Sites of evolutionary divergence differ between olfactory and gustatory receptors of Drosophila

species and found significant differences between these two receptor types. This suggests that insect ORs and GRs have distinct molecular properties and mechanisms of ligand recognition and/or signal transduction.

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBiology letters (2005)
Main Authors Anastasia Gardiner, Roger K Butlin, William C Jordan, Michael G Ritchie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published The Royal Society
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Summary:species and found significant differences between these two receptor types. This suggests that insect ORs and GRs have distinct molecular properties and mechanisms of ligand recognition and/or signal transduction.
olfactory (ORs) and gustatory (GRs) receptors are evolutionarily unrelated to vertebrate ORs or nematode chemosensory receptors. Insect ORs display a reverse membrane topology compared with conventional G-protein-coupled receptors, suggesting that the mammalian scheme of chemosensory signal transduction cannot directly apply to insects. Experimental studies of GR membrane topology are lacking. We analysed the distribution of amino acid sites in GRs and ORs that show evidence for divergence under either positive selection or relaxed purifying constraints, in the genomes of 12
ISSN:1744-9561
1744-957X
DOI:10.1098/rsbl.2008.0723