Abstract
Olfaction plays a crucial role in fish feeding behaviors and ecological adaptation. However, systematic studies on its transcriptional regulation and molecular evolutionary mechanisms in herbivorous and carnivorous fishes remain scarce. In this study, we analyzed four Xenocyprididae species: two herbivorous (Ctenopharyngodon idella and Megalobrama amblycephala) and two carnivorous (Elopichthys bambusa and Culter alburnus), using olfactory rosette transcriptome sequencing and cross-species comparisons. The number of unigenes per species ranged from 40,229 to 42,405, with BUSCO completeness exceeding 89.2%. Functional annotation was performed using six major databases. Olfactory-related candidate genes were identified based on Pfam domains (7tm_4) and KEGG pathways (ko04740), revealing 8-19 olfactory receptor genes per species. These candidate genes were predominantly enriched in the olfactory transduction and neuroactive ligand-receptor interaction pathways. A total of 3681 single-copy orthologous genes were identified, and their expression profiles exhibited clear interspecific divergence without forming strict clustering by dietary type. High-threshold differentially expressed trend genes (|log(2)FC| ≥ 4) were enriched in pathways related to RNA processing, metabolite transport, and xenobiotic metabolism, suggesting that the olfactory system may participate in diverse adaptive responses. Ka/Ks analysis indicated that most homologous genes were under purifying selection, with only 0.87-2.07% showing positive selection. These positively selected genes were enriched in pathways related to immune response and neural regulation, implying potential roles in adaptive evolution associated with ecological behavior. Furthermore, the olfactory-related gene oard1 exhibited Ka/Ks > 1 in the E. bambusa vs. C. idella comparison. qRT-PCR validation confirmed the reliability of the RNA-Seq data. This work is the first to integrate two complementary indicators-expression trends and evolutionary rates-to systematically investigate the transcriptional regulation and molecular evolution of the olfactory system in Xenocyprididae species under the context of dietary differentiation, providing valuable reference data for understanding the perceptual basis of dietary adaptation in freshwater fish.