4.6 Article

Evolution of Protein-Mediated Biomineralization in Scleractinian Corals

Journal

FRONTIERS IN GENETICS
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2021.618517

Keywords

skeleton evolution; co-option; SOM proteins; stony corals; phylogenetic analysis

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme [755876]
  2. Israeli Binational Science Foundation [BSF 2016321]
  3. Zuckerman STEM Leadership Program
  4. ISF [2155/15]

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The study reveals the evolutionary process dominated by the co-option of genes that originated before the cnidarian diversification. Each of the three species of scleractinians appears to express a unique set of ancient genes, as well as a substantial proportion of independently evolved proteins. In addition, non-random clustering of multiple SOM proteins within scleractinian-specific branches suggests the conservation of protein function between distinct species.
While recent strides have been made in understanding the biological process by which stony corals calcify, much remains to be revealed, including the ubiquity across taxa of specific biomolecules involved. Several proteins associated with this process have been identified through proteomic profiling of the skeletal organic matrix (SOM) extracted from three scleractinian species. However, the evolutionary history of this putative biomineralization toolkit, including the appearance of these proteins' throughout metazoan evolution, remains to be resolved. Here we used a phylogenetic approach to examine the evolution of the known scleractinians' SOM proteins across the Metazoa. Our analysis reveals an evolutionary process dominated by the co-option of genes that originated before the cnidarian diversification. Each one of the three species appears to express a unique set of the more ancient genes, representing the independent co-option of SOM proteins, as well as a substantial proportion of proteins that evolved independently. In addition, in some instances, the different species expressed multiple orthologous proteins sharing the same evolutionary history. Furthermore, the non-random clustering of multiple SOM proteins within scleractinian-specific branches suggests the conservation of protein function between distinct species for what we posit is part of the scleractinian core biomineralization toolkit. This core set contains proteins that are likely fundamental to the scleractinian biomineralization mechanism. From this analysis, we infer that the scleractinians' ability to calcify was achieved primarily through multiple lineage-specific protein expansions, which resulted in a new functional role that was not present in the parent gene.

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