@article{oai:oist.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000813, author = {Khrameeva, Ekaterina and Kurochkin, Ilia and Bozek, Katarzyna and Giavalisco, Patrick and Khaitovich, Philipp}, issue = {8}, journal = {Molecular Biology and Evolution}, month = {May}, note = {Lipids are essential structural and functional components of cells. Little is known, however, about the evolution of lipid composition in different tissues. Here, we report a large-scale analysis of the lipidome evolution in six tissues of 32 species representing primates, rodents, and bats. While changes in genes' sequence and expression accumulate proportionally to the phylogenetic distances, <2% of the lipidome evolves this way. Yet, lipids constituting this 2% cluster in specific functions shared among all tissues. Among species, human show the largest amount of species-specific lipidome differences. Many of the uniquely human lipidome features localize in the brain cortex and cluster in specific pathways implicated in cognitive disorders.}, pages = {1947--1957}, title = {Lipidome Evolution in Mammalian Tissues}, volume = {35}, year = {2018} }