[血管紧张素转换酶:进化过程中保守的一种蛋白质]。

Journal de la Societe de biologie Pub Date : 2009-01-01 Epub Date: 2010-02-01 DOI:10.1051/jbio/2009032
Guillaume Rivière
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引用次数: 8

摘要

血管紧张素转换酶(ACE)对哺乳动物的血管稳态至关重要。人类有三种同种异构体。体细胞ACE (sACE)产生血管活性血管紧张素II。睾丸异构体(tACE)是男性生育能力所必需的。ACE2是从另一个基因克隆而来,具有拮抗作用。尽管它们没有封闭的循环系统,但仍有几只ace是从昆虫身上克隆出来的。昆虫的同工异构体在繁殖和发育中是隐含的。秀丽隐杆线虫基因组中没有能够编码功能性酶的序列。然而,在一种更遥远的生物体——水蛭中发现了活性ACE,这种酶主要在消化道内表达。ACE在光面动物中的存在引起了对酶的外观和原始功能的质疑。此外,最近基因组数据的可用性揭示了在更遥远的门(如刺胞菌,placozoa甚至许多原核动物)中存在同源物的假设。此外,在变形菌中活性ACE的表征表明,该祖先同种异构体已经具有功能。因此,ACE从细菌到哺乳动物都存在,并表现出令人难以置信的保守的分子、生化和结构特征。因此,在所有真核细胞中,ACE的缺失可能是继发性损失的结果。综上所述,这些数据表明ACE在进化过程中出现得较早。因此,哺乳动物的ACE特征可能是一种古老蛋白酶长期进化特化的结果,其生理功能仍有待阐明。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
[Angiotensin-converting enzyme: a protein conserved during evolution].

The Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme (ACE) is crucial for vascular homeostasis in mammals. Three isoforms are present in the human. the somatic ACE (sACE) generates the vasoactive angiotensin II. The testicular isoform (tACE) is required for male fertility. ACE2 was cloned from another gene and displays an antagonistic role. Several ACEs were cloned from insects, despite their lack of a closed circulatory system. Insect isoforms are implied in reproduction and development. No sequence in the C. elegans genome is able to encode a functional enzyme. Nevertheless, an active ACE was characterized in an even more distant organism, the leech, in which the enzyme is mainly expressed within the digestive tract. The presence of ACE is lophotrochozoans raises questions about the appearance and original functions of the enzyme. Besides, the recent availability of genomic data unraveled the putative presence of orthologues in even more distant phyla such as cnidaria, placozoa and even many procaryotes. Moreover, the characterization of an active ACE in a proteobacteria indicates that the ancestor isoform was already functional. Thus, ACE is present from bacteria to mammals and exhibits incredibly conserved molecular, biochemical as well as structural features. The absence of ACE in all eucaryotic bicounts could thus result from a secondary loss. Taken together, these data suggest that ACE appeared early during the course of evolution. Mammalian ACE features could thus be a result of the long evolutive specialization of an ancient protease whose physiological functions remain to be elucidated.

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