Sire Jean-Yves, Delgado Sidney, Fromentin Delphine, Girondot Marc
Equipe Evolution and Développement du Squelette, CNRS FRE 2696, Université Paris 6-Pierre and Marie Curie, CNRS FRE 2696, Case 7077, 2, place Jussieu, 75251 Paris Cedex 05, France.
Arch Oral Biol. 2005 Feb;50(2):205-12. doi: 10.1016/j.archoralbio.2004.09.004.
Amelogenin plays a crucial role in enamel structure and mineralization, but the function of its various domains is far to be understood. Evolutionary analysis seems to be a promising way to approach structure/function relationships. In this paper, we review the knowledge of amelogenin with a particular focus on what we have learnt from evolution, and we bring new data on the origin and evolution of this molecule. The comparison of amniote (reptiles and mammals) amelogenin sequences reveals that, in contrast to the well-conserved C- and N-terminal domains, the central region (most of exon 6) is highly variable. The evolutionary analysis indicates that it was created by repeated insertion of three amino acids (triplets ProXGlu or ProXX). In several mammalian lineages a new run of triplet insertions and deletions has occurred independently in a locus considered a hot spot of mutation for mammalian amelogenin. In lizard and snake amelogenin evolves rapidly. Sequence alignment reveals that several residues in the N- and C-terminal regions were kept unchanged during 250 million years (MY), proving their importance for amelogenin structure and function. This alignment permits a rapid validation of the amelogenin mutations in human. Genome sequencing and gene mapping permitted to refine the amelogenin story, in relation to the common location (chromosome 4 in human) of several genes coding for dental proteins and SPARCL1, a SPARC (osteonectin) relative. Amelogenin shares a similar organisation with these genes and a blast search in databanks indicates a strong relationship between amelogenin, ameloblastin and enamelin. Taken together these data suggest that amelogenin could have originated from either ameloblastin or enamelin, themselves being created from SPARCL1, which itself originated from a SPARC duplication, 600 millions years ago.
釉原蛋白在牙釉质结构和矿化过程中起着关键作用,但其各个结构域的功能仍远未明确。进化分析似乎是研究结构/功能关系的一种很有前景的方法。在本文中,我们回顾了关于釉原蛋白的知识,特别关注我们从进化中所学到的内容,并带来了有关该分子起源和进化的新数据。羊膜动物(爬行动物和哺乳动物)釉原蛋白序列的比较表明,与保守的C端和N端结构域不同,中央区域(外显子6的大部分)高度可变。进化分析表明,它是由三个氨基酸(三联体ProXGlu或ProXX)的重复插入产生的。在几个哺乳动物谱系中,三联体插入和缺失的新序列在一个被认为是哺乳动物釉原蛋白突变热点的位点上独立发生。在蜥蜴和蛇中,釉原蛋白进化迅速。序列比对显示,N端和C端区域的几个残基在2.5亿年中保持不变,证明了它们对釉原蛋白结构和功能的重要性。这种比对允许快速验证人类釉原蛋白的突变。基因组测序和基因定位有助于完善釉原蛋白的情况,这与几个编码牙齿蛋白的基因和与骨连接蛋白(osteonectin)相关的SPARCL1的共同定位(人类染色体4)有关。釉原蛋白与这些基因具有相似的组织架构,数据库中的blast搜索表明釉原蛋白、成釉蛋白和釉蛋白之间存在密切关系。综合这些数据表明,釉原蛋白可能起源于成釉蛋白或釉蛋白,而它们本身是由SPARCL1产生的,SPARCL1本身起源于6亿年前的骨连接蛋白(SPARC)的复制。