TY - JOUR
T1 - Genetic variation at hair length candidate genes in elephants and the extinct woolly mammoth
AU - Roca, Alfred L.
AU - Ishida, Yasuko
AU - Nikolaidis, Nikolas
AU - Kolokotronis, Sergios Orestis
AU - Fratpietro, Stephen
AU - Stewardson, Kristin
AU - Hensley, Shannon
AU - Tisdale, Michele
AU - Boeskorov, Gennady
AU - Greenwood, Alex D.
N1 - The authors wish to thank R.D.E. MacPhee and D. Mol (CERPOLEX/MAMMUTHUS) for providing material from the Jarkov mammoth for analysis. We are grateful to the following colleagues for assistance with living elephant samples: N. Georgiadis (Mpala Research Centre, Laikipia, Kenya), R. Hanson and S.J. O'Brien (National Cancer Institute, NIH, Frederick, MD, USA), B. York and A. Baker (Rosamond Gifford Zoo at Burnet Park, Syracuse, NY, USA), and the governments of Gabon and South Africa. Samples were collected in full compliance with specific federal permits. We thank F. Hussain and D. Doyle for technical assistance, and J. Kehler for helpful advice. AR and YI thank M. Gadd and R. Ruggiero of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service African Elephant Conservation Fund for support. GB was supported by the Russian Foundation for Fundamental Research No. 09-04-98568-r_vostok_a. NN was supported by start-up funds from CSUF. SOK was supported by a DARPA postdoctoral fellowship.
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - Background. Like humans, the living elephants are unusual among mammals in being sparsely covered with hair. Relative to extant elephants, the extinct woolly mammoth, Mammuthus primigenius, had a dense hair cover and extremely long hair, which likely were adaptations to its subarctic habitat. The fibroblast growth factor 5 (FGF5) gene affects hair length in a diverse set of mammalian species. Mutations in FGF5 lead to recessive long hair phenotypes in mice, dogs, and cats; and the gene has been implicated in hair length variation in rabbits. Thus, FGF5 represents a leading candidate gene for the phenotypic differences in hair length notable between extant elephants and the woolly mammoth. We therefore sequenced the three exons (except for the 3' UTR) and a portion of the promoter of FGF5 from the living elephantid species (Asian, African savanna and African forest elephants) and, using protocols for ancient DNA, from a woolly mammoth. Results. Between the extant elephants and the mammoth, two single base substitutions were observed in FGF5, neither of which alters the amino acid sequence. Modeling of the protein structure suggests that the elephantid proteins fold similarly to the human FGF5 protein. Bioinformatics analyses and DNA sequencing of another locus that has been implicated in hair cover in humans, type I hair keratin pseudogene (KRTHAP1), also yielded negative results. Interestingly, KRTHAP1 is a pseudogene in elephantids as in humans (although fully functional in non-human primates). Conclusion. The data suggest that the coding sequence of the FGF5 gene is not the critical determinant of hair length differences among elephantids. The results are discussed in the context of hairlessness among mammals and in terms of the potential impact of large body size, subarctic conditions, and an aquatic ancestor on hair cover in the Proboscidea.
AB - Background. Like humans, the living elephants are unusual among mammals in being sparsely covered with hair. Relative to extant elephants, the extinct woolly mammoth, Mammuthus primigenius, had a dense hair cover and extremely long hair, which likely were adaptations to its subarctic habitat. The fibroblast growth factor 5 (FGF5) gene affects hair length in a diverse set of mammalian species. Mutations in FGF5 lead to recessive long hair phenotypes in mice, dogs, and cats; and the gene has been implicated in hair length variation in rabbits. Thus, FGF5 represents a leading candidate gene for the phenotypic differences in hair length notable between extant elephants and the woolly mammoth. We therefore sequenced the three exons (except for the 3' UTR) and a portion of the promoter of FGF5 from the living elephantid species (Asian, African savanna and African forest elephants) and, using protocols for ancient DNA, from a woolly mammoth. Results. Between the extant elephants and the mammoth, two single base substitutions were observed in FGF5, neither of which alters the amino acid sequence. Modeling of the protein structure suggests that the elephantid proteins fold similarly to the human FGF5 protein. Bioinformatics analyses and DNA sequencing of another locus that has been implicated in hair cover in humans, type I hair keratin pseudogene (KRTHAP1), also yielded negative results. Interestingly, KRTHAP1 is a pseudogene in elephantids as in humans (although fully functional in non-human primates). Conclusion. The data suggest that the coding sequence of the FGF5 gene is not the critical determinant of hair length differences among elephantids. The results are discussed in the context of hairlessness among mammals and in terms of the potential impact of large body size, subarctic conditions, and an aquatic ancestor on hair cover in the Proboscidea.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/70350310088
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/70350310088#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1186/1471-2148-9-232
DO - 10.1186/1471-2148-9-232
M3 - Article
C2 - 19747392
AN - SCOPUS:70350310088
SN - 1471-2148
VL - 9
JO - BMC Evolutionary Biology
JF - BMC Evolutionary Biology
IS - 1
M1 - 232
ER -