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Vol 51(2017) N 1 p. 34-40; DOI 10.1134/S0026893317010125 Full Text

Y.H. Lin1, W. Zhang1, J.W. Li1, H.W. Zhang1, D.Y. Chen1,2*

Amphioxus ortholog of ECSIT, an evolutionarily conserved adaptor in the Toll and BMP signaling pathways

1Shandong Provincial Key Laboratory of Animal Cells и Developmental Biology, School of Life Science, Shandong University, Jinan 250100, China
2Medical School, Nankai University, Tianjin, China

*chendy@nankai.edu.cn
Received - 2015-11-04; Accepted - 2016-01-14

In vertebrates, evolutionarily conserved signaling intermediate in the Toll pathway (ECSIT) interacts with the TNF-receptor associated factor 6 (TRAF6) to regulate the processing of MEKK1, activate NF-κB, and also control BMP target genes. However, the role of ECSIT in invertebrates remains largely unexplored. We performed comparative investigations of the expression, gene structure, and phylogeny of ECSIT, Toll-like receptor (TLR), and Smad4 in the cephalochordate Branchiostoma belcheri. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that, in amphioxus, ECSIT, TLR, and Smad4 form independent clusters at the base of Chordate   clusters. Interestingly, overall gene structures were comparable to those in vertebrate orthologs. Transcripts of AmphiECSIT were detectable at the mid-neural stage, and continued to be expressed in the epithelium of the pharyngeal region at later stages. In adult animals, strong expression was observed in the nerve cord, endostyle, epithelial cells of the gut and wheel organ, genital membrane of the testis, and coelom and lymphoid cavities, what is highly similar to AmphiTLR and AmphiSmad4 expression patterns during development and in adult organisms. Our data suggests that ECSIT is evolutionarily conserved. Its amphioxus ortholog functions during embryonic development and as part of the innate immune system and may be involved in TLR/BMP signaling.

amphioxus, evolution, ECSIT, Smad4, Toll-like receptor



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