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Dryad

Data from: Molecular evolution of sour tolerance in birds

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May 14, 2025 version files 141.84 KB

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Abstract

Taste is crucial in shaping animals’ perception. Sourness, one of the primary tastes, is aversive in mammals, whereas many birds frequently consume acidic fruits, suggesting a potential tolerance. Our study uncovers a mechanism enabling sour tolerance in birds involving changes to the sour receptor (Otopetrin1, OTOP1). We demonstrate sour tolerance is a conserved trait in birds, with avian OTOP1 exhibiting acid-induced inhibition, and OTOP1 modulation affects sour perception and tolerance. Ancestral reconstruction reveals that the increase in acid tolerance evolved at the same point in the songbird phylogeny--before the last common ancestor of honeyeaters and other songbirds, and after the divergence of Australian treecreepers--as the regain of sweet sensing in this clade. We propose this shift might have enabled songbirds to feed on a wider range of fruits, expanding their ecological niches, and may play a role in the evolution and diversification of the songbird radiation.