A phylogenetic analysis of transcription factors of the Sox-Tcf/Lef-Mata (STM) family of the HMG-B superfamily was carried out in order to clarify the evolutionary roots of the Wnt signaling pathway in unicellular organisms. The data set for analysis included protein sequences of metazoans, fungi, unicellular opisthokonts, apusomonads and amoebozoans. The topology of the phylogenetic tree suggests that STM-related proteins arose in the common ancestor of Opisthokonta and Amoebozoa, two of amoebozoan STM proteins are sister-related to opisthokont ones and the three known lineages of STM transcription factors (STM family in narrow sence) are found in Opisthokonta only. Of these, the holozoan Sox protein branch is the result of either the first or second branching, that originated in the common ancestor of Opisthokonta. The lineage containing Tcf/Lef proteins (holozoan) and the lineage containing Mata proteins (holomycotan) are sister. They derived either at the time of the Holozoa and Holomycota divergence or originate from two paralogs of the common ancestor of Opisthokonta, which arose after the separation of the Sox lineage. Interaction with Armadillo-like proteins may be an original feature of the STM protein family and existed in the unicellular ancestors of multicellular animals; a connection is possible between the presence of Mata-related proteins in Aphelidium protococcorum and specific genome feature of this species. © 2024 Elsevier B.V.
Original languageEnglish
Article number148520
JournalGene
Volume921
DOIs
StatePublished - 30 Aug 2024

    Research areas

  • Aphelida, Choanoflagellate, HMG-B, Holomycota, Holozoa, Sox transcription factors, Tcf/Lef, Unicellular opisthokonts, Wnt signaling pathway, human menopausal gonadotropin, transcription factor, transcription factor Sox, fungal protein, high mobility group B protein, amino acid sequence, Amoebozoa, Arabidopsis thaliana, armadillo, Article, bootstrapping, choanoflagellate, computer model, fungus, genetic similarity, human, male, nonhuman, Opisthokonta, paralogy, phylogenetic tree, phylogeny, protein family, protein structure, sequence alignment, signal transduction, taxonomy, Wnt signaling, Xenopus laevis, animal, genetics, metabolism, molecular evolution, Animals, Evolution, Molecular, Fungal Proteins, Fungi, HMGB Proteins, Phylogeny, SOX Transcription Factors, Transcription Factors, Wnt Signaling Pathway

ID: 126391322