Abstract

BackgroundUniversal stress proteins (USPs) are present in all domains of life. Their expression is upregulated in response to a large variety of stress conditions. The functional diversity found in this protein family, paired with the sequence degeneration of the characteristic ATP-binding motif, suggests a complex evolutionary pattern for the paralogous USP-encoding genes. In this work, we investigated the origin, genomic organization, expression patterns and evolutionary history of the USP gene family in species of the phylum Platyhelminthes.ResultsOur data showed a cluster organization, a lineage-specific distribution, and the presence of several pseudogenes among the USP gene copies identified. The absence of a well conserved -CCAATCA- motif in the promoter region was positively correlated with low or null levels of gene expression, and with amino acid changes within the ligand binding motifs. Despite evidence of the pseudogenization of various USP genes, we detected an important functional divergence at several residues, mostly located near sites that are critical for ligand interaction.ConclusionsOur results provide a broad framework for the evolution of the USP gene family, based on the emergence of new paralogs that face very contrasting fates, including pseudogenization, subfunctionalization or neofunctionalization. This framework aims to explain the sequence and functional diversity of this gene family, providing a foundation for future studies in other taxa in which USPs occur.

Highlights

  • Universal stress proteins (USPs) are present in all domains of life

  • We found that the number of USP genes varied between Platyhelminthes species: genes in E. granulosus, E. multilocularis, and E. canadensis, in T. solium, 16 in H. microstoma, 10 in S. mansoni and S. haematobium, 18

  • The relaxed tBLASTn analysis detected three pseudogene candidates in the genus Echinococcus, two in T. solium, and one in H. microstoma. Synteny indicates that these pseudogenes may represent lineage-specific gene losses in Echinococcus spp. and T. solium compared with H. microstoma; and in H. microstoma compared with H. diminuta (Fig. 1a and b)

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Summary

Introduction

Universal stress proteins (USPs) are present in all domains of life. Their expression is upregulated in response to a large variety of stress conditions. A subfunctionalization process, where the new copy preserves its function, but with a Members of the universal stress protein (USP) gene family are found in bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes and are composed of a variable number of copies due to lineage-specific expansions [5]. These proteins are highly expressed in response to a large variety of stress conditions, such as oxidative stress, heat shock, and UV exposure [6,7,8]. It was observed that almost all USPs crystals with the typical ATP-binding motif were solved with

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