Invited Review Evolutionary origins of eukaryotic sodium/proton exchangers
نویسندگان
چکیده
Brett, Christopher L., Mark Donowitz, and Rajini Rao. Evolutionary origins of eukaryotic sodium/proton exchangers. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 288: C223– C239, 2005; doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00360.2004.—More than 200 genes annotated as Na /H hydrogen exchangers (NHEs) currently reside in bioinformation databases such as GenBank and Pfam. We performed detailed phylogenetic analyses of these NHEs in an effort to better understand their specific functions and physiological roles. This analysis initially required examining the entire monovalent cation proton antiporter (CPA) superfamily that includes the CPA1, CPA2, and NaT-DC families of transporters, each of which has a unique set of bacterial ancestors. We have concluded that there are nine human NHE (or SLC9A) paralogs as well as two previously unknown human CPA2 genes, which we have named HsNHA1 and HsNHA2. The eukaryotic NHE family is composed of five phylogenetically distinct clades that differ in subcellular location, drug sensitivity, cation selectivity, and sequence length. The major subgroups are plasma membrane (recycling and resident) and intracellular (endosomal/TGN, NHE8-like, and plant vacuolar). HsNHE1, the first cloned eukaryotic NHE gene, belongs to the resident plasma membrane clade. The latter is the most recent to emerge, being found exclusively in vertebrates. In contrast, the intracellular clades are ubiquitously distributed and are likely precursors to the plasma membrane NHE. Yeast endosomal ScNHX1 was the first intracellular NHE to be described and is closely related to HsNHE6, HsNHE7, and HsNHE9 in humans. Our results link the appearance of NHE on the plasma membrane of animal cells to the use of the Na /K -ATPase to generate the membrane potential. These novel observations have allowed us to use comparative biology to predict physiological roles for the nine human NHE paralogs and to propose appropriate model organisms in which to study the unique properties of each NHE subclass.
منابع مشابه
A calcineurin homologous protein is required for sodium-proton exchange events in the C. elegans intestine.
Caenorhabditis elegans defecation is a rhythmic behavior, composed of three sequential muscle contractions, with a 50-s periodicity. The motor program is driven by oscillatory calcium signaling in the intestine. Proton fluxes, which require sodium-proton exchangers at the apical and basolateral intestinal membranes, parallel the intestinal calcium flux. These proton shifts are critical for defe...
متن کاملConversion of the 2 Cl(-)/1 H+ antiporter ClC-5 in a NO3(-)/H+ antiporter by a single point mutation.
Several members of the CLC family are secondary active anion/proton exchangers, and not passive chloride channels. Among the exchangers, the endosomal ClC-5 protein that is mutated in Dent's disease shows an extreme outward rectification that precludes a precise determination of its transport stoichiometry from measurements of the reversal potential. We developed a novel imaging method to deter...
متن کاملCalcineurin Homologous Proteins Regulate the Membrane Localization and Activity of 4 Sodium - Proton Exchangers in C
1 1 2 3 Calcineurin Homologous Proteins Regulate the Membrane Localization and Activity of 4 Sodium-Proton Exchangers in C. elegans* 5 6 Erik Allman, Qian Wang, Rachel L. Walker, Molly Austen, Maureen A. Peters, Keith Nehrke 7 8 Departments of Pharmacology and Physiology and Medicine, University of Rochester School of 9 Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY 14642, The Department of Biology, Obe...
متن کاملCell Timer/Cell Clock
Like the biological clock in the body, replication of each cell type (even different cells of the same organism) follows a timing program. Abnormal function of this timer could be an alarm for a disease like cancer. DNA replication starts from a specific point on the chromosome that is called the origin of replication. In contrast to prokaryotes in which DNA replication starts from a single ...
متن کاملFrom bacteria to man: archaic proton-dependent peptide transporters at work.
Uptake of nutrients into cells is essential to life and occurs in all organisms at the expense of energy. Whereas in most prokaryotic and simple eukaryotic cells electrochemical transmembrane proton gradients provide the central driving force for nutrient uptake, in higher eukaryotes it is more frequently coupled to sodium movement along the transmembrane sodium gradient, occurs via uniport mec...
متن کامل