Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
A major challenge in evolutionary biology is to identify the genes underlying adaptation. The oxygentransporting
haemoglobins directly link external conditions with metabolic needs and therefore represent
a unique system for studying environmental effects on molecular evolution. We have discovered two
haemoglobin polymorphisms in Atlantic cod populations inhabiting varying temperature and oxygen regimes
in the North Atlantic. Three-dimensional modelling of the tetrameric haemoglobin structure demonstrated
that the two amino acid replacementsMet55beta1Val and Lys62beta1Ala are located at crucial positions of the alpha1beta1
subunit interface and haempocket, respectively. The replacements are proposed to affect the oxygen-binding
properties by modifying the haemoglobin quaternary structure and electrostatic feature. Intriguingly, the
same molecularmechanismfor facilitating oxygen binding is found in avian species adapted to high altitudes,
illustrating convergent evolution in water- and air-breathing vertebrates to reduction in environmental
oxygen availability. Cod populations inhabiting the cold Arctic waters and the low-oxygen Baltic Sea seem
well adapted to these conditions by possessing the high oxygen affinity Val55-Ala62 haplotype, while the
temperature-insensitive Met55-Lys62 haplotype predominates in the southern populations. The distinct
distributions of the functionally different haemoglobin variants indicate that the present biogeography of this
ecologically and economically important species might be seriously affected by global warming.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
DE ROSA, MARIA CRISTINA
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: