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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Convergent Evolution of Himalayan Marmot with Some High-Altitude Animals through ND3 Protein

Journal:
Animals
Year:
2021
Authors:
Ziqiang Bao et al.
Affiliation:
College of Life Science and Technology, Central South University of Forestry and Technology, Changsha 410004, China · CH

Abstract

The Himalayan marmot (<i>Marmota himalayana</i>) mainly lives on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and it adopts multiple strategies to adapt to high-altitude environments. According to the principle of convergent evolution as expressed in genes and traits, the Himalayan marmot might display similar changes to other local species at the molecular level. In this study, we obtained high-quality sequences of the <i>CYTB</i> gene, CYTB protein, <i>ND3</i> gene, and ND3 protein of representative species (n = 20) from NCBI, and divided them into the marmot group (n = 11), the plateau group (n = 8), and the Himalayan marmot (n = 1). To explore whether plateau species have convergent evolution on the microscale level, we built a phylogenetic tree, calculated genetic distance, and analyzed the conservation and space structure of Himalayan marmot ND3 protein. The marmot group and Himalayan marmots were in the same branch of the phylogenetic tree for the <i>CYTB</i> gene and CYTB protein, and mean genetic distance was 0.106 and 0.055, respectively, which was significantly lower than the plateau group. However, the plateau group and the Himalayan marmot were in the same branch of the phylogenetic tree, and the genetic distance was only 10% of the marmot group for the ND3 protein, except <i>Marmota flaviventris</i>. In addition, some sites of the ND3 amino acid sequence of Himalayan marmots were conserved from the plateau group, but not the marmot group. This could lead to different structures and functional diversifications. These findings indicate that Himalayan marmots have adapted to the plateau environment partly through convergent evolution of the ND3 protein with other plateau animals, however, this protein is not the only strategy to adapt to high altitudes, as there may have other methods to adapt to this environment.

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Original publication: https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11020251