| Literature DB >> 34073576 |
Norwin Kubick1, Pavel Klimovich2, Patrick Henckell Flournoy2, Irmina Bieńkowska3, Marzena Łazarczyk3, Mariusz Sacharczuk3, Suniti Bhaumik4, Michel-Edwar Mickael2,3, Rajatava Basu4.
Abstract
Understanding the evolution of interleukins and interleukin receptors is essential to control the function of CD4+ T cells in various pathologies. Numerous aspects of CD4+ T cells' presence are controlled by interleukins including differentiation, proliferation, and plasticity. CD4+ T cells have emerged during the divergence of jawed vertebrates. However, little is known about the evolution of interleukins and their origin. We traced the evolution of interleukins and their receptors from Placozoa to primates. We performed phylogenetic analysis, ancestral reconstruction, HH search, and positive selection analysis. Our results indicated that various interleukins' emergence predated CD4+ T cells divergence. IL14 was the most ancient interleukin with homologs in fungi. Invertebrates also expressed various interleukins such as IL41 and IL16. Several interleukin receptors also appeared before CD4+ T cells divergence. Interestingly IL17RA and IL17RD, which are known to play a fundamental role in Th17 CD4+ T cells first appeared in mollusks. Furthermore, our investigations showed that there is not any single gene family that could be the parent group of interleukins. We postulate that several groups have diverged from older existing cytokines such as IL4 from TGFβ, IL10 from IFN, and IL28 from BCAM. Interleukin receptors were less divergent than interleukins. We found that IL1R, IL7R might have diverged from a common invertebrate protein that contained TIR domains, conversely, IL2R, IL4R and IL6R might have emerged from a common invertebrate ancestor that possessed a fibronectin domain. IL8R seems to be a GPCR that belongs to the rhodopsin-like family and it has diverged from the Somatostatin group. Interestingly, several interleukins that are known to perform a critical function for CD4+ T cells such as IL6, IL17, and IL1B have gained new functions and evolved under positive selection. Overall evolution of interleukin receptors was not under significant positive selection. Interestingly, eight interleukin families appeared in lampreys, however, only two of them (IL17B, IL17E) evolved under positive selection. This observation indicates that although lampreys have a unique adaptive immune system that lacks CD4+ T cells, they could be utilizing interleukins in homologous mode to that of the vertebrates' immune system. Overall our study highlights the evolutionary heterogeneity within the interleukins and their receptor superfamilies and thus does not support the theory that interleukins evolved solely in jawed vertebrates to support T cell function. Conversely, some of the members are likely to play conserved functions in the innate immune system.Entities:
Keywords: CD4+ T cells; Th17; evolution; interleukins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34073576 PMCID: PMC8226699 DOI: 10.3390/genes12060813
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Figure 1Workflow of the evolutionary analysis of the IL families. Each node was designated as a family or ancestral sequence node. The ancestral sequence for each family was used to generate an ancestral sequence for each superfamily. The ancestral sequence for the superfamily was utilized as an input for homology search. Finally, an evolutionary network was built.
Figure 2Evolutionary history of ILs and their receptors. (a) Interleukins evolutionary history; the most ancient member of ILs is IL14, which first appeared in Trichoplax and has an orthologs in Fungi. IL1B and IL17A, which both play critical roles in T cell function, first appeared in lampreys. Interestingly, IL6R appears in Drosophila. However, IL6 does not seem to have appeared in this species. (b) Interleukin receptors evolutionary history. IL17AR and IL17DR first diverged in Mollusca. IL-1R8 and IL1RAP first appeared in lampreys, together with IL13RA, IL6RB(GP130), CNTFR, clcf1(CRFL1), IL20Rα IL17R, and IL8R. As lampreys possess VLAR, VLARB, and VLARC cells and not T cells, IL1B and IL6, as well as these receptors, could be performing distinctive roles in this species.
Estimated origins of the IL families and their receptors.
| Receptor Family | Origin |
|---|---|
|
| TIR domain-containing protein (99.9%) |
|
| Fibronectin type-III domain-containing protein (99.69%) |
|
| Fibronectin domain-containing protein (99.9%) |
|
| granulocyte colony-stimulating factor receptor-like (99.99%) |
|
| Interferon γ receptor 1 (99.61%) |
|
| Toll-like receptor 5; Toll-like receptor 5, (96.67%) |
|
| Interferon α/β receptor 1 (Fragment) (98.7%) |
|
| Somatostatin receptor (100%) |
|
|
|
|
| Transforming growth factor β-1 proprotein (99.92%) |
|
| transforming growth factor β-1 proprotein (99.92%) |
|
| Transforming growth factor β-1 (99.68%) |
|
| transforming growth factor β-1 proprotein (99.92%) |
|
| Mouse double-minute 1 (99.71%) |
|
| Transforming growth factor β-1 proprotein (99%) |
|
| Basal cell adhesion molecule (99.56%) |
|
| IL1B (99%) |
|
| α-taxilin (99%) |
|
| Discs Large MAGUK Scaffold Protein 4 (99.56%) |
|
| MMP25 protein (99.5%) |
|
| Synaptogyrin (99.28%) |
Figure 3ILs and IL receptors do not share a sole origin. For each IL and IL receptor family, we identified the highest probable common ancestors using HHsearch and Blastp. Then we employed SplitsTree to estimate an evolutionary network with a bootstrap value of 100 using the identified sequences. (a) IL17 super family evolutionary network. Our workflow identified six different proteins as putative homologs to the ancestor sequence of IL17, namely, MCL1, SPZ, TGFβ, PTTH, Noggin, and ZC3H3. The nearest two homologs to IL17 are SPZ and MCL1. SPZ first appeared in Drosophila, while MCL1 appeared in Bagworm moth. (b) The nearest homologs of IL28 are IFNγ (Elephant shark), BCAM (Bighead turtle), C35D10.12 (Round worm) and TGFβ (Round worm).
Neutrality test and positive selection test (ω) for ILs and ILs receptors (for neutrality test, D is significant if >2 or −2>).
| Gene | Neutrality Test | ω | |
|---|---|---|---|
| IL1 | 0.99 | 1.83 | <0.01 |
| IL2 | −2.4 | 0.73 | >0.05 |
| IL4 | −1.4 | 0.83 | >0.05 |
| IL6 | −0.8 | 1.76 | < 0.01 |
| IL10 | 2.4 | 0.46 | >0.05 |
| IL17 | 1.2 | 1.00 | >0.05 |
| IL28 | n/c | 0.9 | >0.05 |
| IL8 | 2.9 | 0.32 | <0.01 |
| IL14 | −0.6 | 0.38 | <0.01 |
| IL16 | 0.4 | 0.48 | <0.01 |
| IL32 | 0.8 | 0.02 | <0.01 |
| IL34 | 1.5 | 0.43 | <0.01 |
| IL40 | 2.4 | 0.69 | >0.05 |
| IL41 | 1.5 | 0.31 | >0.05 |
| IL1R | 4.0 | 0.61 | <0.01 |
| IL2R | 1.6 | 0.49 | <0.01 |
| IL4R | 1.07 | 0.3 | <0.01 |
| IL6R | 2.02 | 0.38 | <0.01 |
| IL10R | 2.01 | 0.84 | <0.01 |
| IL17R | 1.5 | 0.39 | <0.01 |
| IL28R | 3.5 | 0.69 | <0.01 |
| Unclassified (IL8R) | 2.6 | 0.44 | <0.01 |
Positive selection test for ILs and ILs receptors expressed in lampreys.
| Interlukin | ω | |
|---|---|---|
| IL1B | 0.69 | <0.01 |
| IL17B | 4.00 | >0.05 |
| IL17C | 0.23 | >0.05 |
| IL17D | 0.57 | >0.05 |
| IL17E | >10 | <0.01 |
| IL14 | 0.23 | >0.05 |
| IL16 | 0.40 | >0.05 |
| IL41 | 0.31 | >0.05 |
| Receptor |
|
|
| IL1R8 | 0.30608 | >0.05 |
| IL1RAP | 0.46 | >0.05 |
| IL13RA1 | 0.1 | >0.05 |
| IL6RB | 1.21 | >0.05 |
| IL31R | >10 | >0.05 |
| CNTFR | 1.00 | >0.05 |
| CRFL1 | >10 | >0.05 |
| CSFR | 1.00 | >0.05 |
| IL20RA | 0.1 | >0.05 |
| IL17RA | 0.31 | <0.01 |
| IL17RD | 1.00 | >0.05 |
| IL17RE | 0.46 | >0.05 |
| IL8R | 0.28 | >0.05 |