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Lamins of the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) and the evolution of the vertebrate lamin protein family
Authors:Paul Schilf  Annette Peter  Thomas Hurek  Reimer Stick
Institution:1. Department of Cell Biology, Faculty of Biology and Chemistry, University of Bremen, P.O. Box 33 04 40, 28334 Bremen, Germany;2. Department of Microbe-Plant Interactions, Faculty of Biology and Chemistry, University of Bremen, P.O. Box 33 04 40, 28334 Bremen, Germany
Abstract:Lamin proteins are found in all metazoans. Most non-vertebrate genomes including those of the closest relatives of vertebrates, the cephalochordates and tunicates, encode only a single lamin. In teleosts and tetrapods the number of lamin genes has quadrupled. They can be divided into four sub-types, lmnb1, lmnb2, LIII, and lmna, each characterized by particular features and functional differentiations. Little is known when during vertebrate evolution these features have emerged. Lampreys belong to the Agnatha, the sister group of the Gnathostomata. They split off first within the vertebrate lineage. Analysis of the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) lamin complement presented here, identified three functional lamin genes, one encoding a lamin LIII, indicating that the characteristic gene structure of this subtype had been established prior to the agnathan/gnathostome split. Two other genes encode lamins for which orthology to gnathostome lamins cannot be designated. Search for lamin gene sequences in all vertebrate taxa for which sufficient sequence data are available reveals the evolutionary time frame in which specific features of the vertebrate lamins were established. Structural features characteristic for A-type lamins are not found in the lamprey genome. In contrast, lmna genes are present in all gnathostome lineages suggesting that this gene evolved with the emergence of the gnathostomes. The analysis of lamin gene neighborhoods reveals noticeable similarities between the different vertebrate lamin genes supporting the hypothesis that they emerged due to two rounds of whole genome duplication and makes clear that an orthologous relationship between a particular vertebrate paralog and lamins outside the vertebrate lineage cannot be established.
Keywords:Petromyzon marinus  Sea lamprey  Agnatha  Gnathostomata  Chondrichthyes  Lamin  Gene neighborhood  Vertebrate evolution
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