Amphioxus alcohol dehydrogenase is a class 3 form of single type and of structural conservation but with unique developmental expression

2000 
The coding region of amphioxus alcohol dehydrogenase class 3 (ADH3) has been characterized from two species, Branchiostoma lanceolatum and Branchiostoma floridae. The species variants have residue differences at positions that result in only marginal functional distinctions. Activity measurements show a class 3 glutathione-dependent formaldehyde dehydrogenase, with kcat/Km values about threefold those of the human class 3 ADH enzyme. Only a single ADH3 form is identified in each of the two amphioxus species, and no ethanol activity ascribed to other classes is detectable, supporting the conclusion that evolution of ethanol-active ADH classes by gene duplications occurred at early vertebrate radiation after the formation of the amphioxus lineage. Similarly, Southern blot analysis indicated that amphioxus ADH3 is encoded by a single gene present in the methylated fraction of the amphioxus genome and northern blots revealed a single 1.4-kb transcript. In situ experiments showed that amphioxus Adh3 expression is restricted to particular cell types in the embryos. Transcripts were first evident at the neurula stage and then located at the larval ventral region, in the intestinal epithelium. This tissue-specific pattern contrasts with the ubiquitous Adh3 expression in mammals.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    201
    References
    43
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []