Evolutionary history of the UCP gene family: gene duplication and selection
Joseph Hughes, Francois Criscuolo (DEPE-IPHC)

TL;DR
This study traces the evolutionary history of the UCP gene family across vertebrates, revealing gene duplications, losses, and strong purifying selection with a single positively selected site, highlighting their conserved function.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive phylogeny of UCP genes, identifying duplication events and the selective pressures shaping their evolution in vertebrates.
Findings
Two early vertebrate gene duplications identified.
UCP genes are under strong purifying selection.
One site shows evidence of positive Darwinian selection.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The uncoupling protein (UCP) genes belong to the superfamily of electron transport carriers of the mitochondrial inner membrane. Members of the uncoupling protein family are involved in thermogenesis and determining the functional evolution of UCP genes is important to understand the evolution of thermo-regulation in vertebrates. RESULTS: Sequence similarity searches of genome and scaffold data identified homologues of UCP in eutherians, teleosts and the first squamates uncoupling proteins. Phylogenetic analysis was used to characterize the family evolutionary history by identifying two duplications early in vertebrate evolution and two losses in the avian lineage (excluding duplications within a species, excluding the losses due to incompletely sequenced taxa and excluding the losses and duplications inferred through mismatch of species and gene trees). Estimates of…
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