Towards reconstructing the dipteran demise of an ancient essential gene: E3 ubiquitin ligase Murine double minute.

IF 0.8 3区 生物学 Q4 CELL BIOLOGY
Development Genes and Evolution Pub Date : 2020-07-01 Epub Date: 2020-07-04 DOI:10.1007/s00427-020-00663-8
Naveen Jasti, Dylan Sebagh, Mohammed Riaz, Xin Wang, Bharat Koripella, Vasanth Palanisamy, Nabeel Mohammad, Qing Chen, Markus Friedrich
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Genome studies have uncovered many examples of essential gene loss, raising the question of how ancient genes transition from essentiality to dispensability. We explored this process for the deeply conserved E3 ubiquitin ligase Murine double minute (Mdm), which is lacking in Drosophila despite the conservation of its main regulatory target, the cellular stress response gene p53. Conducting gene expression and knockdown experiments in the red flour beetle Tribolium castaneum, we found evidence that Mdm has remained essential in insects where it is present. Using bioinformatics approaches, we confirm the absence of the Mdm gene family in Drosophila, mapping its loss to the stem lineage of schizophoran Diptera and Pipunculidae (big-headed flies), about 95-85 million years ago. Intriguingly, this gene loss event was preceded by the de novo origin of the gene Companion of reaper (Corp), a novel p53 regulatory factor that is characterized by functional similarities to vertebrate Mdm2 despite lacking E3 ubiquitin ligase protein domains. Speaking against a 1:1 compensatory gene gain/loss scenario, however, we found that hoverflies (Syrphidae) and pointed-wing flies (Lonchopteridae) possess both Mdm and Corp. This implies that the two p53 regulators have been coexisting for ~ 150 million years in select dipteran clades and for at least 50 million years in the lineage to Schizophora and Pipunculidae. Given these extensive time spans of Mdm/Corp coexistence, we speculate that the loss of Mdm in the lineage to Drosophila involved further acquisitions of compensatory gene activities besides the emergence of Corp. Combined with the previously noted reduction of an ancestral P53 contact domain in the Mdm homologs of crustaceans and insects, we conclude that the loss of the ancient Mdm gene family in flies was the outcome of incremental functional regression over long macroevolutionary time scales.

重建一个古老的必要基因:E3泛素连接酶小鼠双分钟的双翅目消亡。
基因组研究已经发现了许多基本基因丢失的例子,提出了古老基因如何从必要性转变为可缺性的问题。我们探索了深度保守的E3泛素连接酶小鼠双分钟(Mdm)的这一过程,尽管其主要调控靶点细胞应激反应基因p53保存,但在果蝇中缺乏Mdm。通过对红粉甲虫Tribolium castaneum进行基因表达和敲除实验,我们发现了Mdm在其存在的昆虫中仍然必不可少的证据。利用生物信息学方法,我们确认了Mdm基因家族在果蝇中的缺失,并将其缺失定位于大约9500万至8500万年前的裂翅目双翅目和大头蝇科(Pipunculidae)的茎系。有趣的是,这种基因丢失事件发生在reaper基因Companion (Corp)的重新起源之前,这是一种新的p53调节因子,其特征是与脊椎动物Mdm2功能相似,尽管缺乏E3泛素连接酶蛋白结构域。然而,我们发现食蚜蝇(食蚜科)和尖翅蝇(lonchopterae)同时拥有Mdm和co .,这意味着这两种p53调节因子在某些双翅目进化枝中共存了约1.5亿年,在裂蝇科和尖翅蝇科的谱系中共存了至少5000万年。考虑到Mdm/Corp共存的时间跨度如此之长,我们推测,除了Corp的出现,在果蝇谱系中Mdm的缺失还涉及到补偿性基因活动的进一步获得,再加上之前提到的甲壳类动物和昆虫Mdm同源物中祖先P53接触域的减少。我们得出结论,果蝇中古老Mdm基因家族的丧失是长期宏观进化时间尺度上渐进式功能回归的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Development Genes and Evolution
Development Genes and Evolution 生物-发育生物学
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Development Genes and Evolution publishes high-quality reports on all aspects of development biology and evolutionary biology. The journal reports on experimental and bioinformatics work at the systemic, cellular and molecular levels in the field of animal and plant systems, covering key aspects of the following topics: Embryological and genetic analysis of model and non-model organisms Genes and pattern formation in invertebrates, vertebrates and plants Axial patterning, embryonic induction and fate maps Cellular mechanisms of morphogenesis and organogenesis Stem cells and regeneration Functional genomics of developmental processes Developmental diversity and evolution Evolution of developmentally relevant genes Phylogeny of animals and plants Microevolution Paleontology.
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