Abstract

The marine medaka Oryzias melastigma is a useful fish model for marine and estuarine ecotoxicology studies and can be applied to field-based population genomics because of its distribution in Asian estuaries and other coastal areas. We identified 769 full-length G protein–coupled receptor genes in the O. melastigma genome and classified them into five distinct classes. A phylogenetic comparison of GPCR genes in O. melastigma to humans and two other small fish species revealed a high-level orthological relationship. Purinergic and chemokine receptors were highly differentiated in humans whereas significant differentiation of chemosensory receptors was evident in fish species. Our results suggest that the GPCR gene families among the species used in this study exhibit evidence of sporadic evolutionary processes. These results may help improve our understanding of the advanced repertoires of GPCR and expand our knowledge of physiological mechanisms of fish in response to various environmental stimuli.

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