Evolution of the albumin protein family in reptiles

[Display omitted] •The four albumin family proteins are physiologically and medically important.•Albumins are responsible for transporting a large variety of ligands throughout the body.•The serum albumin protein is absent in lizards and snakes.•New albumin lineages are identified. The albumin famil...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2022-04, Vol.169, p.107435-107435, Article 107435
Hauptverfasser: Broussard, Emilie M., Rodriguez, Zachary B., Austin, Christopher C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •The four albumin family proteins are physiologically and medically important.•Albumins are responsible for transporting a large variety of ligands throughout the body.•The serum albumin protein is absent in lizards and snakes.•New albumin lineages are identified. The albumin family of proteins consists of vitamin-D binding protein/group-specific component (GC), serum albumin (ALB), alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), and afamin (AFM), which are responsible for transporting many ligands throughout the body. The albumin family proteins are physiologically and medically important, but our understanding of their functions and applications is hindered by the dearth of information regarding these proteins’ evolutionary relationships and functions in non-mammalian lineages. In this study we investigate the evolution of the albumin family proteins in reptiles, using bioinformatic methods to survey available reptile genomes and transcriptomes for albumin family proteins and phylogenetically characterize their relationships. We reinforce the established evolutionary relationships among the albumin protein family in reptiles, however, they are variable in their number of domains, overall genetic sequence, and synteny. We find a novel absence of the physiologically important ALB in squamates and identify two distinct lineages of AFP, one in mammals and another in reptiles. Our study provides a comparative genomic framework for further studies identifying lineage-specific gene expansions that may compensate for the lack of serum albumin in squamates.
ISSN:1055-7903
1095-9513
DOI:10.1016/j.ympev.2022.107435