Evolution, Ecology and Genetics, Research School of Biology, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia.
Mol Biol Evol. 2012 Oct;29(10):3095-109. doi: 10.1093/molbev/mss114. Epub 2012 Apr 10.
Secreted peptides, produced by enzymatic processing of larger precursor molecules, are found throughout the animal kingdom and play important regulatory roles as neurotransmitters and hormones. Many require a carboxy-terminal modification, involving the conversion of a glycine residue into an α-amide, for their biological activity. Two sequential enzymatic activities catalyze this conversion: a monooxygenase (peptidylglycine α-hydroxylating monooxygenase or PHM) and an amidating lyase (peptidyl-α-hydroxyglycine α-amidating lyase or PAL). In vertebrates, these activities reside in a single polypeptide known as peptidylglycine α-amidating monooxygenase (PAM), which has been extensively studied in the context of neuropeptide modification. Bifunctional PAMs have been reported from some invertebrates, but the phylogenetic distribution of PAMs and their evolutionary relationship to PALs and PHMs is unclear. Here, we report sequence and expression data for two PAMs from the coral Acropora millepora (Anthozoa, Cnidaria), as well as providing a comprehensive survey of the available sequence data from other organisms. These analyses indicate that bifunctional PAMs predate the origins of the nervous and endocrine systems, consistent with the idea that within the Metazoa their ancestral function may have been to amidate epitheliopeptides. More surprisingly, the phylogenomic survey also revealed the presence of PAMs in green algae (but not in higher plants or fungi), implying that the bifunctional enzyme either predates the plant/animal divergence and has subsequently been lost in a number of lineages or perhaps that convergent evolution or lateral gene transfer has occurred. This finding is consistent with recent discoveries that other molecules once thought of as "neural" predate nervous systems.
分泌肽是由较大前体分子的酶促加工产生的,存在于整个动物界,作为神经递质和激素发挥着重要的调节作用。许多分泌肽需要羧基末端的修饰,涉及甘氨酸残基转化为α-酰胺,以保持其生物活性。这一转化需要两种连续的酶促活性:单加氧酶(肽基甘氨酸α-羟化单加氧酶或 PHM)和酰胺化裂解酶(肽基-α-羟甘氨酸α-酰胺化裂解酶或 PAL)。在脊椎动物中,这些活性位于一种称为肽基甘氨酸α-酰胺化单加氧酶(PAM)的单一多肽中,该酶在神经肽修饰方面已得到广泛研究。已经从一些无脊椎动物中报道了双功能 PAMs,但 PAMs 的系统发生分布及其与 PALs 和 PHMs 的进化关系尚不清楚。在这里,我们报告了来自珊瑚 Acropora millepora(珊瑚纲,刺胞动物)的两个 PAMs 的序列和表达数据,并对其他生物体的可用序列数据进行了全面调查。这些分析表明,双功能 PAMs 早于神经和内分泌系统的起源,这与它们的祖先功能可能是酰胺化上皮肽的观点一致。更令人惊讶的是,系统基因组学调查还揭示了绿藻中存在 PAMs(但在高等植物或真菌中不存在),这意味着这种双功能酶要么早于植物/动物的分化,随后在许多谱系中丢失,要么可能发生了趋同进化或横向基因转移。这一发现与最近的发现一致,即其他曾经被认为是“神经”的分子早于神经系统出现。