Hemostasis in vertebrates involves both a cellular and a protein component. Previous studies in jawless vertebrates (cyclostomes) suggest that the protein response, which involves thrombin-catalyzed conversion of a soluble plasma protein, fibrinogen, into a polymeric fibrin clot, is conserved in all vertebrates. However, similar data are lacking for the cellular response, which in gnathostomes is regulated by von Willebrand factor (VWF), a glycoprotein that mediates the adhesion of platelets to the subendothelial matrix of injured blood vessels. To gain evolutionary insights into the cellular phase of coagulation, we asked whether a functional gene is present in the Atlantic hagfish, We found a single transcript that encodes a simpler protein compared with higher vertebrates, the most striking difference being the absence of an A3 domain, which otherwise binds collagen under high-flow conditions. Immunohistochemical analyses of hagfish tissues and blood revealed Vwf expression in endothelial cells and thrombocytes. Electron microscopic studies of hagfish tissues demonstrated the presence of Weibel-Palade bodies in the endothelium. Hagfish Vwf formed high-molecular-weight multimers in hagfish plasma and in stably transfected CHO cells. In functional assays, botrocetin promoted VWF-dependent thrombocyte aggregation. A search for sequences in the genome of sea squirts, the closest invertebrate relatives of hagfish, failed to reveal evidence of an intact gene. Together, our findings suggest that VWF evolved in the ancestral vertebrate following the divergence of the urochordates some 500 million years ago and that it acquired increasing complexity though sequential insertion of functional modules.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2017-02-770792 | DOI Listing |
Cell Tissue Res
November 2024
Graduate School of Science and Technology, Shizuoka University, 836 Oya, Suruga-Ku, Shizuoka City, Shizuoka, 422-8529, Japan.
Although the liver of the lamprey, a group of cyclostomes that diverged the earliest among vertebrates, has abundant bile ducts in the larval stage, which degenerate during metamorphosis, there is no comparative study on its architecture with other early diverged vertebrates in terms of the morphological evolution of vertebrate livers. The present study was undertaken to compare the characteristics of the brook lamprey liver with those of the hagfish and banded houndshark, which have the portal triad type liver architecture, and to discuss its evolution. Although the liver of the brook lamprey had two-cell cords of hepatocytes lined by sinusoids in the ammocoetes larval stage, intrahepatic bile ducts around portal veins penetrated into the liver parenchyma with convolution and gradual reduction in diameter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol
January 2025
Department of Integrative Biology, University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada. Electronic address:
Pacific hagfish (Eptatretus stoutii) are an ancient agnathan vertebrate known to be anoxia tolerant. To study their metabolic organization and the role of the mitochondria in anoxia tolerance we developed a novel protocol to measure mitochondrial function in permeabilized cardiomyocytes and how this is affected by one hour of anoxia followed by reoxygenation. When measured at 10 °C the mitochondria had a respiration rate of 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biol Chem
December 2023
Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Aspirnaut, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Center for Matrix Biology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Department of Biochemistry, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Vanderbilt Institute of Chemical Biology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
The collagen IV (Col-IV) scaffold, the major constituent of the glomerular basement membrane (GBM), is a critical component of the kidney glomerular filtration barrier. In Alport syndrome, affecting millions of people worldwide, over two thousand genetic variants occur in the COL4A3, COL4A4, and COL4A5 genes that encode the Col-IV scaffold. Variants cause loss of scaffold, a suprastructure that tethers macromolecules, from the GBM or assembly of a defective scaffold, causing hematuria in nearly all cases, proteinuria, and often progressive kidney failure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCollagen IV is a primordial component of basement membranes, a specialized form of extracellular matrix that enabled multi-cellular epithelial tissues. In mammals, collagen IV assembles from a family of six α-chains (α1 to α6), encoded by six genes (COL4A1 to COL4A6), into three distinct scaffolds: the α121, the α345 and a mixed scaffold containing both α121 and α565. The six mammalian COL4A genes occur in pairs that occur in a head-to-head arrangement on three distinct chromosomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
September 2023
School of Geography, Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
The neurocranium is an integral part of the vertebrate head, itself a major evolutionary innovation. However, its early history remains poorly understood, with great dissimilarity in form between the two living vertebrate groups: gnathostomes (jawed vertebrates) and cyclostomes (hagfishes and lampreys). The 100 Myr gap separating the Cambrian appearance of vertebrates from the earliest three-dimensionally preserved vertebrate neurocrania further obscures the origins of modern states.
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