaptations to extreme high elevations through genetic mechanisms.
Animals living in extremely high elevations have to adapt to low temperatures and low oxygen availability (hypoxia), but the underlying genetic mechanisms associated with these adaptations are still unclear. The mitochondria! respiratory chain can provide >95% of the ATP in animal cells, and its efficiency is influenced by temperature and oxygen availability. Therefore, the respiratory chain complexes (RCCs) could be important molecular targets for positive selection associated with respiratory adaptation in high-altitude environments. Here, we investigated positive selection in 5 RCCs and their assembly factors by analyzing sequences of 106 genes obtained through RNA-seq of all 15 Chinese Phrynocephalus lizard species, which are distributed from lowlands to the Tibetan plateau (average elevation >4,500 m). Our results indicate that evidence of positive selection on RCC genes is not significantly different from assembly factors, and we found no difference in selective pressures among the 5 complexes. We specifically looked for positive selection in lineages where changes in habitat elevation happened. The group of lineages evolving from low to high altitude show stronger signals of positive selection than lineages evolving from high to low elevations. Lineages evolving from low to high elevation also have more shared codons under positive selection, though the changes are not equivalent at the amino acid level. This study advances our understanding of the genetic basis of animal respiratory metabolism evolution in extreme high environments and provides candidate genes for further confirmation with functional analyses.

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