Comparison of the canine and human olfactory receptor gene repertoires

  • P Quignon
  • , E Kirkness
  • , E Cadieu
  • , N Touleimat
  • , R Guyon
  • , C Renier
  • , C Hitte
  • , C Andre
  • , C Fraser
  • , F Galibert*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

100 Citations (Scopus)
115 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Background: Olfactory receptors (ORs), the first dedicated molecules with which odorants physically interact to arouse an olfactory sensation, constitute the largest gene family in vertebrates, including around 900 genes in human and 1,500 in the mouse. Whereas dogs, like many other mammals, have a much keener olfactory potential than humans, only 21 canine OR genes have been described to date.

Results: In this study, 817 novel canine OR sequences were identified, and 640 have been characterized. Of the 661 characterized OR sequences, representing half of the canine repertoire, 18% are predicted to be pseudogenes, compared with 63% in human and 20% in mouse. Phylogenetic analysis of 403 canine OR sequences identified 51 families, and radiation-hybrid mapping of 562 showed that they are distributed on 24 dog chromosomes, in 37 distinct regions. Most of these regions constitute clusters of 2 to 124 closely linked genes. The two largest clusters ( 124 and 109 OR genes) are located on canine chromosomes 18 and 21. They are orthologous to human clusters located on human chromosomes 11q11-q13 and HSA11p15, containing 174 and 115 ORs respectively.

Conclusions: This study shows a strongly conserved genomic distribution of OR genes between dog and human, suggesting that OR genes evolved from a common mammalian ancestral repertoire by successive duplications. In addition, the dog repertoire appears to have expanded relative to that of humans, leading to the emergence of specific canine OR genes.

Original languageEnglish
Article number80
Number of pages9
JournalGenome Biology
Volume4
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2003

Keywords

  • RADIATION HYBRID MAP
  • ODORANT RECEPTORS
  • HUMAN GENOME
  • GERM-CELLS
  • FAMILY
  • EXPRESSION
  • SEQUENCE
  • MOUSE
  • CONSTRUCTION
  • ORGANIZATION

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