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 β-arrestin, which is expressed ubiquitously. Unlike visual arrestin, β-arrestin contains the clathrin-binding domain at the C-terminus, responsible for the agonist-induced internalizationof GPCRs. Here, weisolated 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 β-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 β-arrestin. The phylogenetic tree shows that Ci-Arr is branched from a common root of visual and β-arrestins. Southern analysis suggests that the Ciona genome contains only one gene for the arrestin family. These results suggest that the visual and β-arrestin genes were generated by the duplication of the prototypical arrestin gene like Ci-arr in the early evolution of vertebrates.
CITATION STYLE
Nakagawa, M., Orii, H., Yoshida, N., Jojima, E., Horie, T., Yoshida, R., … Tsuda, M. (2002). Ascidian arrestin (ci-arr), the origin of the visual and nonvisual arrestins of vertebrate. European Journal of Biochemistry, 269(21), 5112–5118. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1432-1033.2002.03240.x
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