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03-24-2003, 10:17 AM | #1 | |
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Human olfaction and pheremone transduction
Two interesting articles in the most recent issue of PNAS . The first article (Gilad et al., 2003) provides evidence for greatly reduced selective pressure on human olfactory receptor genes. Far more OR genes have been mutated to pseudogenes (~60%) in humans than in mice or other primates (~20% in mice).
The second article (Liman and Innan, 2003) shows that the vomeronasal organ [which is probably nonfunctional for pheremone transduction in humans, because a gene required for its function in mice TRPC2, is a pseduogene in humans] probably became nonfunctional fairly early in primate evolution, before the divergence of apes and Old World monkies. Quote:
Human specific loss of olfactory receptor genes. PNAS 2003 100: 3324-3327 Emily R. Liman and Hideki Innan. Relaxed selective pressure on an essential component of pheromone transduction in primate evolution. PNAS 2003 100: 3328-3332. Patrick |
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