Contrasting Patterns of Gene Duplication, Relocation, and Selection Among Human Taste Genes

Evol Bioinform Online. 2021 Jul 24:17:11769343211035141. doi: 10.1177/11769343211035141. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

In humans, taste genes are responsible for perceiving at least 5 different taste qualities. Human taste genes' evolutionary mechanisms need to be explored. We compiled a list of 69 human taste-related genes and divided them into 7 functional groups. We carried out comparative genomic and evolutionary analyses for these taste genes based on 8 vertebrate species. We found that relative to other groups of human taste genes, human TAS2R genes have a higher proportion of tandem duplicates, suggesting that tandem duplications have contributed significantly to the expansion of the human TAS2R gene family. Human TAS2R genes tend to have fewer collinear genes in outgroup species and evolve faster, suggesting that human TAS2R genes have experienced more gene relocations. Moreover, human TAS2R genes tend to be under more relaxed purifying selection than other genes. Our study sheds new insights into diverse and contrasting evolutionary patterns among human taste genes.

Keywords: Taste gene; collinearity; comparative genomics; evolution; gene duplication mode; gene relocation; tandem duplication.