학술논문

The bovine lactation genome: insights into the evolution of mammalian milk.
Document Type
article
Source
Genome biology. 10(4)
Subject
Mammary Glands
Animal
Chromosomes
Mammalian
Milk
Animals
Mammals
Cattle
Humans
Milk Proteins
Chromosome Mapping
Computational Biology
Evolution
Molecular
Phylogeny
Lactation
Quantitative Trait Loci
Genome
Databases
Genetic
Female
Mammary Glands
Animal
Chromosomes
Mammalian
Evolution
Molecular
Databases
Genetic
Bioinformatics
Environmental Sciences
Biological Sciences
Information and Computing Sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundThe newly assembled Bos taurus genome sequence enables the linkage of bovine milk and lactation data with other mammalian genomes.ResultsUsing publicly available milk proteome data and mammary expressed sequence tags, 197 milk protein genes and over 6,000 mammary genes were identified in the bovine genome. Intersection of these genes with 238 milk production quantitative trait loci curated from the literature decreased the search space for milk trait effectors by more than an order of magnitude. Genome location analysis revealed a tendency for milk protein genes to be clustered with other mammary genes. Using the genomes of a monotreme (platypus), a marsupial (opossum), and five placental mammals (bovine, human, dog, mice, rat), gene loss and duplication, phylogeny, sequence conservation, and evolution were examined. Compared with other genes in the bovine genome, milk and mammary genes are: more likely to be present in all mammals; more likely to be duplicated in therians; more highly conserved across Mammalia; and evolving more slowly along the bovine lineage. The most divergent proteins in milk were associated with nutritional and immunological components of milk, whereas highly conserved proteins were associated with secretory processes.ConclusionsAlthough both copy number and sequence variation contribute to the diversity of milk protein composition across species, our results suggest that this diversity is primarily due to other mechanisms. Our findings support the essentiality of milk to the survival of mammalian neonates and the establishment of milk secretory mechanisms more than 160 million years ago.