کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
5906249 | 1159967 | 2013 | 8 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
- Members of two apyrase families serve as anticoagulants in blood-feeding arthropods.
- Independent recruitment events for this function have occurred in each family.
- Ancestral amino acid residues are conserved in anticoagulant 5â²-nucleotidases.
Phylogenetic analyses of three families of arthropod apyrases were used to reconstruct the evolutionary relationships of salivary-expressed apyrases, which have an anti-coagulant function in blood-feeding arthropods. Members of the 5â²nucleotidase family were recruited for salivary expression in blood-feeding species at least five separate times in the history of arthropods, while members of the Cimex-type apyrase family have been recruited at least twice. In spite of these independent events of recruitment for salivary function, neither of these families showed evidence of convergent amino acid sequence evolution in salivary-expressed members. On the contrary, in the 5â²-nucleotide family, salivary-expressed proteins conserved ancestral amino acid residues to a significantly greater extent than related proteins without salivary function, implying parallel evolution by conservation of ancestral characters. This unusual pattern of sequence evolution suggests the hypothesis that purifying selection favoring conservation of ancestral residues is particularly strong in salivary-expressed members of the 5â²-nucleotidase family of arthropods because of constraints arising from expression within the vertebrate host.
Journal: Gene - Volume 527, Issue 1, 15 September 2013, Pages 123-130