Mar. 26,
2013 — The genome of the western painted turtle (Chrysemys picta bellii)
one of the most widespread, abundant and well-studied turtles in the world, is
published this week in Genome Biology. The data show that, like turtles
themselves, the rate of genome evolution is extremely slow; turtle genomes
evolve at a rate that is about a third that of the human genome and a fifth
that of the python, the fastest lineage analyzed.
As a group,
turtles are long-lived, can withstand low temperatures including freezing
solid, can survive for long periods with no oxygen, and their sex is usually
determined by the temperature at which their eggs develop rather than
genetically. The painted turtle is most anoxia-tolerant vertebrate and can
survive up to four months under water depending on the temperature. Turtles and
tortoises are also the most endangered major vertebrate group on earth, with
half of all species listed as endangered. This is the first turtle, and only
the second non-avian reptile genome to be sequenced, and the analysis reveals
some interesting insights about these bizarre features and adaptations, many of
which are only known in turtles.
The western
painted turtle is a freshwater species, and the most widespread turtle native
to North America . Bradley Shaffer and
colleagues place the western painted turtle genome into a comparative
evolutionary context, showing that turtles are more closely related to birds
and crocodilians than to any other vertebrates. They also find 19 genes in the
brain and 23 in the heart whose expression is increased in low oxygen
conditions -- including one whose expression changes nearly 130 fold. Further
experiments on turtle hatchlings indicated that common microRNA was involved in
freeze tolerance adaptation.
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