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Gene structure, transcripts and calciotropic effects of the PTH family of peptides in Xenopus and chicken

BACKGROUND: Parathyroid hormone (PTH) and PTH-related peptide (PTHrP) belong to a family of endocrine factors that share a highly conserved N-terminal region (amino acids 1-34) and play key roles in calcium homeostasis, bone formation and skeletal development. Recently, PTH-like peptide (PTH-L) was...

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Autores principales: Pinheiro, Pedro LC, Cardoso, João CR, Gomes, Ana S, Fuentes, Juan, Power, Deborah M, Canário, Adelino VM
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3009671/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21122104
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-10-373
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author Pinheiro, Pedro LC
Cardoso, João CR
Gomes, Ana S
Fuentes, Juan
Power, Deborah M
Canário, Adelino VM
author_facet Pinheiro, Pedro LC
Cardoso, João CR
Gomes, Ana S
Fuentes, Juan
Power, Deborah M
Canário, Adelino VM
author_sort Pinheiro, Pedro LC
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Parathyroid hormone (PTH) and PTH-related peptide (PTHrP) belong to a family of endocrine factors that share a highly conserved N-terminal region (amino acids 1-34) and play key roles in calcium homeostasis, bone formation and skeletal development. Recently, PTH-like peptide (PTH-L) was identified in teleost fish raising questions about the evolution of these proteins. Although PTH and PTHrP have been intensively studied in mammals their function in other vertebrates is poorly documented. Amphibians and birds occupy unique phylogenetic positions, the former at the transition of aquatic to terrestrial life and the latter at the transition to homeothermy. Moreover, both organisms have characteristics indicative of a complex system in calcium regulation. This study investigated PTH family evolution in vertebrates with special emphasis on Xenopus and chicken. RESULTS: The PTH-L gene is present throughout the vertebrates with the exception of placental mammals. Gene structure of PTH and PTH-L seems to be conserved in vertebrates while PTHrP gene structure is divergent and has acquired new exons and alternative promoters. Splice variants of PTHrP and PTH-L are common in Xenopus and chicken and transcripts of the former have a widespread tissue distribution, although PTH-L is more restricted. PTH is widely expressed in fish tissue but from Xenopus to mammals becomes largely restricted to the parathyroid gland. The N-terminal (1-34) region of PTH, PTHrP and PTH-L in Xenopus and chicken share high sequence conservation and the capacity to modify calcium fluxes across epithelia suggesting a conserved role in calcium metabolism possibly via similar receptors. CONCLUSIONS: The parathyroid hormone family contains 3 principal members, PTH, PTHrP and the recently identified PTH-L. In teleosts there are 5 genes which encode PTHrP (2), PTH (2) and PTH-L and in tetrapods there are 3 genes (PTHrP, PTH and PTH-L), the exception is placental mammals which have 2 genes and lack PTH-L. It is hypothesized that genes of the PTH family appeared at approximately the same time during the vertebrate radiation and evolved via gene duplication/deletion events. PTH-L was lost from the genome of eutherian mammals and PTH, which has a paracrine distribution in lower vertebrates, became the product of a specific endocrine tissue in Amphibia, the parathyroid gland. The PTHrP gene organisation diverged and became more complex in vertebrates and retained its widespread tissue distribution which is congruent with its paracrine nature.
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spelling pubmed-30096712011-01-07 Gene structure, transcripts and calciotropic effects of the PTH family of peptides in Xenopus and chicken Pinheiro, Pedro LC Cardoso, João CR Gomes, Ana S Fuentes, Juan Power, Deborah M Canário, Adelino VM BMC Evol Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Parathyroid hormone (PTH) and PTH-related peptide (PTHrP) belong to a family of endocrine factors that share a highly conserved N-terminal region (amino acids 1-34) and play key roles in calcium homeostasis, bone formation and skeletal development. Recently, PTH-like peptide (PTH-L) was identified in teleost fish raising questions about the evolution of these proteins. Although PTH and PTHrP have been intensively studied in mammals their function in other vertebrates is poorly documented. Amphibians and birds occupy unique phylogenetic positions, the former at the transition of aquatic to terrestrial life and the latter at the transition to homeothermy. Moreover, both organisms have characteristics indicative of a complex system in calcium regulation. This study investigated PTH family evolution in vertebrates with special emphasis on Xenopus and chicken. RESULTS: The PTH-L gene is present throughout the vertebrates with the exception of placental mammals. Gene structure of PTH and PTH-L seems to be conserved in vertebrates while PTHrP gene structure is divergent and has acquired new exons and alternative promoters. Splice variants of PTHrP and PTH-L are common in Xenopus and chicken and transcripts of the former have a widespread tissue distribution, although PTH-L is more restricted. PTH is widely expressed in fish tissue but from Xenopus to mammals becomes largely restricted to the parathyroid gland. The N-terminal (1-34) region of PTH, PTHrP and PTH-L in Xenopus and chicken share high sequence conservation and the capacity to modify calcium fluxes across epithelia suggesting a conserved role in calcium metabolism possibly via similar receptors. CONCLUSIONS: The parathyroid hormone family contains 3 principal members, PTH, PTHrP and the recently identified PTH-L. In teleosts there are 5 genes which encode PTHrP (2), PTH (2) and PTH-L and in tetrapods there are 3 genes (PTHrP, PTH and PTH-L), the exception is placental mammals which have 2 genes and lack PTH-L. It is hypothesized that genes of the PTH family appeared at approximately the same time during the vertebrate radiation and evolved via gene duplication/deletion events. PTH-L was lost from the genome of eutherian mammals and PTH, which has a paracrine distribution in lower vertebrates, became the product of a specific endocrine tissue in Amphibia, the parathyroid gland. The PTHrP gene organisation diverged and became more complex in vertebrates and retained its widespread tissue distribution which is congruent with its paracrine nature. BioMed Central 2010-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3009671/ /pubmed/21122104 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-10-373 Text en Copyright ©2010 Pinheiro et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (<url>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0</url>), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pinheiro, Pedro LC
Cardoso, João CR
Gomes, Ana S
Fuentes, Juan
Power, Deborah M
Canário, Adelino VM
Gene structure, transcripts and calciotropic effects of the PTH family of peptides in Xenopus and chicken
title Gene structure, transcripts and calciotropic effects of the PTH family of peptides in Xenopus and chicken
title_full Gene structure, transcripts and calciotropic effects of the PTH family of peptides in Xenopus and chicken
title_fullStr Gene structure, transcripts and calciotropic effects of the PTH family of peptides in Xenopus and chicken
title_full_unstemmed Gene structure, transcripts and calciotropic effects of the PTH family of peptides in Xenopus and chicken
title_short Gene structure, transcripts and calciotropic effects of the PTH family of peptides in Xenopus and chicken
title_sort gene structure, transcripts and calciotropic effects of the pth family of peptides in xenopus and chicken
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3009671/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21122104
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-10-373
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