Glutamate and GABA Receptors of Nerveless Animals (Placozoa): Preadaptation to Neurotransmission

M. A. Nikitin, S. I. Borman
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Abstract

The emergence of the nervous system is one of the most important events in the evolution of life on Earth. The details of this event remain poorly understood; in particular, a great variety of known neurotransmitter substances requires an explanation. We analyze the homologs of neuronal glutamate and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptors in Placozoa (animals without a nervous system, but possessing the mobility and behavior). Phylogenetic analysis and comparison of amino acid residues responsible for a ligand specificity demonstrated that these Placozoan receptors are unexpectedly numerous, diverse, and evolutionarily dynamic, and by all these traits, they rather resemble the olfactory receptors of higher animals. Our results indicate that the chemoreceptor system was an important source of diverse receptors for the emerging nervous system, and future neurotransmitter amino acids (glutamate, GABA, glycine) were relevant external signals for the first animals that did not yet have a nervous system.

Abstract Image

无神经动物(胎生动物)的谷氨酸和 GABA 受体:对神经传递的预适应
摘要--神经系统的出现是地球生命进化过程中最重要的事件之一。人们对这一事件的细节仍然知之甚少,特别是对已知的多种神经递质需要作出解释。我们分析了胎生动物(没有神经系统但具有活动能力和行为能力的动物)中神经元谷氨酸和γ-氨基丁酸(GABA)受体的同源物。系统进化分析和配体特异性氨基酸残基的比较表明,这些胎生动物受体的数量之多、种类之多和进化之活跃出乎意料,而且从所有这些特征来看,它们与高等动物的嗅觉受体颇为相似。我们的研究结果表明,化学感受器系统是新兴神经系统各种受体的重要来源,而未来的神经递质氨基酸(谷氨酸、GABA、甘氨酸)则是尚未建立神经系统的第一批动物的相关外部信号。
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