Abstract
Extant genes can be modified, or ‘tinkered with’, to provide new roles or new characteristics of these genes. At the genetic level, this often involves gene duplication and specialization of the resulting genes into particular functions. We investigate how ligand-receptor partnerships evolve after gene duplication. While significant work has been conducted in this area, the examination of additional models should help us better understand the proposed models and potentially reveal novel evolutionary patterns and dynamics. We use bioinformatics, comparative genomics and phylogenetic analyses to show that preproghrelin and prepromotilin descended from a common ancestor and that a gene duplication generated these two genes shortly after the divergence of amphibians and amniotes. The evolutionary history of the receptor family differs from that of their cognate ligands. GPR39 diverges first, and an ancestral receptor gives rise to receptors classified as fish-specific clade A, GHSR and MLNR by successive gene duplications occurring before the divergence of tetrapods and ray-finned fish. The ghrelin/GHSR system is maintained and functionally conserved from fish to mammals. Motilin-MLNR specificity must have arisen by ligand-receptor coevolution after the MLN hormone gene diverged from the GHRL gene in the amniote lineage. Conserved molecular machinery can give rise to new neuroendocrine response mechanisms by the co-option of duplicated genes. Gene duplication is both parsimonious and creative in producing elements for evolutionary tinkering and plays a major role in gene co-option, thus aiding the evolution of greater biological complexity.
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He, J., David, I.M. & Zhang, Y. Gene duplication plays a major role in gene co-option: Studies into the evolution of the motilin/ghrelin family and their receptors. Chin. Sci. Bull. 56, 2690–2697 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11434-011-4614-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11434-011-4614-9