| Literature DB >> 27879317 |
Lijuan Xing1, Yang An2, Guangsen Shi1, Jie Yan1, Pancheng Xie2, Zhipeng Qu2, Zhihui Zhang2, Zhiwei Liu1, Dejing Pan3, Ying Xu4,2.
Abstract
Understanding the mechanism underlying the physiological divergence of species is a long-standing issue in evolutionary biology. The circadian clock is a highly conserved system existing in almost all organisms that regulates a wide range of physiological and behavioral events to adapt to the day-night cycle. Here, the interactions between hCK1ϵ/δ/DBT (Drosophila ortholog of CK1δ/ϵ) and serine-rich (SR) motifs from hPER2 (ortholog of Drosophila per) were reconstructed in a Drosophila circadian system. The results indicated that in Drosophila, the SR mutant form hPER2S662G does not recapitulate the mouse or human mutant phenotype. However, introducing hCK1δ (but not DBT) shortened the circadian period and restored the SR motif function. We found that hCK1δ is catalytically more efficient than DBT in phosphorylating the SR motif, which demonstrates that the evolution of CK1δ activity is required for SR motif modulation. Moreover, an abundance of phosphorylatable SR motifs and the striking emergence of putative SR motifs in vertebrate proteins were observed, which provides further evidence that the correlated evolution between kinase activity and its substrates set the stage for functional diversity in vertebrates. It is possible that such correlated evolution may serve as a biomarker associated with the adaptive benefits of diverse organisms. These results also provide a concrete example of how functional synthesis can be achieved through introducing evolutionary partners in vivo.Entities:
Keywords: Drosophila; circadian clock; correlated evolution; invertebrate; kinase; mammal; mouse; orthologs; phosphorylation; substrates
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27879317 PMCID: PMC5217676 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M116.751214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157