Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-11-332
Title: Emergence and evolution of the glycoprotein hormone and neurotrophin gene families in vertebrates
Authors: Santos, S
Mazan, S
Venkatesh, B 
Cohen-Tannoudji, J
Quérat, B
Keywords: chromosome
environmental conditions
evolutionary biology
fish
functional role
gene expression
genetic structure
genomics
hormone
protein
reconstruction
translocation
vertebrate
Branchiostoma
Branchiostoma lanceolatum
Chondrichthyes
Deuterostomia
Petromyzontidae
Protostomia
Tetrapoda
Vertebrata
glycoprotein
hypophysis hormone
nerve growth factor
animal
article
comparative genomic hybridization
DNA sequence
evolution
fish
gene duplication
genetics
lamprey
multigene family
phylogeny
synteny
Animals
Biological Evolution
Comparative Genomic Hybridization
Fishes
Gene Duplication
Glycoproteins
Lampreys
Multigene Family
Nerve Growth Factors
Phylogeny
Pituitary Hormones
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Synteny
Issue Date: 2011
Citation: Santos, S, Mazan, S, Venkatesh, B, Cohen-Tannoudji, J, Quérat, B (2011). Emergence and evolution of the glycoprotein hormone and neurotrophin gene families in vertebrates. BMC Evolutionary Biology 11 (1) : 332. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-11-332
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Background: The three vertebrate pituitary glycoprotein hormones (GPH) are heterodimers of a common and a specific subunit. In human, they are located on different chromosomes but in a similar genomic environment. We took advantage of the availability of genomic and EST data from two cartilaginous fish species as well as from two lamprey species to identify their repertoire of neurotrophin, lin7 and KCNA gene family members which are in the close environment of gph. Gph and gph are absent outside vertebrates but are related to two genes present in both protostomes and deuterostomes that were named gpa2 and gpb5. Genomic organization and functional characteristics of their protein products suggested that gph and gph might have been generated concomitantly by a duplication of gpa2 and gpb5 just prior to the radiation of vertebrates. To have a better insight into this process we used new genomic resources and tools to characterize the ancestral environment before the duplication occurred. Results: An almost similar repertoire of genes was characterized in cartilaginous fishes as in tetrapods. Data in lampreys are either incomplete or the result of specific duplications and/or deletions but a scenario for the evolution of this genomic environment in vertebrates could be proposed. A number of genes were identified in the amphioxus genome that helped in reconstructing the ancestral environment of gpa2 and gpb5 and in describing the evolution of this environment in vertebrates. Conclusion: Our model suggests that vertebrate gph and gph were generated by a specific local duplication of the ancestral forms of gpa2 and gpb5, followed by a translocation of gph to a new environment whereas gph was retained in the gpa2-gpb5 locus. The two rounds of whole genome duplication that occurred early in the evolution of vertebrates generated four paralogues of each gene but secondary gene losses or lineage specific duplications together with genomic rearrangements have resulted in the present organization of these genes, which differs between vertebrate lineages. © 2011 Santos et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Source Title: BMC Evolutionary Biology
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/181622
ISSN: 14712148
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-11-332
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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