Evolution of Key Cell Signaling and Adhesion Protein Families Predates Animal Origins

Author:

King Nicole1,Hittinger Christopher T.1,Carroll Sean B.1

Affiliation:

1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), University of Wisconsin, 1525 Linden Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA.

Abstract

The evolution of animals from a unicellular ancestor involved many innovations. Choanoflagellates, unicellular and colonial protozoa closely related to Metazoa, provide a potential window into early animal evolution. We have found that choanoflagellates express representatives of a surprising number of cell signaling and adhesion protein families that have not previously been isolated from nonmetazoans, including cadherins, C-type lectins, several tyrosine kinases, and tyrosine kinase signaling pathway components. Choanoflagellates have a complex and dynamic tyrosine phosphoprotein profile, and cell proliferation is selectively affected by tyrosine kinase inhibitors. The expression in choanoflagellates of proteins involved in cell interactions in Metazoa demonstrates that these proteins evolved before the origin of animals and were later co-opted for development.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference27 articles.

1. Comparisons of yeast Caenorhabditis Drosophila and human genomes have revealed a set of protein domains conserved among Bilateria and absent from yeast ( 25 26 ). However because the Bilateria represent a recent derivation within the Metazoa and the Fungi diverged from the animal lineage long before the transition to multicellularity comparisons limited to fungal and bilaterian animal genomes do not reveal the complexity of the ancestral animal genome.

2. W. Saville Kent, A Manual of the Infusoria (David Bogue, London, 1880–1882).

3. Observations on the ultrastructure of the choanoflagellate Codosiga botrytis (Ehr.) Saville-Kent with special reference to the flagellar apparatus

4. Monophyletic Origins of the Metazoa: an Evolutionary Link with Fungi

5. N. King, S. B. Carroll, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.98, 15032 (2001).

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