Evolutionary Genomics of Nuclear Receptors: From Twenty-Five Ancestral Genes to Derived Endocrine Systems

Stéphanie Bertrand(École Normale Supérieure de Lyon), Frédéric Brunet(Laboratoire de Biologie et Modélisation de la Cellule), Héctor Escrivá(Laboratoire de Biologie et Modélisation de la Cellule), Gilles Parmentier(Laboratoire de Biologie et Modélisation de la Cellule), Vincent Laudet(Laboratoire de Biologie et Modélisation de la Cellule), Marc Robinson‐Rechavi(École Normale Supérieure de Lyon)
Molecular Biology and Evolution
June 30, 2004
Cited by 350Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Bilaterian animals are notably characterized by complex endocrine systems. The receptors for many steroids, retinoids, and other hormones belong to the superfamily of nuclear receptors, which are transcription factors regulating many aspects of development and homeostasis. Despite a diversity of regulatory mechanisms and physiological roles, nuclear receptors share a common protein organization. To obtain the broad picture of bilaterian nuclear hormone receptor evolution, we have characterized the complete set of nuclear receptor genes from nine animal genome sequences and analyzed it in a phylogenetic framework. In addition, expressed sequence tags from key lineages with no available genome sequence were also searched. This allows us to date the evolutionary events that led from an ancestral nuclear receptor gene, in an early metazoan, to present day diversity. We show that there were ;25 nuclear receptor genes in Urbilateria, the ancestor of bilaterians, at which point the fundamental diversity of the subfamily was already established. Surprisingly, differential gene loss played an important role in the evolution of different nuclear receptor sets in bilaterian lineages. The nuclear receptor distribution was also shaped by periods of gene duplication, essentially in vertebrates, as well as a lineage-specific duplication burst in nematodes. Our results imply that the genes for major receptors such as steroid receptors or thyroid hormone receptors were present in Urbilateria.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis