Coevolution of the spexin/galanin/kisspeptin family: Spexin activates galanin receptor type II and III.
Kim. Dong-Kyu DK; Yun. Seongsik S; Son. Gi Hoon GH; Hwang. Jong-Ik JI; Park. Cho Rong CR; Kim. Jae Il JI; Kim. Kyungjin K; Vaudry. Hubert H; Seong. Jae Young JY
Key Findings
- Spexin and a second spexin gene were identified across vertebrates and are located near kisspeptin and galanin genes on chromosomes.
- Spexin is more closely related to galanin than kisspeptin based on gene structure and sequence similarity.
- Spexin activates human, frog, and fish GALR2/3 receptors, especially GALR3, but not GALR1.
Practical Outcomes
- The findings are interesting for researchers studying hormone signaling but they don’t translate into immediate actions, dosages, or protocols for longevity, metabolism, or performance enhancement.
Summary
Scientists found that a peptide called spexin, which is related to kisspeptin and galanin, likely evolved together with those families and can turn on certain galanin receptors (GALR2/3) in humans and other animals. This is mostly a basic science discovery and doesn’t give any direct tips for health or performance.
Abstract
The novel neuropeptide spexin (SPX) was discovered using bioinformatics. The function of this peptide is currently under investigation. Here, we identified SPX along with a second SPX gene (SPX2) in vertebrate genomes. Syntenic analysis and relocating SPXs and their neighbor genes on reconstructed vertebrate ancestral chromosomes revealed that SPXs reside in the near vicinity of the kisspeptin (KISS) and galanin (GAL) family genes on the chromosomes. Alignment of mature peptide sequences showed some extent of sequence similarity among the 3 peptide groups. Gene structure analysis indicated that SPX is more closely related to GAL than KISS. These results suggest that the SPX, GAL, and KISS genes arose through local duplications before 2 rounds (2R) of whole-genome duplication. Receptors of KISS and GAL (GAL receptor [GALR]) are phylogenetically closest among rhodopsin-like G protein-coupled receptors, and synteny revealed the presence of 3 distinct receptor families KISS receptor, GALR1, and GALR2/3 before 2R. A ligand-receptor interaction study showed that SPXs activate human, Xenopus, and zebrafish GALR2/3 family receptors but not GALR1, suggesting that SPXs are natural ligands for GALR2/3. Particularly, SPXs exhibited much higher potency toward GALR3 than GAL. Together, these results identify the coevolution of SPX/GAL/KISS ligand genes with their receptor genes. This study demonstrates the advantage of evolutionary genomics to explore the evolutionary relationship of a peptide gene family that arose before 2R by local duplications.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-02-11T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/en.2013-2106
204
49