E(spl): genetic, developmental, and evolutionary aspects of a group of invertebrate Hes proteins with close ties to Notch signaling.

Curr Top Dev Biol

Institute of Molecular Biology & Biotechnology, Foundation for Research & Technology Hellas, Heraklion, Greece; Department of Biology, University of Crete, Heraklion, Crete, Greece.

Published: June 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • E(spl) is a dominant mutation in Drosophila that encodes seven related bHLH proteins crucial for mediating the Notch signaling pathway during development.
  • E(spl) proteins, activated by Notch, collaborate with various tissue-specific targets and act as DNA-binding repressors, often working with the corepressor Groucho to ensure proper signaling outcomes.
  • The evolution of the E(spl) protein family shows extensive diversification from an ancient bHLH-O family, highlighting the connection of these proteins to the Notch pathway in early multicellular life.

Article Abstract

Enhancer-of-split (E(spl)) was genetically characterized in Drosophila as a dominant mutation that interacts with an allele of Notch, the receptor in a multipurpose signaling pathway throughout development. Although dominant mutations are often not informative of the normal gene function, E(spl) turned out to encode a family of seven paralogous basic helix-loop-helix proteins of utmost importance in the implementation of the Notch signal in the receiving cell. They are transcriptionally induced by Notch in almost every instance where the signal is deployed, and they participate in numerous feedback circuits, where they interface with a panoply of additional more tissue-specific Notch targets to ensure the proper signaling outcome. Besides the bHLH domain, E(spl) contain a characteristic Orange domain and are classified in the Hes (hairy and enhancer-of-split) branch of the bHLH-Orange proteins. They act as DNA-binding repressors in close collaboration with the corepressor Groucho. In this review, we will focus on the regulation of E(spl) expression and on the function of E(spl) proteins. In the latter section, we will present some of the best-studied developmental events where E(spl) function has been analysed as well as the molecular mechanism of E(spl) activity that has transpired. Finally, we will review the evolution of this protein family, which, albeit of relatively recent origin, present only in insects and crustaceans, has undergone extensive diversification, including gene loss and duplication. Importantly, many of the characteristics of E(spl) proteins are more deeply rooted in the very ancient larger bHLH-O family, which seems to have forged a connection with the Notch pathway from the very beginning of multicellular animal life.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-405943-6.00006-3DOI Listing

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