@article{180016, keywords = {Animals, Humans, Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid, Species Specificity, Sequence Alignment, Multigene Family, Consensus Sequence, Vertebrates, Evolution, Molecular, Chromosome Mapping, DNA, Complementary, Phylogeny, Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs, Exons, Introns, Amino Acid Motifs, Invertebrates, Fungi, Plants, Zinc Fingers, PDZ Domains}, author = {Aartjan Te Velthuis and Tadamoto Isogai and Lieke Gerrits and Christoph Bagowski}, title = {Insights into the molecular evolution of the PDZ/LIM family and identification of a novel conserved protein motif}, abstract = { The PDZ and LIM domain-containing protein family is encoded by a diverse group of genes whose phylogeny has currently not been analyzed. In mammals, ten genes are found that encode both a PDZ- and one or several LIM-domains. These genes are: ALP, RIL, Elfin (CLP36), Mystique, Enigma (LMP-1), Enigma homologue (ENH), ZASP (Cypher, Oracle), LMO7 and the two LIM domain kinases (LIMK1 and LIMK2). As conventional alignment and phylogenetic procedures of full-length sequences fell short of elucidating the evolutionary history of these genes, we started to analyze the PDZ and LIM domain sequences themselves. Using information from most sequenced eukaryotic lineages, our phylogenetic analysis is based on full-length cDNA-, EST-derived- and genomic- PDZ and LIM domain sequences of over 25 species, ranging from yeast to humans. Plant and protozoan homologs were not found. Our phylogenetic analysis identifies a number of domain duplication and rearrangement events, and shows a single convergent event during evolution of the PDZ/LIM family. Further, we describe the separation of the ALP and Enigma subfamilies in lower vertebrates and identify a novel consensus motif, which we call {\textquoteright}ALP-like motif{\textquoteright} (AM). This motif is highly-conserved between ALP subfamily proteins of diverse organisms. We used here a combinatorial approach to define the relation of the PDZ and LIM domain encoding genes and to reconstruct their phylogeny. This analysis allowed us to classify the PDZ/LIM family and to suggest a meaningful model for the molecular evolution of the diverse gene architectures found in this multi-domain family. }, year = {2007}, journal = {PLoS One}, volume = {2}, pages = {e189}, month = {02/2007}, issn = {1932-6203}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0000189}, language = {eng}, }