The vomeronasal system (VNS) serves crucial functions for detecting olfactory clues often related to social and sexual behaviour. Intriguingly, two of the main components of the VNS, the vomeronasal organ (VNO) and the accessory olfactory bulb, are regressed in aquatic mammals, several bats and primates, likely due to adaptations to different ecological niches. To detect genomic changes that are associated with the convergent reduction of the VNS, we performed the first systematic screen for convergently inactivated protein-coding genes associated with convergent VNS reduction, considering 106 mammalian genomes. Extending previous studies, our results support that Trpc2, a cation channel that is important for calcium signalling in the VNO, ...
<div><p>The <i>MOXD2</i> gene encodes a membrane-bound monooxygenase similar to dopamine-β-hydroxyla...
The vomeronasal (VN) systems of rodents and opossums are of the segregated type, i.e alpha-subtype G...
The vomeronasal system is crucial for social and sexual communication in mammals. Two populations of...
In mammals, social and sexual behaviours are largely mediated by the vomeronasal system (VNS). The a...
The vertebrate vomeronasal system (VNS) detects intraspecific pheromones and environmental odorants....
Vertebrate olfaction comprises two anatomically distinct systems: the main olfactory system, which r...
Vestigial characters are common across the tree of life, but the underlying evolutionary processes s...
<p>The degree to which molecular and morphological loss of function occurs synchronously during the ...
Comparative methods are often used to infer loss or gain of complex phenotypes, but few studies take...
The vomeronasal organ (VNO) is functional in most terrestrial mammals, though progressively reduced ...
Tetrapods have two distinct nasal chemosensory systems, the main olfactory system and the vomeronasa...
Abstract The vomeronasal organ (VNO) is a chemo-sensory subsystem found in the nose of most mammals....
G-protein-coupled receptors are responsible for binding to chemosensory cues and initiating response...
The MOXD2 gene encodes a membrane-bound monooxygenase similar to dopamine-β-hydroxylase, and has bee...
The study of the α-subunit of Gi2 and Go proteins in the accessory olfactory bulb (AOB) was crucial ...
<div><p>The <i>MOXD2</i> gene encodes a membrane-bound monooxygenase similar to dopamine-β-hydroxyla...
The vomeronasal (VN) systems of rodents and opossums are of the segregated type, i.e alpha-subtype G...
The vomeronasal system is crucial for social and sexual communication in mammals. Two populations of...
In mammals, social and sexual behaviours are largely mediated by the vomeronasal system (VNS). The a...
The vertebrate vomeronasal system (VNS) detects intraspecific pheromones and environmental odorants....
Vertebrate olfaction comprises two anatomically distinct systems: the main olfactory system, which r...
Vestigial characters are common across the tree of life, but the underlying evolutionary processes s...
<p>The degree to which molecular and morphological loss of function occurs synchronously during the ...
Comparative methods are often used to infer loss or gain of complex phenotypes, but few studies take...
The vomeronasal organ (VNO) is functional in most terrestrial mammals, though progressively reduced ...
Tetrapods have two distinct nasal chemosensory systems, the main olfactory system and the vomeronasa...
Abstract The vomeronasal organ (VNO) is a chemo-sensory subsystem found in the nose of most mammals....
G-protein-coupled receptors are responsible for binding to chemosensory cues and initiating response...
The MOXD2 gene encodes a membrane-bound monooxygenase similar to dopamine-β-hydroxylase, and has bee...
The study of the α-subunit of Gi2 and Go proteins in the accessory olfactory bulb (AOB) was crucial ...
<div><p>The <i>MOXD2</i> gene encodes a membrane-bound monooxygenase similar to dopamine-β-hydroxyla...
The vomeronasal (VN) systems of rodents and opossums are of the segregated type, i.e alpha-subtype G...
The vomeronasal system is crucial for social and sexual communication in mammals. Two populations of...