Newly Discovered AqE Gene is Highly Conserved in Non-tetrapod Vertebrates
Studying the diversity of energy production pathways is important for understanding the evolutionary relationships between metabolic pathways and their biochemical precursors. The lactate/malate dehydrogenase (LDH/MDH) superfamily has been a model system for structural and functional evolution for a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of molecular evolution 2021-06, Vol.89 (4-5), p.214-224 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Studying the diversity of energy production pathways is important for understanding the evolutionary relationships between metabolic pathways and their biochemical precursors. The lactate/malate dehydrogenase (LDH/MDH) superfamily has been a model system for structural and functional evolution for a long time. Recently, the type-2 family of LDH/MDH (or LDH2/MDH2 oxidoreductase) has been identified. The LDH2/MDH2 oxidoreductase family is now known to have functionally more diverse enzymes than the LDH/MDH superfamily. In channel catfish, the gene encoding the LDH2/MDH2 oxidoreductase has been found (and was provisionally termed
AqE
). Homologs of this enzyme are predominantly present in organisms living in an aquatic environment. In this work, we studied the
AqE
gene distribution among non-tetrapod vertebrates. It was found that the
AqE
gene is present in the genomes of bony and cartilaginous fish and in the genomes of hagfishes and lampreys. In addition, it has been confirmed that in representatives of Cypriniformes, the
AqE
gene has been lost.
AqE
in representatives of Salmoniformes underwent significant deletions, which most likely led to its pseudogenization. In most orders of non-Tetrapoda vertebrates, the
AqE
gene remains highly conserved, suggesting that the
AqE
gene in aquatic vertebrates is an essential gene and undergoes rigorous selection. The
AqE
gene has the highest sequence similarity with the archaeal
ComC
gene that encodes sulfolactate dehydrogenase (SLDH). Based on the similarity of substrates, the enzyme encoded by the
AqE
gene is likely involved in the malate–aspartate shuttle mechanism or the biosynthesis of the energy coenzyme M equivalent. |
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ISSN: | 0022-2844 1432-1432 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00239-021-09997-x |