4.3 Article

The Evolution of Hemocyanin Genes in Caenogastropoda: Gene Duplications and Intron Accumulation in Highly Diverse Gastropods

期刊

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION
卷 89, 期 9-10, 页码 639-655

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00239-021-10036-y

关键词

Hemocyanin; Adaptation; Gene structure; Intron accumulation; Gene duplication; Caenogastropoda

资金

  1. German Research Foundation (DFG) [LI998/15-1]
  2. Wagner and the Feldbausch Foundation
  3. Projekt DEAL

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study reveals multiple gene duplications and intron gains within Caenogastropoda, indicating these as general features of Apogastropoda hemocyanins. While exon-intron structures are consistent within Tectipleura lineages, they vary significantly within Caenogastropoda and even among paralogous hemocyanin genes of the same species. This suggests that intron accumulation occurred gradually within Caenogastropoda, leading to a multitude of introns.
Hemocyanin is the oxygen transport protein of most molluscs and represents an important physiological factor that has to be well-adapted to their environments because of the strong influences of abiotic factors on its oxygen affinity. Multiple independent gene duplications and intron gains have been reported for hemocyanin genes of Tectipleura (Heterobranchia) and the caenogastropod species Pomacea canaliculata, which contrast with the uniform gene architectures of hemocyanins in Vetigastropoda. The goal of this study was to analyze hemocyanin gene evolution within the diverse group of Caenogastropoda in more detail. Our findings reveal multiple gene duplications and intron gains and imply that these represent general features of Apogastropoda hemocyanins. Whereas hemocyanin exon-intron structures are identical within different Tectipleura lineages, they differ strongly within Caenogastropoda among phylogenetic groups as well as between paralogous hemocyanin genes of the same species. Thus, intron accumulation took place more gradually within Caenogastropoda but finally led to a similar consequence, namely, a multitude of introns. Since both phenomena occurred independently within Heterobranchia and Caenogastropoda, the results support the hypothesis that introns may contribute to adaptive radiation by offering new opportunities for genetic variability (multiple paralogs that may evolve differently) and regulation (multiple introns). Our study indicates that adaptation of hemocyanin genes may be one of several factors that contributed to the evolution of the large diversity of Apogastropoda. While questions remain, this hypothesis is presented as a starting point for the further study of hemocyanin genes and possible correlations between hemocyanin diversity and adaptive radiation.

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