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Convergent and lineage-specific genomic changes shape adaptations in sugar-consuming birds

Authors

  • Ekaterina Osipova
  • Meng-Ching Ko
  • Konstantin M. Petricek
  • Simon Yung Wa Sin
  • Thomas Brown
  • Sylke Winkler
  • Martin Pippel
  • Julia Jarrells
  • Susanne Weiche
  • Mai-Britt Mosbech
  • Fanny Taborsak-Lines
  • Chuan Wang
  • Orlando Contreras-Lopez
  • Remi-Andre Olsen
  • Philip Ewels
  • Daniel Mendez-Aranda
  • Andrea H. Gaede
  • Keren Sadanandan
  • Gabriel Weijie Low
  • Amanda Monte
  • Ninon Ballerstädt
  • Nicolas M. Adreani
  • Lucia Mentesana
  • Auguste von Bayern
  • Alejandro Rico-Guevara
  • Scott V. Edwards
  • Carolina Frankl-Vilches
  • Heiner Kuhl
  • Antje Bakker
  • Manfred Gahr
  • Douglas L. Altshuler
  • William A. Buttemer
  • Michael Schupp
  • Maude W. Baldwin
  • Michael Hiller
  • Timothy B. Sackton

Journal

  • Science

Citation

  • Science 391 (6788): eadt1522

Abstract

  • High-sugar diets cause human metabolic diseases, yet several bird lineages convergently adapted to feeding on sugar-rich nectar or fruits. We investigated the underlying molecular mechanisms in hummingbirds, parrots, honeyeaters, and sunbirds by generating nine new genomes and 90 tissue-specific transcriptomes. Comparative screens revealed an excess of repeated selection in both protein-coding and regulatory sequences in sugar-feeding birds, suggesting reuse of genetic elements. Sequence or expression changes in sugar-feeders affect genes involved in blood pressure regulation and lipid, amino acid, and carbohydrate metabolism, with experiments showing functional changes in honeyeater hexokinase 3. MLXIPL, a key regulator of sugar and lipid homeostasis, showed convergent sequence and regulatory changes across all sugar-feeding clades; experiments revealed enhanced sugar-induced transcriptional activity of hummingbird MLXIPL, highlighting its adaptive role in high-sugar diets.


DOI

doi:10.1126/science.adt1522