Nucleotide sequence evolution at the kappa-casein locus: evidence for positive selection within the family Bovidae. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Kappa-casein is a mammalian milk protein involved in a number of important physiological processes. In the gut, the ingested protein is split into an insoluble peptide (para kappa-casein) and a soluble hydrophilic glycopeptide (caseinomacropeptide). Caseinomacropeptide is responsible for increased efficiency of digestion, prevention of neonate hypersensitivity to ingested proteins, and inhibition of gastric pathogens. Variation within this peptide has significant effects associated with important traits such as milk production. The nucleotide sequences for regions of kappa-casein exon and intron four were determined for representatives of the artiodactyl family Bovidae. The pattern of nucleotide substitution in kappa-casein sequences for distantly related bovid taxa demonstrates that positive selection has accelerated their divergence at the amino acid sequence level. This selection has differentially influenced the molecular evolution of the two kappa-casein split peptides and is focused within a 34-codon region of caseinomacropeptide.

published proceedings

  • Genetics

author list (cited authors)

  • Ward, T. J., Honeycutt, R. L., & Derr, J. N.

citation count

  • 36

complete list of authors

  • Ward, TJ||Honeycutt, RL||Derr, JN

publication date

  • December 1997