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First published online December 1, 2006
Journal of Experimental Biology 209, 4858-4868 (2006)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2006
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02607
Ancestry of neuronal monoamine transporters in the Metazoa
1 Department of Biology, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada
N6A 5B7
2 Southern Crop Protection and Food Research Centre, Agriculture and
Agri-Food Canada, London, ON, Canada N5V 4T3
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: caveney{at}uwo.ca)
Accepted 18 October 2006
| Summary |
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Key words: Bilateria, protostome, deuterostome, monoamine, neurotransmitters, transporter, SLC6 family, octopamine, tyramine, dopamine, norepinephrine, serotonin, earthworm, Lumbricus terrestris
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The neuronal expression of plasma membrane transporters involved in
neurotransmitter re-uptake is a diagnostic component of monoaminergic systems
in the Bilateria (Torres et al.,
2003
). The fully sequenced genomes of animals representative of
major bilaterian phyla, such as those of the flatworm, fruitfly, nematode and
human, all contain serotonin transporters (SERTs) and dopamine transporters
(DATs) (Pörzgen et al.,
2001
; Caveney and Donly,
2002
). Other monoamine transporters expressed by monoaminergic
neurons include an OA/TA transporter (OAT) associated with arthropod
octopaminergic pathways (Malutan et al.,
2002
; Donly and Caveney,
2005
) and the norepinephrine/epinephrine transporter (NET)
associated with chordate adrenergic pathways
(Apparsundaram et al., 1997
;
Roubert et al., 2001
). These
monoamine transporters are all metazoan members of the solute-linked carrier
(SLC) family 6 [or alternatively sodium:neurotransmitter symporter (SNF)
family] of Na+-dependent nutrient transporters that are expressed
in both prokaryotes
(Androutsellis-Theotokis et al.,
2003
; Yamashita et al.,
2005
) and eukaryotes (Chen et
al., 2004
; Boudko et al.,
2005b
). Monoamine transporters are highly conserved and widely
expressed in the bilaterian nervous system. Their protein structure and
substrate kinetics may provide information on the origin and number of genes
that encode SLC6 monoamine transporters in the Metazoa
(Chen et al., 2004
;
Höglund et al., 2005
). Do
the genes encoding the transporter for each specific monoamine in the metazoan
CNS derive from a common ancestor, and if not, are there differences in the
gene complements present in the different bilaterian lineages? What was the
ancestral monoamine transported by the different types of transporter? And
what is the relationship between protostome OA and deuterostome NE
transporters?
To address these questions, we have used both existing and new structural and functional data on SLC6 monoamine transporters representing many metazoan phyla. We have also cloned and characterized a phenolamine transporter from the CNS of the earthworm. The results suggest that OA and NE are ancient neurotransmitters in the protostome and deuterostome lineages, respectively, and that their transporters share a common origin.
| Materials and methods |
|---|
|
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Template for amplification was obtained from each organism by dissecting the brain and/or nerve cord directly into RNAlater (Ambion, Austin, TX, USA). Total RNA was isolated using Trizol reagent (Invitrogen, Burlington, ON, Canada) and made up in DEPC-treated H2O. Synthesis of cDNA was performed using 10 U Superscript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen) and 2.5 µg of RNA at 42°C for 50 min. PCR was then performed with 2 µl of cDNA as the template. Degenerate primers were designed from conserved amino acid sequences in known MATs (DAT0=5'-GCNGTNGAYYTNGCNAAYGTNTGG-3' encoding AVDLANVW and DAT3=5'-GTNGCNGTDATCCANACNACYTT-3' encoding KVVWITAT) to amplify an internal segment of cDNA encoding from the first to the fifth transmembrane domain (TMD) of the protein. The PCR mix contained 0.2 mmol l-1 dNTPs, 2.5 mmol l-1 MgCl2, 5 pmol µl-1 degenerate primers and 2.5 U Taq DNA Polymerase (Invitrogen). The PCR conditions were 94°C for 2 min, followed by 35 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 55°C for 30 s and 72°C for 1 min, followed by one 5-min hold at 72°C.
Products from PCR were separated on agarose gels and bands estimated to be of the appropriate size were ligated into pGEM-T Easy (Promega, Madison, WI, USA) and transformed into XL1-blue cells (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA, USA). Plasmids were subjected to dideoxynucleotide chain-termination sequencing using an ABI Prism BigDye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Kit and resolved with an ABI 3100 DNA sequencer (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA).
Cloning and expression of a Lumbricus MAT
Using the sequence of the internal DAT0/DAT3 fragment for Lumbricus
terrestris, nested pairs of primers were synthesized for 5' and
3' rapid amplification of cDNA ends-PCR (RACE-PCR). RACE-PCR was
performed using the FirstChoice RLM RACE kit (Ambion) as directed by the
supplier. From the fully assembled sequence, primers were synthesized to
amplify the complete open reading frame (ORF) (Lut8R:
5'-CGGCAGCTCTCGAAGGATACCAT-3' and Lut9F:
5'-GAAGCAGAGACCGAGTGACGAGGA-3'). The resulting 2.4 kb product was
amplified using EasyA polymerase (Stratagene) and cloned in pGEM-T Easy. Three
independently amplified products were sequenced to avoid polymerase
errors.
The cloned insert was transferred to the pIZ/V5-His vector for expression using the InsectSelect System (Invitrogen). Purified plasmid (6 µg) was used to transfect Sf9 cells in 60 mm culture plates using Cellfectin Reagent as instructed by the supplier (Invitrogen). Stably transformed lines derived from individual dishes were established and maintained in the presence of 100 µg ml-1 Zeocin.
Transport assays
Transport assays were performed in 12-well plates (Falcon;
Becton-Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA) as previously described
(Gallant et al., 2003
). Sf9
cells stably expressing LutOAT were seeded at a density of 800 000 per well in
1 ml of SF-900 II SFM medium (Invitrogen) and used 24 h later. The wells were
briefly rinsed and then incubated for an hour in a Na+-containing
saline (11.2 mmol l-1 MgCl2, 11.2 mmol l-1
MgSO4, 53.5 mmol l-1 NaCl, 7.3 mmol l-1
NaH2PO4, 55 mmol l-1 KCl and 76.8 mmol
l-1 sucrose at pH 7). The cells were then exposed to 500 µl
Na+ saline containing either 29 nmol l-1 to 0.29 µmol
l-1 3H-DA (specific activity 34.8 Ci mmol
l-1; 1 Ci=37 GBq), 18 nmol l-1 to 0.91 µmol l-1
3HNE (specific activity 10.9 Ci mmol l-1) (purchased from NEN
Life Sciences Products, Inc., Boston, MA, USA), 20 nmol l-1 to 0.50
µmol l-1 3H-OA (specific activity 20 Ci mmol l-1) or
10 nmol l-1 to 0.2 µmol l-1 3H-TA
(specific activity 50 Ci mmol l-1) (purchased from American
Radiolabelled Chemicals, St Louis, MO, USA). Where required, unlabelled
monoamine was added to the saline to give final concentrations over the range
10 nmol l-1 and 15.8 µmol l-1. Uptake was stopped
after 3 min by removing the radiolabelled solution and washing the cells three
times (2 ml/well/wash) with a Na+-free saline. The plate was air
dried and radiolabelled substrate accumulated by the cells extracted for 20
min with 500 µl 70% ethanol. A 400 µl aliquot was then removed from each
well, added to Ready Safe scintillation fluid (Beckman Coulter, Fullerton, CA,
USA) and the radioactivity counted on a scintillation analyzer (2900TR;
Perkin-Elmer, Wellesley, MA, USA). All washes and incubations were done at
27-29°C. The radiolabelled monoamine solutions were kept on ice until
immediately before use. Transport kinetics for each monoamine was determined
by Eadie-Hofstee analysis of the uptake data, which provides an estimate of
transporter affinity (Km) for the radiolabelled substrate
and the maximum velocity of its uptake
(
max)
(Jayanthi et al., 1998
,
Roubert et al., 2001
).
Na+-dependent uptake of each radiolabelled monoamine was assessed
on 3-5 plates of cells. The uptake data were corrected for
Na+-independent uptake by exposing the cells to an identical
treatment except for the substitution of choline+ for
Na+ in the saline. Sf9 cells also have an endogenous low-affinity
Na+-dependent uptake mechanism for amines that contributed less
than 5% to the total Na+-dependent uptake of OA in cells
transformed with the high-affinity LutOAT cDNA. Its effect on the calculated
Km for OA was not significant over the range of OA
concentrations used.
|
The amino acid sequences obtained were aligned using the ClustalW facility
in MEGA version 3.1 (Kumar et al.,
2004
). Phylogenetic trees were reconstructed using MEGA 3.1 by the
distance neighbour-joining method (with complete deletion of gaps). The
consensus trees resulting from bootstrapping the data (1000 replicates; seed
64884) are shown.
| Results |
|---|
|
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|
The relationship of these four clusters was then assessed. First, we
aligned the full-length protein sequences derived from the limited number of
SLC6-type monoamine transporter genes available online in complete or
near-complete metazoan genomes. To these sequences we added a new monoamine
transporter encoded by a full-length cDNA cloned from the earthworm
Lumbricus terrestris (Phylum Annelida)
(Fig. 3). Second, we searched
this set of full-length monoamine transporters for specific diagnostic amino
acid residues and polypeptide motifs. SLC6 monoamine transporters have several
diagnostic amino acid residues in their transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains
(Nelson, 1998
;
Torres et al., 2003
). As shown
in Fig. 1, TMD1 contains a
unique aspartate residue (D) in the conserved `hallmark' consensus sequence
AVDLA/GNI/VWRFPYL/ICYxNGG
(motif 1). This aspartate replaces a glycine residue (G) seen commonly in
closely related SLC6 nutrient amino acid transporters (NATs)
(Boudko et al., 2005a
). In
TMD5 a tryptophan residue (W) in the consensus sequence
SGKI/VVWxTAL/T (motif 3) normally
replaces a tyrosine residue (Y) seen in NATs. These two highly conserved and
unique motifs served as the sites (Fig.
1) for the PCR primers designed to amplify monoamine transporter
fragments (see Materials and methods). The different types of monoamine
transporters can be further distinguished by the presence of other amino acid
residues (Fig. 1). Many
serotonin transporters have an isoleucine (I) residue in motif 1 and a second
cysteine (C) residue in motif 2 not seen in catecholamine/phenolamine
transporters. Most SERTs also have a basic residue (K, R) in the first
cytoplasmic loop between canonical tryptophan and proline residues in the
sequence WK/RXI/VCP (part of motif
2). A glycine residue (G in WGR) is seen in the corresponding position in
protostome DATs. This amino acid residue is missing in invertebrate OA and
chordate catecholamine transporters (amphioxus NET is an exception). Most
notable in the full-length sequences, however, was a C-terminal HWL motif
(FxxHWLxx) in chordate NETs, cDATs and invertebrate OATs (motif 4). Putative
monoamine transporters in the flatworms Schistosoma and
Schmidtea have variants of this motif. The four consensus motifs are
shown in Fig. 1.
|
These peptide motifs suggest there are three clades of monoamine transporter belonging to the SLC6 transporter family. The first clade consists of SERTs. The second clade is a complex assemblage of monoamine transporters that, depending on organism and tissue context, may transport primarily catecholamines or phenolamines. We call this the MAT (monoamine transporter) clade. The protein structure of MATs includes the HWL motif. These two clades are represented throughout the bilaterian Metazoa. A third clade of DATs (iDAT) is apparently invertebrate-specific, being restricted to protostomes and invertebrate deuterostomes (i.e. non-chordates). iDAT is expressed in the nervous system of most protostome lineages (Fig. 2) and an iDAT variant is expressed in echinoderms. A phylogenetic reconstruction of the protein sequences constituting these three clades of monoamine transporter is shown in Fig. 3.
MAT clade
The MAT clade genes are present in major phyla at the apex of protostome
and deuterostome evolution, namely the Arthropoda and Chordata. Neurally
expressed MAT proteins fall into two structural and functional groups,
invertebrate MATs (OATs) that appear to be primarily active in phenolamine
uptake in situ and chordate MATs (NETs/DATs) primarily active in
catecholamine uptake in situ. The first invertebrate MAT cloned was
an octopamine transporter from the CNS of the moth Trichoplusia ni
(Malutan et al., 2002
). cDNAs
coding for OAT have now been cloned or sequenced from several arthropods
(supplementary material Table S1). Arthropod OATs have high affinity for TA,
OA and DA. Chelicerate arthropods are unusual in expressing two OAT
orthologues (Fig. 2). The
schistosome genome contains a recognizable but as yet uncharacterized
single-copy MAT gene that we provisionally name Schistosoma OAT
(Fig. 3).
The CNS in the protostome and deuterostome lineages differs in having
either octopaminergic or adrenergic neural pathways, respectively. Did the
ancestral MAT have selective affinity for OA over NE? To investigate this
possibility, we cloned and characterized a full-length MAT from the CNS of the
earthworm Lumbricus terrestris (Phylum Annelida). Annelids are
`lower' protostomes thought to possess a primitive anatomy and an ancestral
gene inventory (Arendt et al.,
2004
). The annelid nervous system contains DA, OA and serotonin
(Csoknya et al., 1996
;
Barna et al., 2001
).
Octopaminergic pathways (Csoknya et al.,
1996
, Barna et al.,
2001
) and dopaminergic pathways
(Crisp et al., 2002
) have been
mapped in the annelid brain and stomatogastric ganglia. Octopaminergic
signalling is associated with earthworm locomotion
(Mizutani et al., 2002
) and
smooth muscle contractility in the foregut
(Barna et al., 2001
).
Immunoreactivity for the NE biosynthetic enzyme DA ß-hydroxylase is
lacking in DA-containing neurons in the leech Hirudo, suggesting that
NE-ergic pathways are absent from the annelid CNS
(Crisp et al., 2002
).
|
|
Among basal deuterostomes, the genomes of the sea urchin
Strongylocentrotus (Phylum Echinodermata) and the amphioxus
Branchiostoma (Phylum Cephalochordata) contain single genes coding
for recognizable NET-like MAT proteins
(Fig. 3). Amphioxus is the
nearest common invertebrate ancestor of the vertebrates
(Shimeld and Holland, 2005
).
Motifs 2 and 4 of sea urchin NET and amphioxus NET
(Fig. 1) suggest that these
proteins derive from an ancestor in common with vertebrate NETs. The relative
affinity of putative sea urchin NET and amphioxus NET for NE and DA is
unknown, but both monoamines are pharmacologically active on echinoderm
tissues (Shingyoji and Yamaguchi,
1995
; Vanderlinden and
Mallefet, 2004
). Dopamine and OA, but not NE, are reportedly
present in amphioxus tissues (Moret et
al., 2004
), implying that putative amphioxus NET is involved in
the uptake of DA and/or OA rather than the uptake of NE. The genome of the
ascidian Ciona (Dehal et al.,
2002
) appears to lack a MAT gene altogether, even though the
ascidian larval brain has dopaminergic neurons and expresses the enzymes
required for DA synthesis (Moret et al.,
2005
).
Analysis of the limited collection of lamprey (Petromyzon, Phylum
Chordata Class Agnatha) WGS sequences in the NCBI Trace Archive suggests that
the genome of this primitive vertebrate contains two MAT-type genes, unlike
that of amphioxus, its nearest extant ancestor. In this way the lamprey genome
conforms with those of higher vertebrates, which contain two MAT paralogues.
Both vertebrate MAT genes encode catecholamine transporters. One codes for a
NE transporter (e.g. mammalian NET) and the other a chordatespecific DA
transporter (e.g. mammalian DAT). The latter has been extensively studied in
mammals because of its link with cocaine addiction
(Torres et al., 2003
).
Chordate DAT is present in all completely sequenced genomes of teleosts, birds
and mammals (Fig. 3).
In general, metazoan MATs (as represented by earthworm OAT, insect OAT and
mammalian NET) may be distinguished from iDAT and cDAT by their relatively
high affinity for phenolamines in addition to catecholamines
(Malutan et al., 2002
;
Gallant et al., 2003
).
Chordate NET, for instance, has a submicromolar affinity for both TA and OA,
based on inhibition data (Pörzgen et
al., 2001
). Drosophila DAT and Trichoplusia DAT,
by contrast, have lower affinity for TA and even less affinity for OA
(Pörzgen et al., 2001
;
Gallant et al., 2003
). Rat DAT
and C. elegans DAT similarly have modest affinity for TA and little
affinity for OA (Pörzgen et al.,
2001
).
It is important, however, to appreciate that sequence similarity between a functionally uncharacterized MAT and well-characterized MATs (Fig. 3) is no guarantee of its substrate preferences in situ. This is particularly true with respect to the MAT clade. Tentatively named Branchiostoma NET, Strongylocentrotus NET and Lumbricus OAT could in situ be involved in DA rather than NE or OA transport (although this is unlikely in the sea urchin, as its genome contains an iDAT gene, see below).
Invertebrate DA transporter clade
A second bilaterian SLC6-type gene encodes a DA transporter limited in
distribution to protostome and echinoderm (sea urchin) genomes. This
invertebrate-type DA transporter (iDAT) has some distinctive structural motifs
(Fig. 1). Expression of iDAT in
the invertebrate CNS is probably limited to small numbers of dopaminergic
neurons, such as in the insect brain and ventral nerve cord
(Pörzgen et al., 2001
;
Gallant et al., 2003
). The
iDAT protein has a selective affinity for DA
(Jayanthi et al., 1998
;
Pörzgen et al., 2001
;
Gallant et al., 2003
).
Evidence of iDAT homologues can be found in many protostome genomes, such as
those of the insects Apis and Tribolium, the flatworms
Schistosoma and Schmidtea and the nematode
Caenorhabditis. We isolated cDNAs for partial iDAT sequences from the
CNS of many arthropod species representing the major lineages in the phylum,
namely the Chelicerata, Myriapoda and Pancrustacea (Crustacea and Insecta).
These iDAT genes appear to be direct descendants of an ancestral bilaterian
DAT gene, although iDAT may not be expressed by all present-day protostome
phyla. For example, dopaminergic neurons are present both in the annelid CNS
(Barna et al., 2001
) and
mollusc CNS (Hiripi et al.,
1998
; Kiehn et al.,
2001
), yet iDAT was not detected in the earthworm CNS nor in the
CNS of the molluscs examined. However, the NCBI Trace Archive for the sea hare
Aplysia californica (Mollusca, Gastropoda) contains some WGS
sequences suggestive of the presence of a catecholamine or phenolamine
transporter-like gene. Among the deuterostome genomes examined, only
Strongylocentrotus contains an invertebrate-type DAT homologue.
Homologues of the iDAT gene are missing from the genomes of the lower
chordates Ciona and Branchiostoma and from those of all
higher chordates.
Serotonin transporter clade
The neurotransmitter serotonin was present in neurons in the CNS of all
protostomes and deuterostomes examined
(Hay-Schmidt, 2000
). Serotonin
transporters (SERTs), in contrast to invertebrate-type DA transporters, are
near-ubiquitously expressed in Metazoa. SERT has the smallest and most
conserved structure of the three known MATs in the SLC6 family.
Representatives of all protostome phyla examined were found to express
recognizable SERT homologues. This was most notable in species that lack genes
encoding one or both of the other MATs. In the Mollusca, partial SERT cDNAs
were obtained from the CNS of the snail Cepaea nemoralis and the clam
Elliptio dilatata (Fig.
2). A small SERT fragment has also been cloned from
Aplysia (NCBI accession #AAK94482). In the Annelida, we cloned a
partial SERT cDNA from the earthworm CNS. The partial SERT sequences encoded
by these molluscan and annelid cDNAs aligned with the corresponding region of
full-length flatworm Schistosoma SERT
(Fig. 1). The nematode
Caenorhabditis expresses a SERT with structure least similar to those
of the other protostome SERTs. The honeybee Apis genome (and probably
those of other hymenoptera) is exceptional in that it lacks a SERT gene.
Alignment of all available partial-SERT protein sequences obtained from
genomic and RT-PCR sources supports a conventional protostome clade in
metazoan phylogeny (Fig.
2).
All deuterostomes examined possess a SERT gene homologue. The list includes
the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus, the tunicate Ciona, the
amphioxus Branchiostoma and many representative vertebrates (Phylum
Chordata). The genomes of the lower chordates possess single-copy SERT genes,
whereas analysis of higher chordate genomes suggests that two SERT genes
existed in the stem ancestor of the subphylum Vertebrata. Two SERT paralogues
(designated here as SERT1 and SERT2) are present in teleost and amphibian
genomes (Wang et al., 2006
).
The Petromyzon (lamprey) WGS sequences in the NCBI Trace Archive
indicate that this primitive agnathan also expresses two SERT genes. The
Gallus (chicken) genome contains SERT1 and an additional SERT2-like
sequence (XM_425275.1). Mammalian genomes, however, have single-copy SERT
genes that are most similar to the lower vertebrate SERT1
(Fig. 2). The protein sequences
of deuterostome SERTs align to form a distinct deuterostome clade, in which
echinoderm SERT sits near the base in a position comparable to those occupied
by the protein sequences of echinoderm DAT and echinoderm NET in the two other
clades of deuterostome transporters (Fig.
3). The Strongylocentrotus genome is exceptional among
the genomes of basal deuterostomes examined in that it contains genes
representative of all three clades of SLC6 monoamine transporter.
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Gene loss (in this instance loss of transporter genes) in the lineages
leading to Drosophila and Caenorhabditis are well documented
(Kortschak et al., 2003
;
Raible and Arendt, 2004
). Gene
loss has also occurred during the evolution of the chordates
(Okamura et al., 2005
). The
urochordate Ciona lacks both an iDAT-type and MAT-type gene, and the
cephalochordate Branchiostoma an iDAT-type gene. Despite the absence
of these particular transporter protein sequences, an alignment of available
full-length and partial transporter sequences provides a conventional view of
the general relationships among metazoan phyla (Figs
2,
3).
The conservation of an HWL motif (and the schistosome HWI variant) at the
MAT protein C-terminus in phyla expressing this protein (e.g. cDAT, chordate
NET and protostome OAT) is particularly striking. The C-terminus of chordate
NET and cDAT is proposed to interact with the PDZdomains of cytoplasmic
proteins involved in protein trafficking through the endoplasmic reticulum
(ER) and in surface localization
(Bjerggard et al., 2004
).
Other non-PDZ binding domains, such as the (R/H/Q)HW motif (overlapping the
HWL above) seen in many metazoan MATs, could be equally important in the
trafficking of MAT proteins (Bjerggard et
al., 2004
). The sea urchin and amphioxus genomes contain genes
encoding MAT-like proteins that have a structure more similar to vertebrate
NET and cDAT than to protostome OAT. These MAT-type genes probably derive from
a MAT-like ancestral urbilaterian MAT gene distinct from the ancestor of the
iDAT lineage that lacks this C-terminal motif. The OAT gene, such as that seen
in the earthworm, may represent an ancestral MAT gene shared by both chordate
DAT and NET gene lineages.
Dopamine transporters expressed in the bilaterian CNS thus appear to have
two origins (Fig. 5). The
vertebrate cDAT gene appears to have arisen as a paralogue of the chordate NET
gene, probably following the separation of the vertebrate lineage from the
basal chordate groups, possibly through gene or genome duplication (see
below). The fact that the Drosophila and human DAT genes are derived
from differing lineages may be significant in assessing the correlative value
of Drosophila studies to model human cocaine addiction
(Pörzgen et al., 2001
).
The presence of both an iDAT gene and a MAT gene in the sea urchin genome
suggests this duplication event occurred after the echinoderms branched off
from the deuterostome line of evolution that leads to the chordates. In our
opinion, the possibility that chordate NET derives from cDAT instead of the
other way around is less likely. Both NE and E are thought to play a role in
sea urchin embryogenesis (Anitole-Misleh
and Brown, 2004
) and NE has been shown to trigger brittlestar
luminescence (Vanderlinden and Mallefet,
2004
). Whether this catecholamine is a bona fide
neurotransmitter in echinoderms is unresolved, however. Norepinephrine may be
a very ancient neurotransmitter that existed in the urbilaterian CNS and
possibly even in the nerve nets of pre-bilaterians such as ancestral
cnidarians (Anctil et al.,
2002
). Similarly, OA is extensively employed as a neurotransmitter
in the protostome Metazoa, as well as in the deuterostome branch at least as
far as the Cephalochordata. The uptake data presented here suggest that the
ancestor of earthworm OAT was `pre-adapted' to serve as a transporter of
either catecholamine or phenolamine neurotransmitters. The modest differences
in protein structure of putative echinoderm NET and putative amphioxus NET do
not allow us to predict with any confidence the nature of their neuronal
transport substrate(s) in situ.
Given these reservations, the following scenario might explain the de
novo evolutionary origins of the higher cDAT gene. The scenario is based
on the premise that the cephalochordate ancestor of amphioxus (unlike that of
the urochordate Ciona) is on the direct evolutionary line to
modern-day vertebrates. The absence of an invertebrate-type DAT gene in the
amphioxus genome then becomes evolutionarily significant, as it implies that
the iDAT gene was lost in the protochordate ancestor of modern-day
vertebrates, whereas the MAT homologue was retained. This protochordate
ancestor might have been a largely sessile organism similar in form and/or
behaviour to present-day urochordates and cephalochordates. Other neurally
expressed genes, possibly not crucial to survival in this simplified lifestyle
(or for reasons unknown), were also discarded by the first protochordates.
Recent analysis of the Ciona genome has revealed that many genes
encoding invertebrate-type voltage and ligand-gated ion channels/receptors
have apparently been lost (Okamura et al.,
2005
), and the same may hold true for the amphioxus genome. During
the subsequent evolution of higher chordates with more complex nervous
systems, alternative genes coding for ion channels have been duplicated to
replace some of the functions of those lost
(Vincent et al., 1998
).
The loss of an invertebrate-type DAT at dopaminergic synapses in the
relatively simple brains of ancestral chordates, for instance, would have
necessitated that passive diffusion or other non-transport-based mechanisms
restore external DA to pre-activation levels (see
Pörzgen et al., 2001
).
Genome duplication in the ancestor to the modern vertebrates, which is claimed
to have allowed the vertebrate brain to evolve in size and functional
complexity (Vincent et al.,
1998
), may have provided the opportunity for an ancestral
deuterostome MAT-type gene to diverge into the paralogous NET and DAT genes
expressed in the CNS of all modern vertebrates. Such a proposal is not novel,
as a similar pattern is seen in the duplication of catecholamine receptor
sequences in the vertebrates. Amphioxus expresses a single catecholamine
receptor of the DA D1 ß-adrenergic type
(Vincent et al., 1998
;
Candiani et al., 2005
) (NCBI
accessions CAA06536 and AAQ91625). All higher vertebrates (lamprey, hagfish
and beyond) express two or more catecholamine receptors of this type. Vincent
et al. link the D1 ß-receptor duplication to the origin of an adrenergic
neural system in the vertebrate CNS, and propose that the adrenergic receptor
evolved from a DA receptor (Vincent et
al., 1998
). However, studies on invertebrate OA-receptor and
vertebrate-adrenoreceptor sequences suggest that these proteins share a common
ancestry and that the adrenergic receptor evolved instead from an OA receptor
(Evans and Maquiera, 2005
;
Roeder, 2005
). For example,
the human
-1 adrenoreceptor and ß-adrenoreceptor are apparently
vertebrate homologues of a pair of OA receptors found in arthropods and
molluscs (Evans and Maquiera,
2005
; Roeder,
2005
; Pflüger and
Stevenson, 2005
). Both scenarios underscore the close evolutionary
relatedness of the vertebrate noradrenergic and dopaminergic systems to the
invertebrate octopaminergic system, in which both vertebrate monoamine
receptor and transporter gene paralogues appear to have duplicated in tandem.
A further neural component supports the idea of an urbilaterian (or even
pre-bilaterian) origin of the phenolaminergic/catecholaminergic (MAT) pathway
hinted at by the MAT and receptor sequences. Most metazoan genomes contain a
gene encoding a monoamine ß-hydroxylase needed to catalyze the synthesis
of OA from TA (TßH) and/or NE from DA (DßH) (supplementary material
Table S3). The phylogeny of this enzyme resembles that of MAT and of OA/NE
receptors (data not shown). Furthermore, these ß-hydroxylase protein
sequences, as seen in the iDAT and SERT sequences figured above, question the
validity of a close evolutionary relationship between the Nematoda and other
invertebrate phyla, particularly the Arthropoda. Access to sequence data for
proteins from unstudied lesser phyla may help resolve the peculiar ancestry of
the Nematoda.
In short, our transporter sequence data support the argument that
octopaminergic and adrenergic neurotransmitter pathways arose from a common
ancestral pathway. The genes encoding the hallmark combination of transporter,
receptor and ß-hydroxylase proteins expressed by phenolaminergic and
catecholaminergic neurons appear to have existed in the ancestor of all modern
Bilateria, with the two pathways diverging along the protostome and
deuterostome lineages. The full complement of ancestral SLC6 genes encoding
all three monoamine transporter types appears to have existed in the basal
urbilaterian stock prior to the `explosive' (relatively simultaneous)
appearance of the major metazoan phyla in the Cambrian period, approximately
530-570 million years ago. This could be the reason why the monoamine
transporter sequences failed to endorse any particular scheme proposed to
explain the inter-relationships among the protostome phyla. Recent proposals
that the phyla Mollusca, Annelida and Platyhelmintha cluster in a
lophotrochozoan clade of protostome animals and the phyla Arthropoda and
Nematoda in an ecdysozoan clade of protostome animals
(Aguinaldo et al., 1997
;
Adouette et al., 2000
) are only
partly supported by our analysis. Although similarity in the full and partial
SERT sequences from flatworm, an annelid and two mollusc lophotrochozoans lend
support to the concept of a lophotrochozoan clade
(Fig. 2), comparison of the
partial and full-length DAT and SERT sequences from the nematode C.
elegans with those of several arthropods fails to suggest any affinity
between these two so-called ecdysozoan phyla (Figs
2,
3). Indeed, the nematode DAT
and SERT proteins appear not to be particularly closely related in structure
to homologous sequences in other invertebrate phyla, in that they contain some
unusual amino acid residues in the core motifs (shown in
Fig. 1). The association of the
Nematoda with the Arthropoda in an Ecdysozoa clade is currently disputed
(Blair et al., 2002
;
Wolf et al., 2003
;
Philippe et al., 2005
).
Comparison of the arthropod SERT and OAT sequences, however, do endorse a
recent model for the ancestry of the Arthropoda (Richter et al., 2002), in
which a crustacean-insect lineage, the Pancrustacea, is proposed to be a
sister group to a less well-defined lineage containing the myriapods and
chelicerates, the Paradoxica (Nardi et
al., 2003
; Delsuc et al.,
2003
; Regier et al.,
2005
). In this model, the insects are in essence highly successful
descendants of a basal terrestrial crustacean
(Regier et al., 2005
).
| List of abbreviations |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
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