Teneurin structures are composed of ancient bacterial protein domains

Publication date

2019-03-13

Authors

Jackson, Verity A.
Busby, Jason N.
Janssen, Bert J.C.ISNI 0000000419421614
Lott, J. Shaun
Seiradake, Elena

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Article
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Abstract

Pioneering bioinformatic analysis using sequence data revealed that teneurins evolved from bacterial tyrosine-aspartate (YD)-repeat protein precursors. Here, we discuss how structures of the C-terminal domain of teneurins, determined using X-ray crystallography and electron microscopy, support the earlier findings on the proteins’ ancestry. This chapter describes the structure of the teneurin scaffold with reference to a large family of teneurin-like proteins that are widespread in modern prokaryotes. The central scaffold of modern eukaryotic teneurins is decorated by additional domains typically found in bacteria, which are re-purposed in eukaryotes to generate highly multifunctional receptors. We discuss how alternative splicing contributed to further diversifying teneurin structure and thereby function. This chapter traces the evolution of teneurins from a structural point of view and presents the state-of-the-art of how teneurin function is encoded by its specific structural features.

Keywords

cell adhesion, teneurin, bacterial toxin, evolution, choanoflagellate

Citation

Jackson, V A, Busby, J N, Janssen, B J C, Lott, J S & Seiradake, E 2019, 'Teneurin structures are composed of ancient bacterial protein domains', Frontiers in Neuroscience, vol. 13, 183. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2019.00183