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Surprising complexity of the ancestral apoptosis network

Christian M Zmasek1* email, Qing Zhang1* email, Yuzhen Ye2 email and Adam Godzik1,3 email

Burnham Institute for Medical Research, North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA

School of Informatics, Indiana University, E.10th Street, Bloomington, IN 47408, USA

Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of California San Diego, Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA

author email corresponding author email* Contributed equally

Genome Biology 2007, 8:R226doi:10.1186/gb-2007-8-10-r226

Published: 24 October 2007

Subject areas: Evolution, Genome studies, Bioinformatics

Abstract

Background

Apoptosis, one of the main types of programmed cell death, is regulated and performed by a complex protein network. Studies in model organisms, mostly in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, identified a relatively simple apoptotic network consisting of only a few proteins. However, analysis of several recently sequenced invertebrate genomes, ranging from the cnidarian sea anemone Nematostella vectensis, representing one of the morphologically simplest metazoans, to the deuterostomes sea urchin and amphioxus, contradicts the current paradigm of a simple ancestral network that expanded in vertebrates.

Results

Here we show that the apoptosome-forming CED-4/Apaf-1 protein, present in single copy in vertebrate, nematode, and insect genomes, had multiple paralogs in the cnidarian-bilaterian ancestor. Different members of this ancestral Apaf-1 family led to the extant proteins in nematodes/insects and in deuterostomes, explaining significant functional differences between proteins that until now were believed to be orthologous. Similarly, the evolution of the Bcl-2 and caspase protein families appears surprisingly complex and apparently included significant gene loss in nematodes and insects and expansions in deuterostomes.

Conclusion

The emerging picture of the evolution of the apoptosis network is one of a succession of lineage-specific expansions and losses, which combined with the limited number of 'apoptotic' protein families, resulted in apparent similarities between networks in different organisms that mask an underlying complex evolutionary history. Similar results are beginning to surface for other regulatory networks, contradicting the intuitive notion that regulatory networks evolved in a linear way, from simple to complex.


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