Abstract

BackgroundAmeloblastin (AMBN) is a phosphorylated, proline/glutamine-rich protein secreted during enamel formation. Previous studies have revealed that this enamel matrix protein was present early in vertebrate evolution and certainly plays important roles during enamel formation although its precise functions remain unclear. We performed evolutionary analyses of AMBN in order to (i) identify residues and motifs important for the protein function, (ii) predict mutations responsible for genetic diseases, and (iii) understand its molecular evolution in mammals.ResultsIn silico searches retrieved 56 complete sequences in public databases that were aligned and analyzed computationally. We showed that AMBN is globally evolving under moderate purifying selection in mammals and contains a strong phylogenetic signal. In addition, our analyses revealed codons evolving under significant positive selection. Evidence for positive selection acting on AMBN was observed in catarrhine primates and the aye-aye. We also found that (i) an additional translation initiation site was recruited in the ancestral placental AMBN, (ii) a short exon was duplicated several times in various species including catarrhine primates, and (iii) several polyadenylation sites are present.ConclusionsAMBN possesses many positions, which have been subjected to strong selective pressure for 200 million years. These positions correspond to several cleavage sites and hydroxylated, O-glycosylated, and phosphorylated residues. We predict that these conserved positions would be potentially responsible for enamel disorder if substituted. Some motifs that were previously identified as potentially important functionally were confirmed, and we found two, highly conserved, new motifs, the function of which should be tested in the near future. This study illustrates the power of evolutionary analyses for characterizing the functional constraints acting on proteins with yet uncharacterized structure.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12862-015-0431-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Ameloblastin (AMBN) is a phosphorylated, proline/glutamine-rich protein secreted during enamel formation

  • They belong to the large secretory calcium-binding phosphoprotein (SCPP) family (23 members known in humans), which appeared more than 450 million years ago (Ma) diversified through gene duplication during

  • The alignment of the 53 functional sequences resulted in a 500 amino acid long sequence, when considering methionine in exon 1 (Additional file 2), and including gaps required for accurate alignment

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ameloblastin (AMBN) is a phosphorylated, proline/glutamine-rich protein secreted during enamel formation. Previous studies have revealed that this enamel matrix protein was present early in vertebrate evolution and certainly plays important roles during enamel formation its precise functions remain unclear. Ameloblastin (AMBN), amelogenin (AMEL), enamelin (ENAM), amelotin (AMTN), odontogenic, ameloblast associated (ODAM) and SCPP-PQ1, are ameloblast-secreted proteins involved in various steps of the organization and mineralization of the enamel matrix of mammalian teeth. They belong to the large secretory calcium-binding phosphoprotein (SCPP) family (23 members known in humans), which appeared more than 450 million years ago (Ma) diversified through gene duplication during. The essential transcription factor for osteoblast differentiation, was shown to play an important role in AMBN transcription [34]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call