The Emergence of the Metabolic Signaling of the Nucleoredoxin-like Genes during Evolution

Author:

Aït-Ali NajateORCID,Blond FrédéricORCID,Clérin EmmanuelleORCID,Morshedian AlaORCID,Cesar Quénol,Delalande François,Koyanagi Mitsumasa,Birck CatherineORCID,Han JohnORCID,Ren XiaoyuanORCID,van Dorsselaer AlainORCID,Terakita AkihisaORCID,Fain Gordon L.ORCID,Léveillard ThierryORCID

Abstract

SUMMARYThe nucleoredoxin-like genes NXNL1 and NXNL2 were identified through the biological activity of rod-derived cone viability factors (RdCVF and RdCVF2), the alternatively spliced variants produced by intron retention, that mediate signaling between rod and cone photoreceptors by stimulating glucose uptake. These therapeutic genes for inherited retinal degenerations also produce by splicing thioredoxin-like proteins that reduce oxidized cysteines in photoreceptor proteins. The first NXNL genes date from the first animal phyla. Intron retention produces an active RdCVF protein in the tentacles of Hydra vulgaris, a species without eyes. A Scallop RdCVF protein is produced by ciliated photoreceptors of the retina and binds its receptor, BSG1. In the lamprey, a descendent of early vertebrates, RdCVF metabolic signaling between rod and cones is fully established. In the mouse, the production of BSG1 by photoreceptors is regulated by cell-specific splicing inhibition. RdCVF signaling predates photoreceptors and evolved through two alternative splicing events.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. The Emergence of Rod-Cone Cellular Interaction;Frontiers in Genetics;2022-08-09

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