Abstract

ZMAT2 is among the least-studied of mammalian proteins and genes, even though it is the ortholog of Snu23, a protein involved in pre-mRNA splicing in yeast. Here we have used data from genomic and gene expression repositories to examine the Zmat2 gene and locus in 8 terrestrial vertebrates, 10 ray-finned fish, and 1 lobe-finned fish representing > 500 million years of evolutionary diversification. The analyses revealed that vertebrate Zmat2 genes are similar to their mammalian counterparts, as in 16/19 species studied they contain 6 exons, and in 18/19 encode a single conserved protein. However, unlike in mammals, no Zmat2 pseudogenes were identified in these vertebrates, although an expressed Zmat2 paralog was characterized in flycatcher that resembled a DNA copy of a processed and retro-transposed mRNA, and thus could be a proto-pseudogene captured during its evolutionary journey from active to inert. The Zmat2 locus in terrestrial vertebrates, and in spotted gar and coelacanth, also shares additional genes with its mammalian counterparts, including Histidyl-tRNA synthetase (Hars), Hars2, and others, but these are absent from the Zmat2 locus in teleost fish, in which Stem-loop-binding protein 2 (Slbp2) and Lymphocyte cytosolic protein 2a (Lcp2a) are present instead. Taken together, these observations argue that a recognizable Zmat2 was present in the earliest vertebrate ancestors, and postulate that during chromosomal tetraploidization and subsequent re-diploidization during modern teleost evolution, the duplicated Zmat2 gene was retained and the original lost. This study also highlights how information from genomic resources can be leveraged to reveal new biologically significant insights.

Highlights

  • Recent advances in genomics and genetics provide many opportunities for developing new insights into comparative physiology, evolution, and even disease predisposition [1,2,3] through the evaluation and interpretation of data found in public genomic and gene expression resources [4]

  • Human ZMAT2 and other mammalian Zmat2 genes had been incompletely characterized in the Ensembl and UCSC genomic repositories, but as shown in our recent studies, they comprise a highly conserved series of orthologous genes and proteins [11]

  • Chicken Zmat2 was chosen as the reference gene for terrestrial vertebrates, primarily because it has been more extensively studied than other birds, reptiles, or amphibians

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Recent advances in genomics and genetics provide many opportunities for developing new insights into comparative physiology, evolution, and even disease predisposition [1,2,3] through the evaluation and interpretation of data found in public genomic and gene expression resources [4]. Among the more than 20,000 protein coding genes in mammalian and in other vertebrate genomes, fewer than 10% have been studied in any detail [5,6,7]. The Zmat gene and locus in vertebrates

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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