Saito Shigeru, Ohkita Masashi, Saito Claire T, Takahashi Kenji, Tominaga Makoto, Ohta Toshio
From the Division of Cell Signaling, Okazaki Institute for Integrative Bioscience, National Institute for Physiological Sciences, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Okazaki, Aichi 444-8787, Japan, the Department of Physiological Sciences, SOKENDAI (The Graduate University for Advanced Studies), Okazaki, Aichi 444-8787, Japan, and
the Department of Veterinary Pharmacology, Faculty of Agriculture, Tottori University, Tottori 680-8553, Japan.
J Biol Chem. 2016 May 20;291(21):11446-59. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M115.702498. Epub 2016 Mar 28.
Temperature is one of the most critical environmental factors affecting survival, and thus species that inhabit different thermal niches have evolved thermal sensitivities suitable for their respective habitats. During the process of shifting thermal niches, various types of genes expressed in diverse tissues, including those of the peripheral to central nervous systems, are potentially involved in the evolutionary changes in thermosensation. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms behind the evolution of thermosensation, thermal responses were compared between two species of clawed frogs (Xenopus laevis and Xenopus tropicalis) adapted to different thermal environments. X. laevis was much more sensitive to heat stimulation than X. tropicalis at the behavioral and neural levels. The activity and sensitivity of the heat-sensing TRPA1 channel were higher in X. laevis compared with those of X. tropicalis The thermal responses of another heat-sensing channel, TRPV1, also differed between the two Xenopus species. The species differences in Xenopus TRPV1 heat responses were largely determined by three amino acid substitutions located in the first three ankyrin repeat domains, known to be involved in the regulation of rat TRPV1 activity. In addition, Xenopus TRPV1 exhibited drastic species differences in sensitivity to capsaicin, contained in chili peppers, between the two Xenopus species. Another single amino acid substitution within Xenopus TRPV1 is responsible for this species difference, which likely alters the neural and behavioral responses to capsaicin. These combined subtle amino acid substitutions in peripheral thermal sensors potentially serve as a driving force for the evolution of thermal and chemical sensation.
温度是影响生存的最关键环境因素之一,因此栖息于不同热生态位的物种进化出了适合各自栖息地的热敏感性。在热生态位转移过程中,包括从外周神经系统到中枢神经系统的各种组织中表达的各类基因,都可能参与了热感觉的进化变化。为了阐明热感觉进化背后的分子机制,我们比较了适应不同热环境的两种爪蟾(非洲爪蟾和热带爪蟾)的热反应。在行为和神经水平上,非洲爪蟾对热刺激比热带爪蟾更为敏感。与热带爪蟾相比,非洲爪蟾中热感应TRPA1通道的活性和敏感性更高。另一个热感应通道TRPV1的热反应在这两种爪蟾之间也存在差异。爪蟾TRPV1热反应的物种差异很大程度上由位于前三个锚蛋白重复结构域的三个氨基酸替换决定,已知这三个结构域参与大鼠TRPV1活性的调节。此外,爪蟾TRPV1对辣椒中所含辣椒素的敏感性在这两种爪蟾之间表现出极大的物种差异。爪蟾TRPV1内的另一个单氨基酸替换导致了这种物种差异,这可能改变了对辣椒素的神经和行为反应。外周热传感器中这些组合的细微氨基酸替换可能是热感觉和化学感觉进化的驱动力。