Abstract.
Since separation from fungi and plants, multicellular animals evolved a variety of gene families involved in cell–cell communication from a limited number of ancestral precursors by gene duplications in two separate periods of animal evolution. In the very early evolution of animals before the separation of parazoans and eumetazoans, animals underwent extensive gene duplications by which different subtypes (subfamilies) with distinct functions diverged. The multiplicity of members (isoforms) in the same subtype increased by further gene duplications (isoform duplications) in the first half of chordate evolution before the fish–tetrapod split; different isoforms are virtually identical in structure and function but differ in tissue distribution. From cloning and phylogenetic analyses of four subfamilies of the protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) family, we recently showed extensive isoform duplications in a limited period around or just before the cyclostome–gnathostome split. To obtain a reliable estimate for the divergence time of vertebrate isoforms, we have conducted isolation of cDNAs encoding the protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) from Branchiostoma belcheri, an amphioxus, Eptatretus burgeri, a hagfish, and Potamotrygon motoro, a ray. We obtained 33 different cDNAs in total, most of which belong to known PTP subfamilies. The phylogenetic analyses of five subfamilies based on the maximum likelihood method revealed frequent isoform duplications in a period around or just before the gnathostome–cyclostome split. An evolutionary implication was discussed in relation to the Cambrian explosion.
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Received: 12 November 1999 / Accepted: 13 December 1999
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Ono-Koyanagi, K., Suga, H., Katoh, K. et al. Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases from Amphioxus, Hagfish, and Ray: Divergence of Tissue-Specific Isoform Genes in the Early Evolution of Vertebrates. J Mol Evol 50, 302–311 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002399910035
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002399910035