TY - JOUR
T1 - A mutation in the receptor Methoprene-tolerant alters juvenile hormone response in insects and crustaceans
AU - Miyakawa, Hitoshi
AU - Toyota, Kenji
AU - Hirakawa, Ikumi
AU - Ogino, Yukiko
AU - Miyagawa, Shinichi
AU - Oda, Shigeto
AU - Tatarazako, Norihisa
AU - Miura, Toru
AU - Colbourne, John K.
AU - Iguchi, Taisen
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Juvenile hormone is an essential regulator of major developmental and life history events in arthropods. Most of the insects use juvenile hormone III as the innate juvenile hormone ligand. By contrast, crustaceans use methyl farnesoate. Despite this difference that is tied to their deep evolutionary divergence, the process of this ligand transition is unknown. Here we show that a single amino-acid substitution in the receptor Methoprene-tolerant has an important role during evolution of the arthropod juvenile hormone pathway. Microcrustacea Daphnia pulex and D. magna share a juvenile hormone signal transduction pathway with insects, involving Methoprene-tolerant and steroid receptor coactivator proteins that form a heterodimer in response to various juvenoids. Juvenile hormone-binding pockets of the orthologous genes differ by only two amino acids, yet a single substitution within Daphnia Met enhances the receptor's responsiveness to juvenile hormone III. These results indicate that this mutation within an ancestral insect lineage contributed to the evolution of a juvenile hormone III receptor system.
AB - Juvenile hormone is an essential regulator of major developmental and life history events in arthropods. Most of the insects use juvenile hormone III as the innate juvenile hormone ligand. By contrast, crustaceans use methyl farnesoate. Despite this difference that is tied to their deep evolutionary divergence, the process of this ligand transition is unknown. Here we show that a single amino-acid substitution in the receptor Methoprene-tolerant has an important role during evolution of the arthropod juvenile hormone pathway. Microcrustacea Daphnia pulex and D. magna share a juvenile hormone signal transduction pathway with insects, involving Methoprene-tolerant and steroid receptor coactivator proteins that form a heterodimer in response to various juvenoids. Juvenile hormone-binding pockets of the orthologous genes differ by only two amino acids, yet a single substitution within Daphnia Met enhances the receptor's responsiveness to juvenile hormone III. These results indicate that this mutation within an ancestral insect lineage contributed to the evolution of a juvenile hormone III receptor system.
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U2 - 10.1038/ncomms2868
DO - 10.1038/ncomms2868
M3 - Article
C2 - 23673641
AN - SCOPUS:84878700494
SN - 2041-1723
VL - 4
JO - Nature Communications
JF - Nature Communications
M1 - 1856
ER -