Transcript austin

Collaborators
 Donald

University of St. Thomas
 Jae-Ho

B. Ogden
St. Mary’s University
 Brenda

Kim
Rogers State University
 Gary

R. Frohlich
S. Whaley
Houston Baptist University
Why do Humans Smell
so Badly
??
Introduction

Olfactory receptor (OR) genes provide the basis
for the sense of smell and, with more than 1,000
genes, comprise the largest gene superfamily in
mammalian genomes.
 All OR genes are 7 pass transmembrane
receptors and have an approximately 1 kb
coding region that is uninterrupted by introns.
General Observation
 Many
mammals, dogs especially, are
known to have an acute sense of smell.
 By comparison humans are practically
anosmic.
Major Question
 Is
there a molecular/cell biological
explanation for why humans smell so
badly?
Possible Student Answers
 H.
sapiens may have fewer OR genes, as
compared with dogs and/or other
mammals.
 Humans may have fewer functional OR
genes (i.e., a higher proportion of
pseudogenes).
 Other?
What Does the Literature Say about this Topic?

Approximately 60% of human OR genes carry one or
more coding region disruptions and are therefore
considered pseudogenes.
 In nonhuman apes, the fraction of OR pseudogenes is
only approximately 30%.
 Both humans and other apes have a significantly higher
fraction of OR pseudogenes than do the mouse (20%) or
the dog (12%).
 A decrease in the size of the intact olfactory repertoire
occurred independently in two evolutionary lineages: in
the ancestor of Old World Monkeys and apes, and in the
New World howler monkey.
 Some speculate that the high fraction of OR
pseudogenes in some primates may reflect a decreased
reliance on the sense of smell in species for whom
auditory cues and full trichromatic vision may be more
important.
From: Gilad, et. al., PLOS Biology (2) 2004.
Phylogenetic Tree of Primates.
Arrow marks lineage acquiring trichromatic color vision, red marks lineages with high
Frequency of OR pseudogenes.
From: Gilad, et. al., PLOS Biology (2) 2004.
Evolutionary changes in the number of functional OR genes in mice and humans.
MRCA = most recent common ancestor.
From: Niimura and Nei, Gene (346) 2005.
Our Approach

Ask students to provide molecular/cell biological
explanations for the observation that humans have a
poor sense of smell, as compared with dogs and many
other mammals.
 After discussion, ask the students to obtain data to
support/refute the hypothesis that “humans have an
increased frequency of OR pseudogenes, as compared
to dogs.”
 Ask each student to choose, at random, 5-10 functional
canine OR genes from a database (source provided) and
determine if the human ortholog for each dog gene is an
actual (functional) OR gene or a pseudogene (i.e., a
sequence with one or more coding region disruptions) .
 The frequency of human OR pseudogenes will be
determined for the data compiled from the entire class,
and be compared with the known frequency of OR
pseudogenes in dogs (i.e., 12%).
Dog/Human/Chimp/Mouse OR Database
Link: www.bip.weizmann.ac.il/HORDE
Linked to: www.bip.weizmann.ac.il/HORDE