Gene and allele-specific expression during electric organ ontogeny in African weakly electric fish (Campylomormyrus)
Feng Cheng, Alice B. Dennis, Linh Nguyen, Otto Baumann, Frank Kirschbaum, Marisol Domínguez, Ralph Tiedemann

TL;DR
This study explores how gene and allele-specific expression in electric fish relates to the development of their electric signals during growth.
Contribution
The study identifies candidate genes and allelic expression patterns linked to electric organ development in African weakly electric fish hybrids.
Findings
Candidate genes KCNJ2, CPNE7, and CADPS are associated with electric organ development.
Hybrid alleles show nearly equal expression in juvenile and adult stages.
KCNJ2 exhibits increasing allelic dominance from C. rhynchophorus during ontogeny.
Abstract
The African weakly electric fish use their muscle-derived electric organ to produce electric organ discharge (EOD) for electrocommunication and electrolocation. The EOD among species of the genus Campylomormyrus and cross-species hybrids is species-specific and varies during ontogeny. We compared the gene expression patterns and allele-specific expression between juvenile and adult in C. compressirostris (EOD duration 0.4 ms in both juveniles and adults), C. rhynchophorus (EOD duration 5 ms in juveniles and 40 ms in adults) and their hybrids (EOD duration 0.4 ms in juveniles and 4 ms in adults). By clustering the gene expression and EOD duration, we identified several candidate genes that might be involved in EOD development, i.e., KCNJ2, CPNE7 and CADPS. In the hybrids, the alleles from parental species show nearly equal expression at both juvenile and adult life stages. KCNJ2 exhibits…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsFish biology, ecology, and behavior · Physiological and biochemical adaptations · Ichthyology and Marine Biology
