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Reproduction (2007) 133 697-708
DOI: 10.1530/REP-06-0043
Copyright © 2007 Society for Reproduction and Fertility
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RESEARCH

Molecular evolution of the carboxy terminal region of the zona pellucida 3 glycoprotein in murine rodents

Christine A Swann1,3, Steven J B Cooper2,3 and William G Breed1,3

1 School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Adelaide, North Terrace, Adelaide, 5005 South Australia, 2 Evolutionary Biology Unit, South Australian Museum, Adelaide, South Australia and 3 Centre for Evolutionary Biology and Biodiversity, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia

Correspondence: Correspondence should be addressed to W G Breed; Email: bill.breed{at}adelaide.edu.au

In mammals, before fertilization can occur, sperm have to bind to, and penetrate, the zona pellucida (ZP). In the laboratory mouse, which has been used as a model system for fertilization studies, sperm–ZP binding has been found to be mediated by a region at the carboxy terminal, encoded by exon 7 of the Zp3 gene. This region shows considerable interspecific sequence diversity with some evidence of adaptive evolution in mammals, suggesting that it may contribute to species-specific sperm–ZP binding. However, in a previous study of sequence diversity of ZP3 of three species of Australian murine rodents, we found an identical protein sequence of the region encoded by exon 7. Here, we expand this earlier study to determine the sequence diversity of this region in 68 out of the 130 species of Australasian murine rodents. Maximum likelihood analyses, using representatives of both New Guinean and Australian taxa, provide evidence of positive selection at three codons adjacent to, or within, the putative combining-site for sperm of ZP3, but this was not evident when the analysis was restricted to the Australian taxa. The latter group showed low levels of both intra- and inter-generic sequence divergences in the region encoded by exon 7 of Zp3, with little evidence that this region contributes to species specificity of sperm–ZP binding. These findings suggest that the selective forces acting on the Zp3 exon 7 region during the evolution of the Australasian murine rodents have been variable, and that positive selection has only occurred in a few lineages.







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