Advanced search
Start date
Betweenand


Divergence time estimates for the hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha (HIF1α) reveal an ancient emergence of animals in low-oxygen environments

Full text
Author(s):
Belato, Flavia A. ; Mello, Beatriz ; Coates, Christopher J. ; Halanych, Kenneth M. ; Brown, Federico D. ; Morandini, Andre C. ; Leme, Juliana de Moraes ; Trindade, Ricardo I. F. ; Costa-Paiva, Elisa Maria
Total Authors: 9
Document type: Journal article
Source: Geobiology; v. N/A, p. 14-pg., 2023-09-26.
Abstract

Unveiling the tempo and mode of animal evolution is necessary to understand the links between environmental changes and biological innovation. Although the earliest unambiguous metazoan fossils date to the late Ediacaran period, molecular clock estimates agree that the last common ancestor (LCA) of all extant animals emerged similar to 850 Ma, in the Tonian period, before the oldest evidence for widespread ocean oxygenation at similar to 635-560 Ma in the Ediacaran period. Metazoans are aerobic organisms, that is, they are dependent on oxygen to survive. In low-oxygen conditions, most animals have an evolutionarily conserved pathway for maintaining oxygen homeostasis that triggers physiological changes in gene expression via the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIFa). However, here we confirm the absence of the characteristic HIFa protein domain responsible for the oxygen sensing of HIFa in sponges and ctenophores, indicating the LCA of metazoans lacked the functional protein domain as well, and so could have maintained their transcription levels unaltered under the very low-oxygen concentrations of their environments. Using Bayesian relaxed molecular clock dating, we inferred that the ancestral gene lineage responsible for HIFa arose in the Mesoproterozoic Era, similar to 1273 Ma (Credibility Interval 957-1621 Ma), consistent with the idea that important genetic machinery associated with animals evolved much earlier than the LCA of animals. Our data suggest at least two duplication events in the evolutionary history of HIFa, which generated three vertebrate paralogs, products of the two successive whole-genome duplications that occurred in the vertebrate LCA. Overall, our results support the hypothesis of a pre-Tonian emergence of metazoans under low-oxygen conditions, and an increase in oxygen response elements during animal evolution. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 18/20268-1 - Physiology of Ediacaran-Cambrian modern analogues
Grantee:Elisa Maria Costa e Silva de Paiva
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Post-Doctoral
FAPESP's process: 21/14115-0 - Physiological and molecular responses of modern metazoans under the Neoproterozoic oceanic conditions
Grantee:Flávia Ariany Belato Costa
Support Opportunities: Scholarships abroad - Research Internship - Doctorate
FAPESP's process: 19/18051-7 - Physiological, morphological and developmental responses of modern metazoans under the Neoproterozoic oceanic conditions
Grantee:Flávia Ariany Belato Costa
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Doctorate
FAPESP's process: 16/06114-6 - The Neoproterozoic Earth System and the rise of biological complexity
Grantee:Ricardo Ivan Ferreira da Trindade
Support Opportunities: Research Projects - Thematic Grants
FAPESP's process: 15/50164-5 - Stem cells, regeneration, and the evolution of coloniality in ascidians
Grantee:Federico David Brown Almeida
Support Opportunities: Research Grants - Young Investigators Grants