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Molecular evolution of the Thrombospondin superfamily

Journal

SEMINARS IN CELL & DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 155, Issue -, Pages 12-21

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.semcdb.2023.05.004

Keywords

Cnidaria; Drosophila; Extracellular matrix; Myotendinous junction; Phylogeny; Porifera; Prawns; Tissue regeneration

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Thrombospondins (TSPs) play diverse roles in animals and have been found to belong to a superfamily that includes different subgroups such as mega-TSPs, sushi-TSPs, and poriferan-TSPs. Invertebrates encode a greater diversity of TSP superfamily members than vertebrates.
Thrombospondins (TSPs) are multidomain, calcium-binding glycoproteins that have wide-ranging roles in ver-tebrates in cell interactions, extracellular matrix (ECM) organisation, angiogenesis, tissue remodelling, syn-aptogenesis, and also in musculoskeletal and cardiovascular functions. Land animals encode five TSPs, which assembly co-translationally either as trimers (subgroup A) or pentamers (subgroup B). The vast majority of research has focused on this canonical TSP family, which evolved through the whole-genome duplications that took place early in the vertebrate lineage. With benefit of the growth in genome-and transcriptome-predicted proteomes of a much wider range of animal species, examination of TSPs throughout metazoan phyla has revealed extensive conservation of subgroup B-type TSPs in invertebrates. In addition, these searches established that canonical TSPs are, in fact, one branch within a TSP superfamily that includes other clades designated mega-TSPs, sushi-TSPs and poriferan-TSPs. Despite the apparent simplicity of poriferans and cnidarians as organisms, these phyla encode a greater diversity of TSP superfamily members than vertebrates. We discuss here the mo-lecular characteristics of the TSP superfamily members, current knowledge of their expression profiles and functions in invertebrates, and models for the evolution of this complex ECM superfamily.

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