4.5 Article

Adaptive evolution of fish hatching enzyme: one amino acid substitution results in differential salt dependency of the enzyme

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 216, Issue 9, Pages 1609-1615

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.069716

Keywords

adaptation; astacin family; egg envelope; hatching enzyme

Categories

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS)
  2. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [24770230, 23370041, 24570250, 24770231] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Embryos of medaka Oryzias latipes hatch in freshwater, while those of killifish Fundulus heteroclitus hatch in brackish water. Medaka and Fundulus possess two kinds of hatching enzymes, high choriolytic enzyme (HCE) and low choriolytic enzyme (LCE), which cooperatively digest their egg envelope at the time of hatching. Optimal salinity of medaka HCE was found in 0 mol l(-1) NaCl, and activity decreased with increasing salt concentrations. One of the two Fundulus HCEs, FHCE1, showed the highest activity in 0 mol l(-1) NaCl, and the other, FHCE2, showed the highest activity in 0.125 mol l(-1) NaCl. The results suggest that the salt dependencies of HCEs are well adapted to each salinity at the time of hatching. Different from HCE, LCEs of both species maintained the activity sufficient for egg envelope digestion in various salinities. The difference in amino acid sequence between FHCE1 and FHCE2 was found at only a single site at position 36 (Gly/Arg), suggesting that this single substitution causes the different salt dependency between the two enzymes. Superimposition of FHCE1 and FHCE2 with the 3-D structure model of medaka HCE revealed that position 36 was located on the surface of HCE molecule, far from its active site cleft. The results suggest a hypothesis that position 36 influences salt-dependent activity of HCE, not with recognition of primary structure around the cleavage site, but with recognition of higher ordered structure of egg envelope protein.

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