Characterisation of monotreme caseins reveals lineage-specific expansion of an ancestral casein locus in mammals
Christophe M. Lefèvre A B C D , Julie A. Sharp A B and Kevin R. Nicholas A BA Institute for Technology Research and Innovation, Deakin University, Waurn Ponds, Vic. 3217, Australia.
B CRC for Innovative Dairy Products, Department of Zoology, University of Melbourne, Vic. 3010, Australia.
C Victorian Bioinformatics Consortium, Monash University, Clayton, Vic. 3080, Australia.
D Corresponding author. Email: clefevre@deakin.edu.au
Reproduction, Fertility and Development 21(8) 1015-1027 https://doi.org/10.1071/RD09083
Submitted: 2 April 2009 Accepted: 15 September 2009 Published: 30 October 2009
Abstract
Using a milk-cell cDNA sequencing approach we characterised milk-protein sequences from two monotreme species, platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) and echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus) and found a full set of caseins and casein variants. The genomic organisation of the platypus casein locus is compared with other mammalian genomes, including the marsupial opossum and several eutherians. Physical linkage of casein genes has been seen in the casein loci of all mammalian genomes examined and we confirm that this is also observed in platypus. However, we show that a recent duplication of β-casein occurred in the monotreme lineage, as opposed to more ancient duplications of α-casein in the eutherian lineage, while marsupials possess only single copies of α- and β-caseins. Despite this variability, the close proximity of the main α- and β-casein genes in an inverted tail–tail orientation and the relative orientation of the more distant kappa-casein genes are similar in all mammalian genome sequences so far available. Overall, the conservation of the genomic organisation of the caseins indicates the early, pre-monotreme development of the fundamental role of caseins during lactation. In contrast, the lineage-specific gene duplications that have occurred within the casein locus of monotremes and eutherians but not marsupials, which may have lost part of the ancestral casein locus, emphasises the independent selection on milk provision strategies to the young, most likely linked to different developmental strategies. The monotremes therefore provide insight into the ancestral drivers for lactation and how these have adapted in different lineages.
Additional keywords: lactation, milk, prototherian, sequencing.
Acknowledgements
We thank Peggy Rismiller of Kangaroo Island, SA, Australia and Katherine Belov from southern NSW for providing milk from echidna and platypus, and the platypus genome consortium for sharing information on the platypus genome sequence and its analysis.
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