Login
Help

ARTICLE

Submit your Data

  1. Gene 'Moocul.CG.ELv1_2.S27...'
  2. Pub 'PMID:12392543'

Title

Ascidian arrestin (Ci-arr), the origin of the visual and nonvisual arrestins of vertebrate.

Authors

Nakagawa M, Orii H, Yoshida N, Jojima E, Horie T, Yoshida R, Haga T, Tsuda M

Journal

Eur. J. Biochem. 2002; 269(21):5112-8

PubMed ID

12392543

Abstract

Arrestin is one of the key proteins for the termination of G protein signaling. Activated G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are specifically phosphorylated by G protein-coupled receptor kinases (GRKs) and then bind to arrestins to preclude the receptor/G protein interaction, resulting in quenching of the following signal transduction. Vertebrates possess two types of arrestin; visual arrestin expressed exclusively in photoreceptor cells in retinae and pineal organs, and beta-arrestin, which is expressed ubiquitously. Unlike visual arrestin, beta-arrestin contains the clathrin-binding domain at the C-terminus, responsible for the agonist-induced internalization of GPCRs. Here, we isolated a novel arrestin gene (Ci-arr) from the primitive chordate, the ascidian Ciona intestinalis larvae. The deduced amino acid sequence suggests that Ci-Arr be closely related to vertebrate arrestins. Interestingly, this arrestin has the feature of both visual and beta-arrestin. Whereas the expression of Ci-arr was restricted to the photoreceptors in the larvae similarly to visual arrestin, the gene product, containing the clathrin-binding domain, promoted the GPCR internalization in HEK293tsA201 cells similarly to beta-arrestin. The phylogenetic tree shows that Ci-Arr is branched from a common root of visual and beta-arrestins. Southern analysis suggests that the Ciona genome contains only one gene for the arrestin family. These results suggest that the visual and beta-arrestin genes were generated by the duplication of the prototypical arrestin gene like Ci-arr in the early evolution of vertebrates.

Data related to this article

Fates affected

No result

Fates Genes involved

Genes functionally analyzed

No result

Gene Name Experimental evidence

Genes whose regulation was studied

No result

Gene Name Experimental evidence

Genes with description of Wild Type Expression

1 result

Molecular Tools

No result

Molecular Tool Name

Cis-regulatory regions

No result

Cis-reg Name

Constructs

No result

Construct Name Experimental evidence

RNA-Seq data

No result

Studied Transcriptome Experiment ID