Rojas Ana, Doolittle Russell F
Center for Molecular Genetics, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0624, USA.
J Mol Evol. 2006 Dec;55(6):790-4. doi: 10.1007/s00239-002-2361-x.
Although serine proteases are found in all kinds of cellular organisms and many viruses, the classic "chymotrypsin family" (Group S1A by the 1998 Barrett nomenclature) has an unusual phylogenetic distribution, being especially common in animals, entirely absent from plants and protists, and rare among fungi. The distribution in Bacteria is largely restricted to the genus Streptomyces, although a few isolated occurrences in other bacteria have been reported. The family may be entirely absent from Archaea. Although more than a thousand sequences have been reported for enzymes of this type from animals, none of them have been from early diverging phyla like Porifera or Cnidaria. We now report the existence of Group S1A serine proteases in a sponge (phylum Porifera) and a jellyfish (phylum Cnidaria), making it safe to conclude that all animal groups possess these enzymes.
尽管丝氨酸蛋白酶存在于各种细胞生物和许多病毒中,但经典的“胰凝乳蛋白酶家族”(按照1998年巴雷特命名法为S1A组)具有不同寻常的系统发育分布,在动物中特别常见,在植物和原生生物中完全不存在,在真菌中也很罕见。细菌中的分布主要局限于链霉菌属,不过也有报道称在其他细菌中有一些孤立的实例。古菌中可能完全没有这个家族。尽管已经报道了来自动物的一千多种此类酶的序列,但没有一个来自像多孔动物门或刺胞动物门这样早期分化的门类。我们现在报告在一种海绵(多孔动物门)和一种水母(刺胞动物门)中存在S1A组丝氨酸蛋白酶,从而可以确定所有动物类群都拥有这些酶。