Abstract

BackgroundThe cytosolic arrestin proteins mediate desensitization of activated G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) via competition with G proteins for the active phosphorylated receptors. Arrestins in active, including receptor-bound, conformation are also transducers of signaling. Therefore, this protein family is an attractive therapeutic target. The signaling outcome is believed to be a result of structural and sequence-dependent interactions of arrestins with GPCRs and other protein partners. Here we elucidated the detailed evolution of arrestins in deuterostomes.ResultsIdentity and number of arrestin paralogs were determined searching deuterostome genomes and gene expression data. In contrast to standard gene prediction methods, our strategy first detects exons situated on different scaffolds and then solves the problem of assigning them to the correct gene. This increases both the completeness and the accuracy of the annotation in comparison to conventional database search strategies applied by the community. The employed strategy enabled us to map in detail the duplication- and deletion history of arrestin paralogs including tandem duplications, pseudogenizations and the formation of retrogenes. The two rounds of whole genome duplications in the vertebrate stem lineage gave rise to four arrestin paralogs. Surprisingly, visual arrestin ARR3 was lost in the mammalian clades Afrotheria and Xenarthra. Duplications in specific clades, on the other hand, must have given rise to new paralogs that show signatures of diversification in functional elements important for receptor binding and phosphate sensing.ConclusionThe current study traces the functional evolution of deuterostome arrestins in unprecedented detail. Based on a precise re-annotation of the exon-intron structure at nucleotide resolution, we infer the gain and loss of paralogs and patterns of conservation, co-variation and selection.

Highlights

  • The cytosolic arrestin proteins mediate desensitization of activated G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) via competition with G proteins for the active phosphorylated receptors

  • We placed arrestins in a wider evolutionary context, while in a second analysis we focused on a narrower set of sequences covering only deuterostome arrestins

  • This has been a limitation to previous studies on arrestin evolution

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Summary

Introduction

The cytosolic arrestin proteins mediate desensitization of activated G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) via competition with G proteins for the active phosphorylated receptors. We will refer to this group of proteins as arrestins there are additional members in the clan that share the anti-parallel β-sandwich fold and are involved in cellular trafficking. These are the arrestindomain containing proteins and a set of families that are a b c rather distantly related to arrestins with maximal 10% sequence identity [8]. These distant relatives encompass the VPS26 family (including DSCR3) and RGP1 that are represented in human (Homo sapiens), as well as fungal arrestin-related trafficking adapters, amoebal arrestin domain-containing proteins and the Spo0M family in bacteria and archaea [8, 10]

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