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Publication : Evolution of odorant receptors expressed in mammalian testes.

First Author  Branscomb A Year  2000
Journal  Genetics Volume  156
Issue  2 Pages  785-97
PubMed ID  11014824 Mgi Jnum  J:65104
Mgi Id  MGI:1891781 Doi  10.1093/genetics/156.2.785
Citation  Branscomb A, et al. (2000) Evolution of odorant receptors expressed in mammalian testes. Genetics 156(2):785-97
abstractText  About 10% of mammalian odorant receptors are transcribed in testes, and odorant-receptor proteins have been detected on mature spermatozoa. Testis-expressed odorant receptors (TORs) are hypothesized to play roles in sperm chemotaxis, but they might also be ordinary nasal odorant receptors (NORs) that are expressed gratuitously in testes. Under the sperm-chemotaxis hypothesis, TORs should be subject to intense sexual selection and therefore should show higher rates of amino acid substitution than NORs, but under the gratuitous-expression hypothesis, TORs are misidentified NORs and therefore should evolve like other NORs. To test these predictions, we estimated synonymous and nonsynonymous divergences of orthologous NOR and TOR coding sequences from rat and mouse. Contrary to both hypotheses, TORs are on average more highly conserved than NORs, especially in certain domains of the OR protein. This pattern suggests that some TORs might perform internal nonolfactory functions in testes; for example, they might participate in the regulation of sperm development. However, the pattern is also consistent with a modified gratuitous-expression model in which NORs with specialized ligand specificities are both more highly conserved than typical NORs and more likely to be expressed in testes.
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