Tunicates have a complex, highly dynamic TNF superfamily
Ignacio Marín

TL;DR
Tunicates have a surprisingly complex and rapidly evolving TNF superfamily, with more genes than some vertebrates.
Contribution
The study reveals that tunicates have a more complex TNF superfamily than previously known, with frequent gene duplications and dynamic evolution.
Findings
Tunicates have up to 14 TNFSF genes, exceeding numbers in some vertebrates.
Tunicate TNFSF genes evolve rapidly, with distinct gene sets even among closely related species.
TNFSF genes in tunicates may play roles in immunity and development, similar to vertebrates.
Abstract
Genes of the Tumor Necrosis Factor Superfamily (TNFSF) encode proteins with critical roles in cell signaling in animals, particularly in immunity and development. The evolution of the TNF superfamily remains poorly understood. This study demonstrates that tunicates possess a much more complex TNF superfamily than previously assumed. Some species have a large number of TNFSF genes, up to 14, due to frequent, independent tandem duplications. Significantly, this number exceeds that observed in many vertebrates (e.g., all characterized cyclostomes, as well as some birds and reptiles). As in vertebrates, the TNF superfamily of tunicates is capable of rapid evolutionary change. All 24 model tunicate species analyzed have different sets of TNFSF genes and even closely related species often have quite distinct TNF superfamilies. A comparison of tunicate and vertebrate data suggests that four…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine Ecology and Invasive Species · Marine Biology and Environmental Chemistry · Developmental Biology and Gene Regulation
