| Literature DB >> 10635065 |
J D Spafford1, A N Spencer, W J Gallin.
Abstract
Voltage-gated Na+ channels are responsible for fast propagating action potentials. The structurally simplest animals known to contain rapid, transient, voltage-gated currents carried exclusively by Na+ ions are the Cnidaria. The Cnidaria are thought to be close to the origin of the metazoan radiation and thus are pivotal organisms for studying the evolution of the Na+ channel gene. Here we describe the genomic organization of the Na+ channel alpha subunit, PpSCN1, from the hydrozoan jellyfish, Polyorchis penicillatus. We show that most of the 20 intron sites in this diploblast are conserved in mammalian Na+ channel genes, with some even shared by Ca2+ channels. One of these conserved introns is spliced by a rare U 12-type spliceosome. Such conservation places the origin of the primary exon arrangement of Na+ channels and different intron splicing mechanisms to at least the common ancestors of diploblasts and triploblasts, approximately 600 million-1 billion years ago.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10635065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Receptors Channels ISSN: 1060-6823