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Evolutionary and Functional Diversification of the Vitamin D Receptor-Lithocholic Acid Partnership

The evolution, molecular behavior, and physiological function of nuclear receptors are of particular interest given their diverse roles in regulating essential biological processes. The vitamin D receptor (VDR) is well known for its canonical roles in calcium homeostasis and skeletal maintenance. Ad...

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Autores principales: Kollitz, Erin M., Zhang, Guozhu, Hawkins, Mary Beth, Whitfield, G. Kerr, Reif, David M., Kullman, Seth W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5152921/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27942020
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0168278
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author Kollitz, Erin M.
Zhang, Guozhu
Hawkins, Mary Beth
Whitfield, G. Kerr
Reif, David M.
Kullman, Seth W.
author_facet Kollitz, Erin M.
Zhang, Guozhu
Hawkins, Mary Beth
Whitfield, G. Kerr
Reif, David M.
Kullman, Seth W.
author_sort Kollitz, Erin M.
collection PubMed
description The evolution, molecular behavior, and physiological function of nuclear receptors are of particular interest given their diverse roles in regulating essential biological processes. The vitamin D receptor (VDR) is well known for its canonical roles in calcium homeostasis and skeletal maintenance. Additionally, VDR has received an increased amount of attention due to the discovery of numerous non-calcemic functions, including the detoxification of lithocholic acid. Lithocholic acid is a toxic metabolite of chenodeoxycholic acid, a primary bile acid. The partnership between the VDR and lithocholic acid has been hypothesized to be a recent adaptation that evolved to mediate the detoxification and elimination of lithocholic acid from the gut. This partnership is speculated to be limited to higher vertebrates (birds and mammals), as lower vertebrates do not synthesize the parent compound of lithocholic acid. However, the molecular functions associated with the observed insensitivity of basal VDRs to lithocholic acid have not been explored. Here we characterize canonical nuclear receptor functions of VDRs from select species representing key nodes in vertebrate evolution and span a range of bile salt phenotypes. Competitive ligand binding assays revealed that the receptor’s affinity for lithocholic acid is highly conserved across species, suggesting that lithocholic acid affinity is an ancient and non-adaptive trait. However, transient transactivation assays revealed that lithocholic acid-mediated VDR activation might have evolved more recently, as the non-mammalian receptors did not respond to lithocholic acid unless exogenous coactivator proteins were co-expressed. Subsequent functional assays indicated that differential lithocholic acid-mediated receptor activation is potentially driven by differential protein-protein interactions between VDR and nuclear receptor coregulator proteins. We hypothesize that the vitamin D receptor-lithocholic acid partnership evolved as a by-product of natural selection on the ligand-receptor partnership between the vitamin D receptor and the native VDR ligand: 1α,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3), the biologically active metabolite of vitamin D(3).
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spelling pubmed-51529212016-12-28 Evolutionary and Functional Diversification of the Vitamin D Receptor-Lithocholic Acid Partnership Kollitz, Erin M. Zhang, Guozhu Hawkins, Mary Beth Whitfield, G. Kerr Reif, David M. Kullman, Seth W. PLoS One Research Article The evolution, molecular behavior, and physiological function of nuclear receptors are of particular interest given their diverse roles in regulating essential biological processes. The vitamin D receptor (VDR) is well known for its canonical roles in calcium homeostasis and skeletal maintenance. Additionally, VDR has received an increased amount of attention due to the discovery of numerous non-calcemic functions, including the detoxification of lithocholic acid. Lithocholic acid is a toxic metabolite of chenodeoxycholic acid, a primary bile acid. The partnership between the VDR and lithocholic acid has been hypothesized to be a recent adaptation that evolved to mediate the detoxification and elimination of lithocholic acid from the gut. This partnership is speculated to be limited to higher vertebrates (birds and mammals), as lower vertebrates do not synthesize the parent compound of lithocholic acid. However, the molecular functions associated with the observed insensitivity of basal VDRs to lithocholic acid have not been explored. Here we characterize canonical nuclear receptor functions of VDRs from select species representing key nodes in vertebrate evolution and span a range of bile salt phenotypes. Competitive ligand binding assays revealed that the receptor’s affinity for lithocholic acid is highly conserved across species, suggesting that lithocholic acid affinity is an ancient and non-adaptive trait. However, transient transactivation assays revealed that lithocholic acid-mediated VDR activation might have evolved more recently, as the non-mammalian receptors did not respond to lithocholic acid unless exogenous coactivator proteins were co-expressed. Subsequent functional assays indicated that differential lithocholic acid-mediated receptor activation is potentially driven by differential protein-protein interactions between VDR and nuclear receptor coregulator proteins. We hypothesize that the vitamin D receptor-lithocholic acid partnership evolved as a by-product of natural selection on the ligand-receptor partnership between the vitamin D receptor and the native VDR ligand: 1α,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3), the biologically active metabolite of vitamin D(3). Public Library of Science 2016-12-12 /pmc/articles/PMC5152921/ /pubmed/27942020 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0168278 Text en © 2016 Kollitz et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kollitz, Erin M.
Zhang, Guozhu
Hawkins, Mary Beth
Whitfield, G. Kerr
Reif, David M.
Kullman, Seth W.
Evolutionary and Functional Diversification of the Vitamin D Receptor-Lithocholic Acid Partnership
title Evolutionary and Functional Diversification of the Vitamin D Receptor-Lithocholic Acid Partnership
title_full Evolutionary and Functional Diversification of the Vitamin D Receptor-Lithocholic Acid Partnership
title_fullStr Evolutionary and Functional Diversification of the Vitamin D Receptor-Lithocholic Acid Partnership
title_full_unstemmed Evolutionary and Functional Diversification of the Vitamin D Receptor-Lithocholic Acid Partnership
title_short Evolutionary and Functional Diversification of the Vitamin D Receptor-Lithocholic Acid Partnership
title_sort evolutionary and functional diversification of the vitamin d receptor-lithocholic acid partnership
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5152921/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27942020
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0168278
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