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Published January 4, 2011 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Structural shifts of aldehyde dehydrogenase enzymes were instrumental for the early evolution of retinoiddependent axial patterning in metazoans

Abstract

Aldehyde dehydrogenases (ALDHs) catabolize toxic aldehydes and process the vitamin A-derived retinaldehyde into retinoic acid (RA), a small diffusible molecule and a pivotal chordate morphogen. In this study, we combine phylogenetic, structural, genomic, and developmental gene expression analyses to examine the evolutionary origins of ALDH substrate preference. Structural modeling reveals that processing of small aldehydes, such as acetaldehyde, by ALDH2, versus large aldehydes, including retinaldehyde, by ALDH1A is associated with small versus large substrate entry channels (SECs), respectively. Moreover, we show that metazoan ALDH1s and ALDH2s are members of a single ALDH1/2 clade and that during evolution, eukaryote ALDH1/2s often switched between large and small SECs after gene duplication, transforming constricted channels into wide opened ones and vice versa. Ancestral sequence reconstructions suggest that during the evolutionary emergence of RA signaling, the ancestral, narrow-channeled metazoan ALDH1/2 gave rise to large ALDH1 channels capable of accommodating bulky aldehydes, such as retinaldehyde, supporting the view that retinoid-dependent signaling arose from ancestral cellular detoxification mechanisms. Our analyses also indicate that, on a more restricted evolutionary scale, ALDH1 duplicates from invertebrate chordates (amphioxus and ascidian tunicates) underwent switches to smaller and narrower SECs. When combined with alterations in gene expression, these switches led to neofunctionalization from ALDH1-like roles in embryonic patterning to systemic, ALDH2-like roles, suggesting functional shifts from signaling to detoxification.

Additional Information

© 2011 National Academy of Sciences. Edited by John Gerhart, University of California, Berkeley, CA, and approved November 10, 2010 (received for review August 17, 2010). Published online before print December 17, 2010. We thank Gérard Benoit, Tiago Pereira, Linda Z. Holland, and Nicholas D. Holland for critical reading of the manuscript. We are indebted to the Faculty of Medicine of the University of São Paulo for access to its high-performance computing cluster. This work was supported by Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo Grant 06/50843-0 (to J.X.-N.), by funds from Agence Nationale de Recherche (ANR-07-BLAN-0038 and ANR-09-BLAN-0262-02), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, and Ministere de l'Education Nationale de la Recherche et de Technologie (to M.S.), and by the Consortium for Research into Nuclear Receptors in Development and Aging (CRESCENDO), a European Union Integrated Project of FP6. M.S.-C. was supported by a travel fellowship from the Company of Biologists. Author contributions: M.S. and J.X.-N. designed research; T.J.P.S., F.M., M.S.-C., D.S., F.B., S.S., A.P., J.A., C.J.L., B.D., P.S.L.d.O., M.S., and J.X.-N. performed research; D.S., C.J.L., B.D., M.B., and P.S.L.d.O. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; T.J.P.S., F.M., M.S.-C., D.S., A.C.P., F.B., S.S., A.P., J.A., C.J.L., B.D., V.L., P.S.L.d.O., M.S., and J.X.-N. analyzed data; and T.J.P.S., F.M., D.S., B.D., V.L., M.B., P.S.L.d.O., M.S., and J.X.-N. wrote the paper.

Attached Files

Published - Sobreira2011p12637P_Natl_Acad_Sci_Usa.pdf

Supplemental Material - pnas.201011223SI.pdf

Supplemental Material - sd01.xls

Supplemental Material - sd02.xls

Supplemental Material - sm01.avi

Supplemental Material - sm02.avi

Supplemental Material - sm03.avi

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Created:
August 22, 2023
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