Abstract

Disruption of teneurin expression results in abnormal neural networks, but just how teneurins support the development of the central nervous system remains an area of active research. This review summarizes some of what we know about the functions of the various domains of teneurins, the possible evolution of teneurins from a bacterial toxin, and the intriguing patterns of teneurin expression. Teneurins are a family of type-2 transmembrane proteins. The N-terminal intracellular domain can be processed and localized to the nucleus, but the significance of this nuclear localization is unknown. The extracellular domain of teneurins is largely composed of tyrosine-aspartic acid repeats that fold into a hollow barrel, and the C-terminal domains of teneurins are stuffed, and least partly, into the barrel. A 6-bladed beta-propeller is found at the other end of the barrel. The same arrangement—6-bladed beta-propeller, tyrosine-aspartic acid repeat barrel, and the C-terminal domain inside the barrel—is seen in toxic proteins from bacteria, and there is evidence that teneurins may have evolved from a gene encoding a prokaryotic toxin via horizontal gene transfer into an ancestral choanoflagellate. Patterns of teneurin expression are often, but not always, complementary. In the central nervous system, where teneurins are best studied, interconnected populations of neurons often express the same teneurin. For example, in the chicken embryo neurons forming the tectofugal pathway express teneurin-1, whereas neurons forming the thalamofugal pathway express teneurin-2. In Drosophila melanogaster, Caenorhabditis elegans, zebrafish and mice, misexpression or knocking out teneurin expression leads to abnormal connections in the neural networks that normally express the relevant teneurin. Teneurins are also expressed in non-neuronal tissue during development, and in at least some regions the patterns of non-neuronal expression are also complementary. The function of teneurins outside the nervous system remains unclear.

Highlights

  • Teneurins are type-2 transmembrane proteins with a variable N-terminal intracellular domain and a large, phylogenetically conserved extracellular domain

  • This study showed that the homotypic interactions between the beta-propellers of teneurin-1 were stronger than the heterotypic interactions between the beta-propellers of teneurin-1 and teneurin-2 (Beckmann et al, 2013)

  • Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (BLAST) searches of the sequences encoded on the third exon revealed that the extracellular domain of choanoflagellate teneurin was more similar to the YD proteins of bacteria than to the extracellular domain of metazoan teneurins. This pointed to the possibility that teneurins evolved via horizontal gene transfer from a bacterial prey to a single-celled predator prior to the evolution of metazoa from a choanoflagellate-like ancestor (Tucker et al, 2012)

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Summary

Frontiers in Neuroscience

Received: 26 September 2018 Accepted: 28 November 2018 Published: 11 December 2018. Citation: Tucker RP (2018) Teneurins: Domain Architecture, Evolutionary Origins, and Patterns of Expression. Disruption of teneurin expression results in abnormal neural networks, but just how teneurins support the development of the central nervous system remains an area of active research. This review summarizes some of what we know about the functions of the various domains of teneurins, the possible evolution of teneurins from a bacterial toxin, and the intriguing patterns of teneurin expression. The same arrangement—6-bladed beta-propeller, tyrosine-aspartic acid repeat barrel, and the C-terminal domain inside the barrel—is seen in toxic proteins from bacteria, and there is evidence that teneurins may have evolved from a gene encoding a prokaryotic toxin via horizontal gene transfer into an ancestral choanoflagellate. Patterns of teneurin expression are often, but not always, complementary. Teneurins are expressed in non-neuronal tissue during development, and in at least some regions the patterns of non-neuronal expression are complementary.

INTRODUCTION
The Teneurin Intracellular Domain
YD Repeats and the RHS Core Protein Domain
Teneurin Tertiary Organization
Differences Between the Teneurins
THE EVOLUTION OF TENEURINS
Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans
Patterns of Expression in the Visual Systems of Birds and Mice
Tissue and references
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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