Yin Zhiyuan, Shen Danyu, Zhao Yaning, Peng Hao, Liu Jinding, Dou Daolong
Department of Plant Pathology, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China.
USDA Agricultural Research Service, San Joaquin Valley Agricultural Sciences Center, Parlier, CA 93648, USA.
Comput Struct Biotechnol J. 2023 Aug 12;21:4070-4078. doi: 10.1016/j.csbj.2023.08.007. eCollection 2023.
Transmembrane kinases (TMKs) are important mediators of cellular signaling cascades. The kinase domains of most metazoan and plant TMKs belong to the serine/threonine/tyrosine kinase (S/T/Y-kinase) superfamily. They share a common origin with prokaryotic kinases and have diversified into distinct subfamilies. Diverse members of the eukaryotic crown radiation such as amoebae, ciliates, and red and brown algae (grouped here under the umbrella term "protists") have long diverged from higher eukaryotes since their ancient common ancestry, making them ideal organisms for studying TMK evolution. Here, we developed an accurate and high-throughput pipeline to predict TMKomes in cellular organisms. Cross-kingdom analyses revealed distinct features of TMKomes in each grouping. Two-transmembrane histidine kinases constitute the main TMKomes of bacteria, while metazoans, plants, and most protists have a large proportion of single-pass TM S/T/Y-kinases. Phylogenetic analyses classified most protist S/T/Y-kinases into three clades, with clades II and III specifically expanded in amoebae and oomycetes, respectively. In contrast, clade I kinases were widespread in all protists examined here, and likely shared a common origin with other eukaryotic S/T/Y-kinases. Functional annotation further showed that most non-kinase domains were grouping-specific, suggesting that their recombination with the more conserved kinase domains led to the divergence of S/T/Y-kinases. However, we also found that protist leucine-rich repeat (LRR)- and G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR)-type TMKs shared similar sensory domain architectures with respective plant and animal TMKs, despite that they belong to distinct kinase subfamilies. Collectively, our study revealed the functional diversity of TMKomes and the distinct origins of S/T/Y-kinases in protists.
跨膜激酶(TMKs)是细胞信号级联反应的重要介质。大多数后生动物和植物TMKs的激酶结构域属于丝氨酸/苏氨酸/酪氨酸激酶(S/T/Y-激酶)超家族。它们与原核激酶有着共同的起源,并已分化为不同的亚家族。自古老的共同祖先以来,真核生物冠群辐射中的各种成员,如变形虫、纤毛虫以及红藻和褐藻(在此统称为“原生生物”)就与高等真核生物长期分化,这使它们成为研究TMK进化的理想生物。在这里,我们开发了一种准确且高通量的流程来预测细胞生物中的TMK组。跨界分析揭示了每个分类中TMK组的独特特征。双跨膜组氨酸激酶构成了细菌的主要TMK组,而后生动物、植物和大多数原生生物则有很大比例的单次跨膜S/T/Y-激酶。系统发育分析将大多数原生生物S/T/Y-激酶分为三个进化枝,进化枝II和III分别在变形虫和卵菌中特异性扩展。相比之下,进化枝I激酶在此处研究的所有原生生物中广泛存在,并且可能与其他真核生物S/T/Y-激酶有着共同起源。功能注释进一步表明,大多数非激酶结构域是分类特异性的,这表明它们与更保守的激酶结构域的重组导致了S/T/Y-激酶的分化。然而,我们还发现,原生生物富含亮氨酸重复序列(LRR)和G蛋白偶联受体(GPCR)型的TMKs,尽管它们属于不同的激酶亚家族,但与各自的植物和动物TMKs具有相似的传感结构域架构。总体而言,我们的研究揭示了TMK组的功能多样性以及原生生物中S/T/Y-激酶的不同起源。