4.8 Article

Loss of sweet taste despite the conservation of sweet receptor genes in insectivorous bats

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2021516118

Keywords

diet; taste receptor; molecular evolution; functional assay

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31722051, 31672272, 32000385]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province [2019CFA075]
  3. Ten-thousand Talents Program
  4. China National Postdoctoral Program for Innovative Talents [BX20200255]
  5. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2020M672407]
  6. Hubei Provincial Postdoctoral Foundation
  7. GDAS Special Project of Science and Technology Development [2017GDASCX-0107, 2018GDASCX-0107]
  8. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders at the NIH [R01DC010842]

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Despite the high conservation of sweet taste receptor genes between frugivorous and insectivorous bats at the sequence level, there is a significant functional divergence, as evidenced by behavioral experiments and cell-based assays. Frugivorous bats exhibited a strong preference for natural sugars, while insectivorous bats did not, indicating a close relationship between the functional evolution of sweet taste receptors and diet. This study highlights the importance of combining different approaches in molecular evolutionary studies and cautions against relying solely on sequence conservation for inferring protein and physiological function.
The evolution of taste perception is usually associated with the ecology and dietary changes of organisms. However, the association between feeding ecology and taste receptor evolution is unclear in some lineages of vertebrate animals. One example is the sweet taste receptor gene Tas1r2. Previous analysis of partial sequences has revealed that Tas1r2 has undergone equally strong purifying selection between insectivorous and frugivorous bats. To test whether the sweet taste function is also important in bats with contrasting diets, we examined the complete coding sequences of both sweet taste receptor genes (Tas1r2 and Tas1r3) in 34 representative bat species. Although these two genes are highly conserved between frugivorous and insectivorous bats at the sequence level, our behavioral experiments revealed that an insectivorous bat (Myotis ricketti) showed no preference for natural sugars, whereas the frugivorous species (Rousettus leschenaultii) showed strong preferences for sucrose and fructose. Furthermore, while both sweet taste receptor genes are expressed in the taste tissue of insectivorous and frugivorous bats, our cellbased assays revealed striking functional divergence: the sweet taste receptors of frugivorous bats are able to respond to natural sugars whereas those of insectivorous bats are not, which is consistent with the behavioral preference tests, suggesting that functional evolution of sweet taste receptors is closely related to diet. This comprehensive study suggests that using sequence conservation alone could be misleading in inferring protein and physiological function and highlights the power of combining behavioral experiments, expression analysis, and functional assays in molecular evolutionary studies.

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