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Nuclear Receptors and Development of Marine Invertebrates

Angelica Miglioli, Laura Canesi, Isa D. L. Gomes, Michael Schubert, Rémi Dumollard

2021Genes31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Nuclear Receptors (NRs) are a superfamily of transcription factors specific to metazoans that have the unique ability to directly translate the message of a signaling molecule into a transcriptional response. In vertebrates, NRs are pivotal players in countless processes of both embryonic and adult physiology, with embryonic development being one of the most dynamic periods of NR activity. Accumulating evidence suggests that NR signaling is also a major regulator of development in marine invertebrates, although ligands and transactivation dynamics are not necessarily conserved with respect to vertebrates. The explosion of genome sequencing projects and the interpretation of the resulting data in a phylogenetic context allowed significant progress toward an understanding of NR superfamily evolution, both in terms of molecular activities and developmental functions. In this context, marine invertebrates have been crucial for characterizing the ancestral states of NR-ligand interactions, further strengthening the importance of these organisms in the field of evolutionary developmental biology.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyMarine invertebratesNuclear receptorTransactivationEvolutionary biologyContext (archaeology)GenomeInvertebrateSUPERFAMILYDevelopmental biologyTranscription factorPhylogenetic treeGeneticsComputational biologyGeneEcologyPaleontologyEstrogen and related hormone effectsGenetic and Clinical Aspects of Sex Determination and Chromosomal AbnormalitiesReproductive biology and impacts on aquatic species
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