Abstract

Gap junction channels are formed by two unrelated protein families. Non-chordates use the primordial innexins, while chordates use connexins that superseded the gap junction function of innexins. Chordates retained innexin-homologs, but N-glycosylation prevents them from forming gap junctions. It is puzzling why chordates seem to exclusively use the new gap junction protein and why no chordates should exist that use non-glycosylated innexins to form gap junctions. Here, we identified glycosylation sites of 2388 innexins from 174 non-chordate and 276 chordate species. Among all chordates, we found not a single innexin without glycosylation sites. Surprisingly, the glycosylation motif is also widespread among non-chordate innexins indicating that glycosylated innexins are not a novelty of chordates. In addition, we discovered a loss of innexin diversity during early chordate evolution. Most importantly, lancelets, which lack connexins, exclusively possess only one highly conserved innexin with one glycosylation site. A bottleneck effect might thus explain why connexins have become the only protein used to form chordate gap junctions.

Highlights

  • Animals from humans to comb jellies use gap junction channels to couple adjacent cells and enable direct intercellular communication

  • We suggest a new evolutionary scenario in which a loss in innexin diversity could explain why connexins arose de novo during the early chordate evolution and why connexins have completely replaced the innexins that so successfully serve diverse functions in the nervous systems of invertebrates

  • We first screened for innexin proteins across multiple non-­chordate taxa by using innexin proteins as sequence queries in BLAST searches

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Summary

Introduction

Animals from humans to comb jellies use gap junction channels to couple adjacent cells and enable direct intercellular communication. Arrowheads mark innexins with NGSs that have been shown to form functional gap junction channels (Figure 1—source data 3).

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