4.5 Article

Evolutionary insights into umami, sweet, and bitter taste receptors in amphibians

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 11, 期 24, 页码 18011-18025

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8398

关键词

amphibian; anurans; bitter taste receptor; caecilians; umami; sweet taste receptor

资金

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Henan Province [182300410071]
  2. Doctoral Research Foundation of Shangqiu Normal University [7001-700218]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study identified a large repertoire of intact Tas1r and Tas2r genes in amphibians, shaped by massive gene duplications and losses. Anurans possess a greater number of intact Tas2r genes compared to caecilians. Additionally, while no correlation was found between feeding preferences and the evolution of Tas1rs in amphibians, the expansion of Tas2rs may help amphibians adapt to both aquatic and terrestrial habitats.
Umami and sweet sensations provide animals with important dietary information for detecting and consuming nutrients, whereas bitter sensation helps animals avoid potentially toxic or harmful substances. Enormous progress has been made toward animal sweet/umami taste receptor (Tas1r) and bitter taste receptor (Tas2r). However, information about amphibians is mainly scarce. This study attempted to delineate the repertoire of Tas1r/Tas2r genes by searching for currently available genome sequences in 14 amphibian species. This study identified 16 Tas1r1, 9 Tas1r2, and 9 Tas1r3 genes to be intact and another 17 Tas1r genes to be pseudogenes or absent in the 14 amphibians. According to the functional prediction of Tas1r genes, two species have lost sweet sensation and seven species have lost both umami and sweet sensations. Anurans possessed a large number of intact Tas2rs, ranging from 39 to 178. In contrast, caecilians possessed a contractive bitter taste repertoire, ranging from 4 to 19. Phylogenetic and reconciling analysis revealed that the repertoire of amphibian Tas1rs and Tas2rs was shaped by massive gene duplications and losses. No correlation was found between feeding preferences and the evolution of Tas1rs in amphibians. However, the expansion of Tas2rs may help amphibians adapt to both aquatic and terrestrial habitats. Bitter detection may have played an important role in the evolutionary adaptation of vertebrates in the transition from water to land.

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