Phylogenetic analyses suggest multiple changes of substrate specificity within the Glycosyl hydrolase 20 family

0301 basic medicine Glycoside Hydrolases Evolution Molecular Sequence Data beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidases Substrate Specificity Evolution, Molecular 03 medical and health sciences Eukaryotic Cells Prokaryotic Cells Sequence Analysis, Protein Gene Order QH359-425 Animals Humans Amino Acid Sequence Sequence Alignment Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics Phylogeny Research Article
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-8-214 Publication Date: 2008-07-22T18:13:15Z
ABSTRACT
Beta-N-acetylhexosaminidases belonging to the glycosyl hydrolase 20 (GH20) family are involved in the removal of terminal beta-glycosidacally linked N-acetylhexosamine residues. These enzymes, widely distributed in microorganisms, animals and plants, are involved in many important physiological and pathological processes, such as cell structural integrity, energy storage, pathogen defence, viral penetration, cellular signalling, fertilization, development of carcinomas, inflammatory events and lysosomal storage diseases. Nevertheless, only limited analyses of phylogenetic relationships between GH20 genes have been performed until now.Careful phylogenetic analyses of 233 inferred protein sequences from eukaryotes and prokaryotes reveal a complex history for the GH20 family. In bacteria, multiple gene duplications and lineage specific gene loss (and/or horizontal gene transfer) are required to explain the observed taxonomic distribution. The last common ancestor of extant eukaryotes is likely to have possessed at least one GH20 family member. At least one gene duplication before the divergence of animals, plants and fungi as well as other lineage specific duplication events have given rise to multiple paralogous subfamilies in eukaryotes. Phylogenetic analyses also suggest that a second, divergent subfamily of GH20 family genes present in animals derive from an independent prokaryotic source. Our data suggest multiple convergent changes of functional roles of GH20 family members in eukaryotes.This study represents the first detailed evolutionary analysis of the glycosyl hydrolase GH20 family. Mapping of data concerning physiological function of GH20 family members onto the phylogenetic tree reveals that apparently convergent and highly lineage specific changes in substrate specificity have occurred in multiple GH20 subfamilies.
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