@phdthesis{oai:oist.repo.nii.ac.jp:00002553, author = {Mbogo, Ivan}, month = {2022-12-01, 2022-03-10}, note = {The evolution of the multicellular body animals from unicellular organisms is still a significant and long-lasting subject of interest in biology. Acquisition of cell-cell adhesion with cadherin, α- and β-catenin proteins is thought to be tightly coupled with the origin of animal epithelium and consequent evolutionary thrive of animals. On the other hand, much research has shown, in a wide range of animal lineages such as bilaterians and cnidarians, that β-catenin associates with diverse intracellular proteins involved in gene transcription/translation and plays an essential role in the induction of the signalling centre (organiser) during animal embryogenesis. The pleiotropic and evolutionary conserved functions of β-catenin suggest deep evolutionary roots of the β-catenin complexes and involvement in the emergence of basic animal body plan. Recent progress in genomics has identified genes of the cell-cell adhesion complex and signalling machinery of β-catenin in genomes of early-branching animals, including Porifera (sponges) and Ctenophora(comb jellies). However, due to difficulties in applying molecular and genetic technologies in these non-model animals, the ancestral functions of β-catenin complexes remain largely to be explored.In this study, I combined structural, proteomic, and functional approaches to understand evolutionarily conserved features of the β-catenin and its associated proteins. Structural analysis suggests a unicellular origin of the basic architecture of β-catenin protein, while amino acid residues critical in adhesive properties are conserved only within animals. To analyse evolutionarily conserved functional characteristics of basal animal β-catenins, I performed transphyletic studies where the basal animal β-catenins are expressed in Xenopus embryos. A series of proteomics analyses of β-catenin-associated proteins revealed the cadherin catenin complex's deep origin and evolutionary conservation. The transphyletic function studies and detailed sequence analysis also revealed the β-catenin's organiser-inducing function of Cnidaria, Porifera, but not Ctenophora. These data suggest that the primary function of ancestral β-catenin was to play adhesive roles, and its' signalling properties were equipped later during the evolution of basal animals.}, school = {Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University}, title = {後生動物のベータカテニン多機能化の進化に関する研究}, year = {} }