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MBE Advance Access originally published online on July 28, 2003
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Mol. Biol. Evol. 20(11):1897-1908. 2003
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msg208
© 2003 by the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. ISSN: 0737-4038

Functional Antifreeze Glycoprotein Genes in Temperate-Water New Zealand Nototheniid Fish Infer an Antarctic Evolutionary Origin

Chi-Hing C. Cheng*,, Liangbiao Chen*,{dagger}, Thomas J. Near*,{ddagger} and Yumi Jin*

* Department of Animal Biology, University of Illinois, Urbana
{dagger} Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
{ddagger} Center for Population Biology, University of California, Davis

E-mail: c-cheng{at}uiuc.edu.

The fish fauna of the Antarctic Ocean is dominated by five endemic families of the Perciform suborder Notothenioidei, thought to have arisen in situ within the Antarctic through adaptive radiation of an ancestral stock that evolved antifreeze glycoproteins (AFGPs) enabling survival as the ocean chilled to subzero temperatures. The endemism results from geographic confinement imposed by a massive oceanographic barrier, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, which also thermally isolated Antarctica over geologic time, leading to its current frigid condition. Despite this voluminous barrier to fish dispersal, a number of species from the Antarctic family Nototheniidae now inhabit the nonfreezing cool temperate coasts of the southern continents. The origin of these temperate-water nototheniids is not completely understood. Since the AFGP gene apparently evolved only once, before the Antarctic notothenioid radiation, the presence of AFGP genes in extant temperate-water nototheniids can be used to infer an Antarctic evolutionary origin. Genomic Southern analysis, PCR amplification of AFGP genes, and sequencing showed that Notothenia angustata and Notothenia microlepidota endemic to southern New Zealand have two to three AFGP genes, structurally the same as those of the Antarctic nototheniids. At least one of these genes is still functional, as AFGP cDNAs were obtained and low levels of mature AFGPs were detected in the blood. A phylogenetic tree based on complete ND2 coding sequences showed monophyly of these two New Zealand nototheniids and their inclusion in the monophyletic Nototheniidae consisted of mostly AFGP-bearing taxa. These analyses support an Antarctic ancestry for the New Zealand nototheniids. A divergence time of approximately 11 Myr was estimated for the two New Zealand nototheniids, approximating the upper Miocene northern advance of the Antarctic Convergence over New Zealand, which might have served as the vicariant event that lead to the northward dispersal of their most recent common ancestor. Similar secondary northward dispersal likely applies to the South American nototheniid Paranotothenia magellanica, which has four AFGP genes in its DNA, but not to the sympatric nototheniid Patagonotothen tessellata, which does not appear to have any AFGP sequences in its genome at all.

Key Words: AFGP gene • non-Antarctic notothenioids • South American nototheniids • evolution • biogeography


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Phil Trans R Soc BHome page
C.-H Christina Cheng and H William Detrich III
Molecular ecophysiology of Antarctic notothenioid fishes
Phil Trans R Soc B, December 29, 2007; 362(1488): 2215 - 2232.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


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J. Exp. Biol.Home page
P. A. Cziko, C. W. Evans, C.-H. C. Cheng, and A. L. DeVries
Freezing resistance of antifreeze-deficient larval Antarctic fish
J. Exp. Biol., February 1, 2006; 209(3): 407 - 420.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]



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