Piatigorsky Joram
Laboratory of Molecular and Developmental Biology, National Eye Institute, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-2730, USA.
J Struct Funct Genomics. 2003;3(1-4):131-7.
The crystallins account for 80-90% of the water-soluble proteins of the transparent lens. These diverse proteins are responsible for the optical properties of the lens and have been recruited from metabolic enzymes and stress proteins. They often differ among species (i.e. are taxon-specific) and may be expressed outside of the lens where they have non-refractive roles (a situation we call gene sharing). Crystallin recruitment has occurred by changes in gene regulation resulting in high lens expression. Duck lactate dehydrogenase/epsilon-crystallin and alpha-enolase/tau-crystallin are each encoded in single-copy genes, consistent with these enzymes acquiring a crystallin role, without loss of their nonlens metabolic function, by a change in gene regulation in the absence of gene duplication. The small heat shock protein/alpha-crystallins and avian argininosuccinate lyase/delta-crystallins were also recruited by a change in gene regulation leading to high lens expression, except this was followed by a gene duplication with further lens specialization of the alphaA and the delta1 (in chickens) crystallin genes. Cephalopod (squid and octopus) S-crystallins were recruited from glutathione S-transferase apparently after duplication of the original gene encoding the enzyme, although this remains uncertain. We speculate that one of the new genes (glutathione S-transferase/S11-crystallin) specialized for lens expression by a change in gene regulation and subsequently duplicated many times to form the lens-specialized, multiple S-crystallins that lack enzymatic activity. That similar transcription factors (e.g. Pax-6, retinoic acid receptors, maf, Sox, AP-1, CREB) regulate different crystallin genes suggest that common features of lens-specific expression have played a pivotal role for recruiting the diverse, multifunctional proteins as crystallins.
晶状体蛋白占透明晶状体水溶性蛋白质的80 - 90%。这些多样的蛋白质决定了晶状体的光学特性,它们是从代谢酶和应激蛋白演化而来的。它们在不同物种间常常存在差异(即具有分类群特异性),并且可能在晶状体之外表达,在那里发挥非折射作用(我们将这种情况称为基因共享)。晶状体蛋白的演化是通过基因调控的变化实现的,从而导致其在晶状体中高表达。鸭乳酸脱氢酶/ε-晶状体蛋白和α-烯醇化酶/τ-晶状体蛋白均由单拷贝基因编码,这与这些酶通过基因调控变化获得晶状体蛋白功能相一致,即在没有基因复制的情况下,它们在保留非晶状体代谢功能的同时,还获得了晶状体蛋白功能。小分子热休克蛋白/α-晶状体蛋白和禽精氨琥珀酸裂解酶/δ-晶状体蛋白也是通过基因调控变化实现高晶状体表达而被招募的,只是随后发生了基因复制,αA和δ1(鸡中的)晶状体蛋白基因进一步特化。头足类动物(鱿鱼和章鱼)的S-晶状体蛋白显然是在编码该酶的原始基因复制后,从谷胱甘肽S-转移酶演化而来的,不过这一点仍不确定。我们推测,其中一个新基因(谷胱甘肽S-转移酶/S11-晶状体蛋白)通过基因调控变化专门用于晶状体表达,随后多次复制形成了缺乏酶活性的、专门用于晶状体的多种S-晶状体蛋白。相似的转录因子(如Pax-6、视黄酸受体、maf、Sox、AP-1、CREB)调控不同的晶状体蛋白基因,这表明晶状体特异性表达的共同特征在招募这些多样的多功能蛋白质作为晶状体蛋白的过程中起到了关键作用。