RESUMEN
Microplastics pose risks to marine organisms through ingestion, entanglement, and as carriers of toxic additives and environmental pollutants. Plastic pre-production pellet leachates have been shown to affect the development of sea urchins and, to some extent, mussels. The extent of those developmental effects on other animal phyla remains unknown. Here, we test the toxicity of environmental mixed nurdle samples and new PVC pellets for the embryonic development or asexual reproduction by regeneration of animals from all the major animal superphyla (Lophotrochozoa, Ecdysozoa, Deuterostomia and Cnidaria). Our results show diverse, concentration-dependent impacts in all the species sampled for new pellets, and for molluscs and deuterostomes for environmental samples. Embryo axial formation, cell specification and, specially, morphogenesis seem to be the main processes affected by plastic leachate exposure. Our study serves as a proof of principle for the potentially catastrophic effects that increasing plastic concentrations in the oceans and other ecosystems can have across animal populations from all major animal superphyla.
Asunto(s)
Invertebrados , Microplásticos , Plásticos , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua , Animales , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua/toxicidad , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua/análisis , Plásticos/toxicidad , Invertebrados/efectos de los fármacos , Microplásticos/toxicidad , Desarrollo Embrionario/efectos de los fármacosRESUMEN
Metallothioneins (MTs) constitute an important family of metal binding proteins. Mollusk MTs, in particular, have been used as model systems to better understand the evolution of their metal binding features and functional adaptation. In the present study two recombinantly produced MTs, LgiMT1 and LgiMT2, and their de novo evolved γ domain, of the marine limpet Lottia gigantea, were analyzed by electronic spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. Both MT proteins, as well as their γ domains, exhibit a strong binding specificity for Cd(II), but not for Zn(II) or Cu(I). The LgiMTs' γ domain renders an MII4(SCys)10 cluster with an increased Cd stoichiometry (binding 4 instead of 3 Cd2+ ions), representing a novel structural element in the world of MTs, probably featuring an adamantane 3D structure. This cluster significantly improves the Cd(II)-binding performance of the full length proteins and thus contributes to the particularly high Cd coping capacity observed in free-living limpets.
Asunto(s)
Cadmio , Gastrópodos , Animales , Cadmio/metabolismo , Zinc/metabolismo , Unión Proteica , Metales/metabolismo , Gastrópodos/metabolismo , Metalotioneína/genética , Metalotioneína/metabolismoRESUMEN
Protein domains are independent structural and functional modules that can rearrange to create new proteins. While the evolution of multidomain proteins through the shuffling of different preexisting domains has been well documented, the evolution of domain repeat proteins and the origin of new domains are less understood. Metallothioneins (MTs) provide a good case study considering that they consist of metal-binding domain repeats, some of them with a likely de novo origin. In mollusks, for instance, most MTs are bidomain proteins that arose by lineage-specific rearrangements between six putative domains: α, ß1, ß2, ß3, γ and δ. Some domains have been characterized in bivalves and gastropods, but nothing is known about the MTs and their domains of other Mollusca classes. To fill this gap, we investigated the metal-binding features of NpoMT1 of Nautilus pompilius (Cephalopoda class) and FcaMT1 of Falcidens caudatus (Caudofoveata class). Interestingly, whereas NpoMT1 consists of α and ß1 domains and has a prototypical Cd2+ preference, FcaMT1 has a singular preference for Zn2+ ions and a distinct domain composition, including a new Caudofoveata-specific δ domain. Overall, our results suggest that the modular architecture of MTs has contributed to MT evolution during mollusk diversification, and exemplify how modularity increases MT evolvability.
Asunto(s)
Gastrópodos , Metales , Animales , Metales/metabolismo , Metalotioneína/metabolismo , Dominios Proteicos , Gastrópodos/genética , Gastrópodos/metabolismo , Cadmio/metabolismoRESUMEN
We show for the first time glycosylation of recombinant metallothioneins (MTs) produced in E. coli. Interestingly, our results show that the glycosylation level of the recombinant MTs is inversely proportional to the degree of protein structuration, and reflects their different metal preferences.
Asunto(s)
Escherichia coli , Metalotioneína , Proteínas Recombinantes , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Metalotioneína/química , Metalotioneína/metabolismo , Metales/metabolismo , Glicosilación , Proteínas Recombinantes/química , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismoRESUMEN
Metallothioneins' (MTs) biological function has been a matter of debate since their discovery. The importance to categorize these cysteine-rich proteins with high coordinating capacity into a specific group led to numerous classification proposals. We proposed a classification based on their metal-binding abilities, gradually sorting them from those with high selectivity towards Zn/Cd to those that are Cu-specific. However, the study of the NpeMT1 and NpeMT2isoforms of Nerita peloronta, has put a new perspective on this classification. N. peloronta has been chosen as a representative mollusk to elucidate the metal-binding abilities of Neritimorpha MTs, an order without any MTs characterized recently. Both isoforms have been recombinantly synthesized in cultures supplemented with ZnII, CdII, or CuII, and the purified metal-MT complexes have been thoroughly characterized by spectroscopic and spectrometric methods, leading to results that confirmed that Neritimorpha share Cd-selective MTs with Caenogastropoda and Heterobranchia, solving a so far unresolved question. NpeMTs show high coordinating preferences towards divalent metal ions, although one of them (NpeMT1) shares features with the so-called genuine Zn-thioneins, while the other (NpeMT2) exhibits a higher preference for Cd. The dissimilarities between the two isoforms let a window open to a new proposal of chemical MT classification.
Asunto(s)
Cadmio/metabolismo , Gastrópodos/metabolismo , Metalotioneína/química , Metalotioneína/clasificación , Zinc/metabolismo , Animales , Dicroismo Circular , Cobre/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/genética , Gastrópodos/química , Metalotioneína/genética , Metalotioneína/metabolismo , Dominios Proteicos , Isoformas de Proteínas , Proteínas Recombinantes/genética , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismo , Espectrofotometría UltravioletaRESUMEN
A central question in chordate evolution is the origin of sessility in adult ascidians, and whether the appendicularian complete free-living style represents a primitive or derived condition among tunicates1. According to the 'a new heart for a new head' hypothesis, the evolution of the cardiopharyngeal gene regulatory network appears as a pivotal aspect to understand the evolution of the lifestyles of chordates2-4. Here we show that appendicularians experienced massive ancestral losses of cardiopharyngeal genes and subfunctions, leading to the 'deconstruction' of two ancestral modules of the tunicate cardiopharyngeal gene regulatory network. In ascidians, these modules are related to early and late multipotency, which is involved in lineage cell-fate determination towards the first and second heart fields and siphon muscles. Our work shows that the deconstruction of the cardiopharyngeal gene regulatory network involved the regressive loss of the siphon muscle, supporting an evolutionary scenario in which ancestral tunicates had a sessile ascidian-like adult lifestyle. In agreement with this scenario, our findings also suggest that this deconstruction contributed to the acceleration of cardiogenesis and the redesign of the heart into an open-wide laminar structure in appendicularians as evolutionary adaptations during their transition to a complete pelagic free-living style upon the innovation of the food-filtering house5.
Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Corazón/anatomía & histología , Corazón/crecimiento & desarrollo , Urocordados/anatomía & histología , Urocordados/fisiología , Animales , Linaje de la Célula , Redes Reguladoras de Genes , Locomoción , Miocardio/citología , Miocardio/metabolismo , Urocordados/citología , Urocordados/genéticaRESUMEN
Chordate Oikopleura dioica probably is the fastest evolving metazoan reported so far, and thereby, a suitable system in which to explore the limits of evolutionary processes. For this reason, and in order to gain new insights on the evolution of protein modularity, we have investigated the organization, function and evolution of multi-modular metallothionein (MT) proteins in O. dioica. MTs are a heterogeneous group of modular proteins defined by their cysteine (C)-rich domains, which confer the capacity of coordinating different transition metal ions. O. dioica has two MTs, a bi-modular OdiMT1 consisting of two domains (t-12C and 12C), and a multi-modular OdiMT2 with six t-12C/12C repeats. By means of mass spectrometry and spectroscopy of metal-protein complexes, we have shown that the 12C domain is able to autonomously bind four divalent metal ions, although the t-12C/12C pair -as it is found in OdiMT1- is the optimized unit for divalent metal binding. We have also shown a direct relationship between the number of the t-12C/12C repeats and the metal-binding capacity of the MTs, which means a stepwise mode of functional and structural evolution for OdiMT2. Finally, after analyzing four different O. dioica populations worldwide distributed, we have detected several OdiMT2 variants with changes in their number of t-12C/12C domain repeats. This finding reveals that the number of repeats fluctuates between current O. dioica populations, which provides a new perspective on the evolution of domain repeat proteins.
RESUMEN
To investigate novel patterns and processes of protein evolution, we have focused in the metallothioneins (MTs), a singular group of metal-binding, cysteine-rich proteins that, due to their high degree of sequence diversity, still represents a "black hole" in Evolutionary Biology. We have identified and analyzed more than 160 new MTs in nonvertebrate chordates (especially in 37 species of ascidians, 4 thaliaceans, and 3 appendicularians) showing that prototypic tunicate MTs are mono-modular proteins with a pervasive preference for cadmium ions, whereas vertebrate and cephalochordate MTs are bimodular proteins with diverse metal preferences. These structural and functional differences imply a complex evolutionary history of chordate MTs-including de novo emergence of genes and domains, processes of convergent evolution, events of gene gains and losses, and recurrent amplifications of functional domains-that would stand for an unprecedented case in the field of protein evolution.
Asunto(s)
Cordados , Urocordados , Animales , Cordados/genética , Metalotioneína/genética , Urocordados/genética , Urocordados/metabolismoRESUMEN
Gene loss is a pervasive source of genetic variation that influences species evolvability, biodiversity and the innovation of evolutionary adaptations. To better understand the evolutionary patterns and impact of gene loss, here we investigate as a case study the evolution of the wingless (Wnt) family in the appendicularian tunicate Oikopleura dioica, an emergent EvoDevo model characterized by its proneness to lose genes among chordates. Genome survey and phylogenetic analyses reveal that only four of the thirteen Wnt subfamilies have survived in O. dioica-Wnt5, Wnt10, Wnt11, and Wnt16,-representing the minimal Wnt repertoire described in chordates. While the loss of Wnt4 and Wnt8 likely occurred in the last common ancestor of tunicates, representing therefore a synapomorphy of this subphylum, the rest of losses occurred during the evolution of appendicularians. This work provides the first complete Wnt developmental expression atlas in a tunicate and the first insights into the evolution of Wnt developmental functions in appendicularians. Our work highlights three main evolutionary patterns of gene loss: (1) conservation of ancestral Wnt expression domains not affected by gene losses; (2) function shuffling among Wnt paralogs accompanied by gene losses; and (3) extinction of Wnt expression in certain embryonic directly correlated with gene losses. Overall our work reveals that in contrast to "conservative" pattern of evolution of cephalochordates and vertebrates, O. dioica shows an even more radical "liberal" evolutionary pattern than that described ascidian tunicates, stretching the boundaries of the malleability of Wnt family evolution in chordates.
RESUMEN
Metallothioneins (MTs) are proteins devoted to the control of metal homeostasis and detoxification, and therefore, MTs have been crucial for the adaptation of the living beings to variable situations of metal bioavailability. The evolution of MTs is, however, not yet fully understood, and to provide new insights into it, we have investigated the MTs in the diverse classes of Mollusks. We have shown that most molluskan MTs are bimodular proteins that combine six domains-α, ß1, ß2, ß3, γ, and δ-in a lineage-specific manner. We have functionally characterized the Neritimorpha ß3ß1 and the Patellogastropoda γß1 MTs, demonstrating the metal-binding capacity of the new γ domain. Our results have revealed a modular organization of mollusk MT, whose evolution has been impacted by duplication, loss, and de novo emergence of domains. MTs represent a paradigmatic example of modular evolution probably driven by the structural and functional requirements of metal binding.
Asunto(s)
Evolución Molecular , Gastrópodos/genética , Metalotioneína/genética , Animales , Filogenia , Dominios ProteicosRESUMEN
Metallothioneins (MTs) are a diverse group of proteins responsible for the control of metal homeostasis and detoxification. To investigate the impact that environmental conditions might have had on the metal-binding abilities of these proteins, we have characterized the MTs from the apple snail Pomacea bridgesii, a gastropod species belonging to the class of Caenogastropoda with an amphibious lifestyle facing diverse situations of metal bioavailability. P. bridgesii has two structurally divergent MTs, named PbrMT1 and PbrMT2, that are longer than other gastropod MTs due to the presence of extra sequence motifs and metal-binding domains. We have characterized the Zn(II), Cd(II), and Cu(I) binding abilities of these two MTs after their heterologous expression in E. coli. Our results have revealed that despite their structural differences, both MTs share an unspecific metal-binding character, and a great ability to cope with elevated amounts of different metal ions. Our analyses have also revealed slight divergences in their metal-binding features: PbrMT1 shows a more pronounced Zn(II)-thionein character than PbrMT2, while the latter has a stronger Cu(I)-thionein character. The characterization of these two unconventional PbrMTs supports the loss of the metal-binding specificity during the evolution of the MTs of the Ampullariid family, and further suggests an evolutionary link of this loss with the adaptation of these gastropod lineages to metal-poor freshwater habitats.
Asunto(s)
Cadmio/química , Cobre/química , Metalotioneína , Caracoles , Zinc/química , Animales , Metalotioneína/química , Metalotioneína/genética , Caracoles/química , Caracoles/genéticaRESUMEN
The tiny contribution of cadmium (Cd) to the composition of the earth's crust contrasts with its high biological significance, owing mainly to the competition of Cd with the essential zinc (Zn) for suitable metal binding sites in proteins. In this context it was speculated that in several animal lineages, the protein family of metallothioneins (MTs) has evolved to specifically detoxify Cd. Although the multi-functionality and heterometallic composition of MTs in most animal species does not support such an assumption, there are some exceptions to this role, particularly in animal lineages at the roots of animal evolution. In order to substantiate this hypothesis and to further understand MT evolution, we have studied MTs of different snails that exhibit clear Cd-binding preferences in a lineage-specific manner. By applying a metallomics approach including 74 MT sequences from 47 gastropod species, and by combining phylogenomic methods with molecular, biochemical, and spectroscopic techniques, we show that Cd selectivity of snail MTs has resulted from convergent evolution of metal-binding domains that significantly differ in their primary structure. We also demonstrate how their Cd selectivity and specificity has been optimized by the persistent impact of Cd through 430 million years of MT evolution, modifying them upon lineage-specific adaptation of snails to different habitats. Overall, our results support the role of Cd for MT evolution in snails, and provide an interesting example of a vestigial abiotic factor directly driving gene evolution. Finally, we discuss the potential implications of our findings for studies devoted to the understanding of mechanisms leading to metal specificity in proteins, which is important when designing metal-selective peptides.
Asunto(s)
Cadmio/farmacología , Evolución Molecular , Metalotioneína/metabolismo , Metales/análisis , Transcriptoma/efectos de los fármacos , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Animales , Metalotioneína/genética , Filogenia , Homología de Secuencia , CaracolesRESUMEN
The urochordate Oikopleura dioica is emerging as a nonclassical animal model in the field of evolutionary developmental biology (a.k.a. evo-devo) especially attractive for investigating the impact of gene loss on the evolution of mechanisms of development. This is because this organism fulfills the requirements of an animal model (i.e., has a simple and accessible morphology, a short generation time and life span, and affordable culture in the laboratory and amenable experimental manipulation), but also because O. dioica occupies a key phylogenetic position to understand the diversification and origin of our own phylum, the chordates. During its evolution, O. dioica genome has suffered a drastic process of compaction, becoming the smallest known chordate genome, a process that has been accompanied by exacerbating amount of gene losses. Interestingly, however, despite the extensive gene losses, including entire regulatory pathways essential for the embryonic development of other chordates, O. dioica retains the typical chordate body plan. This unexpected situation led to the formulation of the so-called inverse paradox of evo-devo, that is, when a genetic diversity is able to maintain a phenotypic unity. This chapter reviews the biological features of O. dioica as a model animal, along with the current data on the evolution of its genes and genome. We pay special attention to the numerous examples of gene losses that have taken place during the evolution of this unique animal model, which is helping us to understand to which the limits of evo-devo can be pushed off.
Asunto(s)
Biología Evolutiva , Evolución Molecular , Eliminación de Gen , Modelos Animales , Urocordados/embriología , Urocordados/genética , Animales , FilogeniaRESUMEN
Intracellular traffic amongst organelles represents a key feature for eukaryotes and is orchestrated principally by members of Rab family, the largest within Ras superfamily. Given that variations in Rab repertoire have been fundamental in animal diversification, we provided the most exhaustive survey regarding the Rab toolkit of chordates. Our findings reveal the existence of 42 metazoan conserved subfamilies exhibiting a univocal intron/exon structure preserved from cnidarians to vertebrates. Since the current view does not capture the Rab complexity, we propose a new Rab family classification in three distinct monophyletic clades. The Rab complement of chordates shows a dramatic diversification due to genome duplications and independent gene duplications and losses with sharp differences amongst cephalochordates, tunicates and gnathostome vertebrates. Strikingly, the analysis of the domain architecture of this family highlighted the existence of chimeric calcium-binding Rabs, which are animal novelties characterized by a complex evolutionary history in gnathostomes and whose role in cellular metabolism is obscure. This work provides novel insights in the knowledge of Rab family: our hypothesis is that chordates represent a hotspot of Rab variability, with many events of gene gains and losses impacting intracellular traffic capabilities. Our results help to elucidate the role of Rab members in the transport amongst endomembranes and shed light on intracellular traffic routes in vertebrates. Then, since the predominant role of Rabs in the molecular communication between different cellular districts, this study paves to way to comprehend inherited or acquired human disorders provoked by dysfunctions in Rab genes.
Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Cordados/genética , Genoma , Familia de Multigenes , Filogenia , Proteínas de Unión al GTP rab/genética , Animales , Transporte Biológico , Cordados/clasificación , Bases de Datos Genéticas , Exones , Duplicación de Gen , Variación Genética , Humanos , Intrones , Orgánulos/genética , Orgánulos/metabolismo , Dominios Proteicos , Sintenía , Proteínas de Unión al GTP rab/clasificación , Proteínas de Unión al GTP rab/metabolismoRESUMEN
Locomotion by tail beating powered by a system of bilateral paraxial muscle and notochord is likely one of the key evolutionary innovations that facilitated the origin and radiation of chordates. The innovation of paraxial muscle was accompanied by gene duplications in stem chordates that gave rise to muscular actins from cytoplasmic ancestral forms, which acquired contractile capability thanks to the recruitment of the myosin motor-machinery. To better understand the role of actin diversification during the evolution of chordates, in this work we have characterized the complete actin catalogue of the appendicularian Oikopleura dioica, an urochordate that maintains a chordate body plan throughout its life, including the notochord in a muscled tail that confers an active free-living pelagic style. Our genomic survey, phylogenetic analyses and Diagnostic-Actin-Values (DAVs) reveal that O. dioica has four muscular actins (ActnM1-4) and three cytoplasmic actins (ActnC1-3), most of which originated by independent gene duplications during the evolution of the appendicularian lineage. Detailed developmental expression atlas of the complete actin catalogue of O. dioica reveals differences in the temporal-regulation and tissue-specificity of different actin paralogs, suggesting complex processes of subfunctionalization during the evolution of urochordates. Our results suggest the presence of a "cardio-paraxial" muscular actin at least in the last common ancestor of Olfactores (i.e. vertebrates+urochordates). Our results reveal highly dynamic tissue-specific expression patterns for some cytoplasmic actins, including the notochord, ciliated cells and neurons with axonal projections, which challenge the classic housekeeping notion ascribed to these genes. Considering that previous work had demonstrated the existence of notochord-specific actins in cephalochordates, the tissue-specific expression of two cytoplasmic actins in the notochord of O. dioica suggests that this pattern plausibly reflects the ancestral condition of chordates, and provides new insights to better understand the evolutionary origin of the notochord.
Asunto(s)
Actinas/metabolismo , Cordados/embriología , Corazón/embriología , Modelos Biológicos , Músculos/metabolismo , Notocorda/embriología , Citoesqueleto de Actina/metabolismo , Actinas/genética , Animales , Cordados/genética , Desarrollo Embrionario/genética , Evolución Molecular , Notocorda/metabolismoRESUMEN
Vertebrates have greatly elaborated the basic chordate body plan and evolved highly distinctive genomes that have been sculpted by two whole-genome duplications. Here we sequence the genome of the Mediterranean amphioxus (Branchiostoma lanceolatum) and characterize DNA methylation, chromatin accessibility, histone modifications and transcriptomes across multiple developmental stages and adult tissues to investigate the evolution of the regulation of the chordate genome. Comparisons with vertebrates identify an intermediate stage in the evolution of differentially methylated enhancers, and a high conservation of gene expression and its cis-regulatory logic between amphioxus and vertebrates that occurs maximally at an earlier mid-embryonic phylotypic period. We analyse regulatory evolution after whole-genome duplications, and find that-in vertebrates-over 80% of broadly expressed gene families with multiple paralogues derived from whole-genome duplications have members that restricted their ancestral expression, and underwent specialization rather than subfunctionalization. Counter-intuitively, paralogues that restricted their expression increased the complexity of their regulatory landscapes. These data pave the way for a better understanding of the regulatory principles that underlie key vertebrate innovations.
Asunto(s)
Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Genómica , Anfioxos/genética , Vertebrados/genética , Animales , Tipificación del Cuerpo/genética , Metilación de ADN , Humanos , Anfioxos/embriología , Anotación de Secuencia Molecular , Regiones Promotoras Genéticas , Transcriptoma/genéticaRESUMEN
Investigating environmental hazards than could affect appendicularians is of prime ecological interest because they are among the most abundant components of the mesozooplankton. This work shows that embryo development of the appendicularian Oikopleura dioica is compromised by diatom bloom-derived biotoxins, even at concentrations in the same range as those measured after blooms. Developmental gene expression analysis of biotoxin-treated embryos uncovers an aberrant golf ball-like phenotype affecting morphogenesis, midline convergence, and tail elongation. Biotoxins induce a rapid upregulation of defensome genes, and considerable delay and silencing of zygotic transcription of developmental genes. Upon a possible future intensification of blooms associated with ocean warming and acidification, our work puts an alert on the potential impact that an increase of biotoxins may have on marine food webs, and points to defensome genes as molecular biosensors that marine ecologists could use to monitor the genetic stress of natural populations exposed to microalgal blooms.
RESUMEN
Arion vulgaris is a land-living European slug belonging to the gastropod clade of Stylommatophora. The species is known as an efficient pest organism in vegetable gardening and horticulture, which may in part be the consequence of its genetically based innate immunity, along with its high ability to withstand toxic metal stress by intracellular detoxification. Like many species of terrestrial snails, slugs possess a distinct capacity for Cd accumulation in their midgut gland, where the metal is stored and inactivated, conferring to these animals an increased metal tolerance. Although midgut gland Cd fractions in slugs have been shown to be variably allocated between different metal-binding protein pools, depending on the level of environmental metal contamination, a true metallothionein (MT) was so far never characterized from slugs. Instead, the Cd binding proteins identified so far were described as Metallothionein-like proteins (MTLPs). In the present study, the slug A. vulgaris was used as a model organism, in order to verify the presence of true MTs in experimentally metal-exposed slugs. We wanted to find out if these suggested slug MTs have similar metal binding properties and metal-selective features like those previously reported from helicid snails. To this aim, two MT isoform genes (AvMT1 and AvMT2) were characterized from midgut gland extracts and localized in the cells of this tissue. The AvMT1 and AvMT2 proteins were purified and partially sequenced, and their metal-binding features analysed after recombinant expression. Eventually, we wanted to understand if and by how much the metal binding features of the two MT isoforms of A. vulgaris may be related, owing to their reciprocal amino acid sequence similarities, to the binding properties of metal-specific MTs from terrestrial snails.
Asunto(s)
Sistema Digestivo/metabolismo , Metalotioneína/metabolismo , Metales/metabolismo , Caracoles/clasificación , Caracoles/metabolismo , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Animales , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Metalotioneína/genética , Isoformas de Proteínas , Homología de Secuencia , Caracoles/genéticaRESUMEN
The increasing levels of heavy metals derived from human activity are poisoning marine environments, threating zooplankton and ocean food webs. To protect themselves from the harmful effects of heavy metals, living beings have different physiological mechanisms, one of which is based on metallothioneins (MTs), a group of small cysteine-rich proteins that can bind heavy metals counteracting their toxicity. The MT system of urochordate appendicularians, an ecologically relevant component of the zooplankton, remained, however, unknown. In this work, we have characterized the MTs of the appendicularian species Oikopleura dioica, revealing that O. dioica has two MT genes, named OdMT1 and OdMT2, which encode for Cys-rich proteins, the former with 72 amino acids comparable with the small size MTs of other organisms, but the second with 399 amino acids representing the longest MT reported to date for any living being. Sequence analysis revealed that OdMT2 gene arose from a duplication of an ancestral OdMT1 gene followed by up to six tandem duplications of an ancestral repeat unit (RU) in the current OdMT2 gene. Interestingly, each RU contained, in turn, an internal repeat of a 7-Cys subunit (X3CX3CX2CX2CX3-6CX2CXCX), which is repeated up to 12 times in OdMT2. Finally, ICP-AES analyses of heterologously expressed OdMT proteins showed that both MTs were capable to form metal-complexes, with preference for cadmium ions. Collectively, our results provide the first characterization of the MT system in an appendicularian species as an initial step to understand the zooplankton response to metal toxicity and other environmental stress situations.
Asunto(s)
Cadmio/metabolismo , Cisteína/genética , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Metalotioneína/genética , Metalotioneína/metabolismo , Secuencias Repetidas en Tándem , Urocordados/metabolismo , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Animales , Cisteína/metabolismo , Regiones Promotoras Genéticas , Elementos Reguladores de la Transcripción , Homología de Secuencia , Urocordados/genéticaRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: What impact gene loss has on the evolution of developmental processes, and how function shuffling has affected retained genes driving essential biological processes, remain open questions in the fields of genome evolution and EvoDevo. To investigate these problems, we have analyzed the evolution of the Wnt ligand repertoire in the chordate phylum as a case study. RESULTS: We conduct an exhaustive survey of Wnt genes in genomic databases, identifying 156 Wnt genes in 13 non-vertebrate chordates. This represents the most complete Wnt gene catalog of the chordate subphyla and has allowed us to resolve previous ambiguities about the orthology of many Wnt genes, including the identification of WntA for the first time in chordates. Moreover, we create the first complete expression atlas for the Wnt family during amphioxus development, providing a useful resource to investigate the evolution of Wnt expression throughout the radiation of chordates. CONCLUSIONS: Our data underscore extraordinary genomic stasis in cephalochordates, which contrasts with the liberal and dynamic evolutionary patterns of gene loss and duplication in urochordate genomes. Our analysis has allowed us to infer ancestral Wnt functions shared among all chordates, several cases of function shuffling among Wnt paralogs, as well as unique expression domains for Wnt genes that likely reflect functional innovations in each chordate lineage. Finally, we propose a potential relationship between the evolution of WntA and the evolution of the mouth in chordates.