Cryptochrome evolution: Difference between revisions

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CRY1 duplicated in early vertebrates giving rise to CRY2 which evidently carved out a distinct functional role as it has persisted in all species since including committed subterranean and cave species. The status of the gene in lamprey, hagfish and chondrichthyes cannot be resolved without better assemblies but there is no indication of a duplication there or in urochordates or cephalochordates.
CRY1 duplicated in early vertebrates giving rise to CRY2 which evidently carved out a distinct functional role as it has persisted in all species since including committed subterranean and cave species. The status of the gene in lamprey, hagfish and chondrichthyes cannot be resolved without better assemblies but there is no indication of a duplication there or in urochordates or cephalochordates.


Confusingly, Cry2 is also used for non-orthologous insect cryptochromes entries at GenBank. These represent a different duplication of a different parent gene called CRY1A here (which itself was subsequently lost in dipteran). Drosophila 'CRY2' sequences, called CRY1B here, are invalid model systems for vertebrate CRY2 and indeed are equally unsuited as invertebrate CRY1 proxies because properties change in species retaining both copies.  
Confusingly, Cry2 is also used for non-orthologous insect cryptochromes entries at GenBank. These represent a different duplication of a different parent gene called CRY1A here (which itself was subsequently lost in dipterans). The Drosophila 'CRY2' sequence, called CRY1B here, is not a valid model system for vertebrate CRY2 and indeed is equally unsuited as a invertebrate CRY1 proxy because properties can be expected to pull apart in species retaining both copies.  


Vertebrate CRY2 has an extended amino terminus that arose in amniotes. Prior to that time, it was similar in length to vertebrate CRY1 (and still is from fish to frog). A few residues of this extension are conserved but overall the sequences displays compositional simplicity, to the point that RepeatMasker finds a variable length simple repeat (CCG)n within coding and in some species also upstream. Base composition alone then leads to inevitable amino acid conservation which however does not imply selective pressure or functionality.  
Vertebrate CRY2 has an extended amino terminus that arose in amniotes. Prior to that time, it was similar in length to vertebrate CRY1 (and still is from fish to frog). A few residues of this extension are conserved but overall the sequences displays compositional simplicity, to the point that RepeatMasker finds a variable length simple repeat (CCG)n within coding and in some species also upstream. Base composition alone then leads to inevitable amino acid conservation which however does not imply selective pressure or functionality.  
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The full set of 43 vertebrate CRY2 sequences is [[Cryptochrome_refSeqs|here]]. These are mostly pre-curated provisional sequences taken from the UCSC 46-way genomic alignment relative to human except where the fasta header displays an accession number. This loses  small insersions and indeed whole exons when they are very diverged or lie in isolated small contigs or unassembled traces.  
The full set of 43 vertebrate CRY2 sequences is [[Cryptochrome_refSeqs|here]]. These are mostly pre-curated provisional sequences taken from the UCSC 46-way genomic alignment relative to human except where the fasta header displays an accession number. This source misses small insertions and indeed whole exons when very diverged or lie in isolated small contigs or unassembled traces.  


The final exons, being quite variable especially in fish, are best determined from transcripts when available and then extended by blastx homology to species within the same clade that lack transcripts. After these corrections, the sequences are [http://npsa-pbil.ibcp.fr/cgi-bin/align_multalin.pl aligned] and additional anomalies are confirmed or discarded on a case-by-base basis.  
The final exons, being quite variable especially in fish, are best determined from transcripts when available and then extended by blastx homology to species within the same clade that lack transcripts. After these corrections, the sequences are [http://npsa-pbil.ibcp.fr/cgi-bin/align_multalin.pl aligned] and additional anomalies are confirmed or discarded on a case-by-base basis.  
It has been [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC147960/pdf previously reported] that the PKRK motif in the last exon of mouse CRY2 represents a nuclear localization signal. This motif is indeed conserved in all tetrapod sequences from frog to human. While neither coelocanth nor gar sequence extends to this region, it is definitely absent from other ray-finned fish. Thus nuclear localization may be an innovation of land vertebrates.


It appears that the last exon in fish has lost all homology (and so functionality), in some cases simply running out into junk dna until a stop codon is encountered. Exon seven is broken up in some fish with an extra intron that might have some use in fish taxonomy as a derived characteristic.
It appears that the last exon in fish has lost all homology (and so functionality), in some cases simply running out into junk dna until a stop codon is encountered. Exon seven is broken up in some fish with an extra intron that might have some use in fish taxonomy as a derived characteristic.

Revision as of 23:49, 23 April 2012

See also: Curated reference sequences for cryptochromes and photolyases

Introduction to Cryptochromes

Cryptochromes are large flavoproteins with a curiously complex evolutionary history, beginning billions of years ago as dna repair enzymes (or even earlier as replication primase). An old gene duplication followed by specializing divergence gave rise to two paralogs repairing distinct types of dna damage (cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers and 6-4 pyrimidine-pyrimidone pairs). These photolyases initially used FAD activated by visible blue light to undo the damage done by UV and other processes.

Since FAD has relatively low adsorbance, photolyases evolved a second site for an antenna chromophore with better light harvesting capabilities that could transfer its excitation to the FAD at the active site. This elusive antenna molecule may be FMN, a folate, lumazine, or a 5-deazariboflavin called Fo once thought restrict to methanogenic archaea. In the case of the much-studied Drosophila, both the photolyases utilize Fo, making it a new vitamin for this species since the biosynthetic genes are absent. Cryptochrome so far lack antenna molecules but retain the binding domain and substrate pocket.

The next round of gene duplication of the 6-4 photolyase gave rise to a cryptochrome which retained the conformational change induced by FAD binding of blue light but lost dna repair capacity, instead specializing in entraining the day/night circadian rhythm cycle. However the distinction between signalling (non-enzymatic) and catalytic gene family members is muddled. Later rounds of gene duplication gave rise to yet more orthology classes to be followed -- sometimes hundreds of millions of years later -- by gene loss in some large lineages.

The seven main classes were retained in various combinations in different clades during the subsequent course of evolution, causing endless comparative nomenclatural confusion (when in doubt, look at the amino acid sequences). For example, Drosophila did not retain CRY1A unlike other insects while placental mammals lost all three photolyases though marsupials retained one and monotremes two. Gallinaceous birds also lost a photolyase. Rayfinned fish had a series of further duplications within the gene family. Despite this, the primary sequence, exon structure, fold and FAD, antenna and dna binding sites have largely been conserved -- along with key regulatory binding sites to other proteins -- even as antenna molecules and dna repair capacity might be dispensed with.

A new vertebrate cryptochrome CRY7 with a ubiquitin binding domain UIM

Even ten years into the whole genome era, the comparative genomics of cryptochromes and photolyases has never been considered, perhaps because of a narrow experimental focus on 'model' organisms such as mouse and fruit fly that, as it turns out, have rather restricted and unrepresentative gene family complements. Since most annotation effort goes into human (which are very deficient in their repertoire), the lack of a suitable homology probe there lets novel photolyases and cryptochromes in other species go undiscovered.

This section describes a new cryptochrome orthology class (designated CRY7 here) with an extensive but not universal phylogenetic distribution. It apparently arose in the pre-Cambrian as a segmental gene duplication of CRY64 (or vice versa) based on its independent intronation pattern. Most remarkably, CRY7 possesses an amino terminal ubiquitin binding domain. The new protein is evolving overall rather rapidly for a cryptochrome and has been lost from many clades but it still retains the two core domains. Although the antenna molecule cannot be predicted, the FAD cofactor is likely present, based on structurally modelling with 1U3C and 3CVW (from CRY64_droMel, 34% identity and CRY1A_araTha, 29% identity).

CRY7 is absent from mammals and indeed all amniotes but still present in amphibians, lobe-finned, ray-finned fish including basal gar, and two molluscs. These genes form a single new orthology class with distinct syntenic location, intronation pattern, and domain structure. The unusual phylogenetic distribution cannot be plausibly explained by prokaryotic endosymbiont, DNA contamination by xenobiotics (in filter-feeders), nor horizontal gene transfer. There is also affinity to two placozoan cryptochrome but these lack the ubiquitin binding domain.

CRY7 in frog has 20 overlapping transcripts at GenBank dating back to 2003 that cover all but the middle of the gene. Expression has been reported from egg (BX771555, AL893008), neurulation embryo (BX699228, AL662439), whole embryo (CX470086, CX470087), tailbud head (CR562794, CR562774), adult testes (CX928370 and 7 others), and adult ovary (DR850985 and 3 others). These sites of expression do not distinguish between a DNA repair role and photosignalling. However the presence of the N-terminal UIM domain strongly suggests the latter because protein turnover is a well-established component of the cryptochrome circadian system.

In non-mammalian species, circadian regulation of other genes can take place directly at cellular sites indpendently of the central nervous system, often in species with extra-retinal opsin expression. Frog expresses melanopsin in skin melanophores; fish also express an opsin in lateral line iridophores which exhibit circadian color changes; and squid utilize an external opsin to manage camouflage. Ultra-structural coexpression studies of CRY7 and the respective opsins might establish an association.

CRY7uim.jpg

The ubiquitin interacting motif (UIM) consists of 20 amino acid residues first described in the 26S proteasome subunit that recognises ubiquitin. Ubiquitin binds UIM so the motif triggers a cascade of downstream signalling events. The UIM forms a short alpha-helix that can fits into the ubiquitin pocket via hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions. The UIM motif of a frog CRY7 gene model was predicted by subsequent automatic procedures at KEGG but the short UIM motif was neither homologously confirmed in other species nor shown actually part of the cryptochrome gene (rather than belonging to an upstream adjacent gene with a missed stop codon). UIM domains are widespread but not necessarily homologous (ie mobile chimeric domains) because short motif can evolve in situ.

However here the amino terminus begins with about 70 semi-conserved residues, followed by the UIM domain beginning a new exon. This extended motif has no Blast counterpart in other known proteins even using a consensus sequence probe. It is followed by a long spacer region of about 140 amino acids that is evolving chaotically in both length and composition. This pattern suggests a fusion with a UIM donor protein with the spacer region in the process of being discarded. Conservation begins again as the antenna domain is reached and continues through the FAD domain all the way to the carboxy terminus (which extends nearly 100 amino acids beyond any homology with the CRY64 FAD domain). A crystallographic structure for CRY7 might reveal more distant relationships for the conserved N- and C-terminal extensions.

Species      UIM motif             UIM conservation      Genus species (common)

CRY7_xenTro  GYETDLELAIALSLQEHNQL  GYETD....I....Q.HNQL  Xenopus tropicalis (frog)
CRY7_lepOcu  VEEEEVEVALALSLQELGVS  SV.EE.V.V......Q.LGV  Lepisosteus oculatus (gar) 
CRY7_danRer  DESEELELALTLSLYETKQI  D.SE......T...Y.T.QI  Danio rerio (zebrafish)
CRY7_salSal  DEDDELAVALALSLLEVKRQ  D.....AV........V.R.  Salmo salar (salmon)
CRY7_gadMor  DEEDELEVALALSLLDVKPQ  ...............D..GH  Haplochromis burtoni (chichlid)
CRY7_hapBur  TEDDELELALALSLLDMKGH  .Q........S...V..D.H  Gasterosteus aculeatus (stickleback)
CRY7_oreNil  TEDDELELALALSLLDMKGQ  ....D.........M..E..  Oryzias latipes (medaka)
CRY7_xipMac  MEDDELELALALSLLDMKDQ  ...............D..G.  Oreochromis niloticus (tilapia)
CRY7_gasAcu  TQDDELELALSLSLVEMDDH  ...ED.........V....C  Tetraodon nigroviridis (fugu)
CRY7_takRub  TEDDELELALALSLVETKDY  ..............V.T..Y  Takifugu rubripes (fugu)
CRY7_oryLat  TEDDDLELALALSLMEMEDQ  D.E....V.......DV.P.  Gadus morhua (cod) 
CRY7_tetNig  TEDEDLELALALSLVEMKDC  M..............D....  Xiphophorus maculatus (platyfish) 
consensus    TEDDELELALALSLLEMKDQ  TEDDELELALALSLLEMKDQ  UIM motif PFAM: PF02809

Synteny is not helpful in the CRY7 situation with only Oryzias latipes (medaka) sharing a neighboring gene with frog. CRY7 does not represent a segmental duplication of CRY64 because its intronation pattern is totally different, plus the percent identity is very low for a pair of cryptochromes. Vertebrates do lose and gain introns but that process is extremely slow. More likely the gene duplication took place in single-celled eukaryotes prior to the principal era of intronation, with the two ortholog classes then acquiring introns independently at essentially random positions. CRY7 is a misclassified paralog cross-over in Genomicus and not represented in the UCSC 46-way whole genome alignment because human lacks the gene.

CRY7 has a completely unique intronation pattern lacking any relationship to CRY64 (its best blast match within the gene family) or any other cryptochrome or photolyase. Since this pattern is strongly conserved in the CRY7 ortholog set, it is likely ancient. If so, this protein represents a very old branch of the gene family but one that is unrecognizable or lost from most lineages. CRY7 is not an evolutionary novelty, having persisted for 450,000,000 years in vertebrates; nearly half of the 58,000 living species of vertebrates retain it, though not any amniotes studied to date. The position and phase of CRY64 intron breaks are positioned by homology into frog CRY7 below and contrasted with a comparison of CRY64 to human CRY1 (which share 5 identical intron sites). Blue indicates phase 00, orange phase 12, red phase 21, magenta perfect match of position and phase:

CRY7_xenTro Xenopus tropicalis (frog) introns relative to CRY64
0 MDLEPFERAQIDDVLQQLESGSVQADEFLCLVLSILGSSRTYSQFPAILQSLSRKEPAMYRELMDLHAEYFRK 0
0 EPADLETLGYETDLELAIALSLQEHNQLTDTASFASEVDPAPKISFADAAKLSHFSHKHNKKNSSSKTEITKLKDNVAAMNLYQERKRYHINGQEKTCISN
CYNGQPEPEDCVLKSEDGEDVFHVETSRPRESKAKHSRRSRKKKKSAPSRGL^VAMKPVLVWFRRDLRLHDNPALISALEHGVPVIPVFLWCINEETGQNFTLATGGAT
KYWLHHALLKLNQSLIQRFGSH^IIFRVARSCEEELVSLVHETGADTIIINAVYEPWLKERDDLISETLRRHGVELKKHHSYCLYEPDS^VSTEGVGLR 1
2 GIGSVSHFMSCCKRNNSAPIGMPLDAPRCLPAPC^NWPESDHLDTLELGKMPHRKDGTL 0
0 IDWAVTIRESWDFSEDGAYTCLANFLQ^D1
2 GVKHYEKESGRADKPYTSHISPYLHFGQISPRTVLHEAYFTKKNV^PKFLRKLAWRDLAYWLLILFPDMPSEPVRPAYK 0
0 SQRWSSDLNHLRAWQK^GLTGYPLVDAAMRELWLTGWMCNYSRHVVASFLVAYLHIHWVHGYR^WFQ 0
0 DTLLDADVAINAMMWQNGGMSGLDHWNFVMHPVDSALTCDPYGSYVR^KWCPELAGLPDEYIHKPWKCAPSQLRRA 1
2 GVILGRNYPHRIVLDLEERREQSLKDVVEVRKKHLEYLDEVSGCDMVQIPDQLLAL^TLGHTSGEDEVVRNRTGSFLLPVITRKEFKYKTLQPDTKDNPYNTVLKGYV
SRKRDETIAYMNERHFTASTINEGAQRHERIERTNRLMEGLPAPSDAKNKSRRTPKKDPFSIIPPSYLHLAN* 0

>CRY1_homSap Homo sapiens (human) introns relative to CRY64
0 MGVNAVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALKECIQGADTIRCVYILDPWFAGSSNVGINRWR 2
1 FLLQCLEDLDANLRKLNSR^LFVIRGQPADVFPRLFK 0
0 EWNITKLSIEYDSEPFGKERDAAIKKLATEAGVEVIVRISHTLYDLDK 2
1 IIELNGGQPPLTYKRFQTLISKMEPLEIPVETITSEVIE^KCTTPLSDDHDEKYGVPSLEEL 1
2 GFDTDGLSSAVWPGGETEALTRLERHLERK 0
0 AWVANFERPRMNANSLLASPTGLSPYLRFGCLSCRLFYFKLTDLYKK 0
0 VKKNSSPPLSLYGQLLWREFFYTAATNNPRFDKMEGNPICVQIPWDKNPEALAKWAE^GRTGFPWIDAIMTQLRQEGWIHHLARHAVACFLTRGDLWISWEEGMK 0
0 VFEELLLDADWSINAGSWMWLSCSSFFQQFFHCYCPVGFGRRTDPNGDYIR 2
1 RYLPVLRGFPAKYIYDPWNAPEGIQKVAKCLIGVNYPKPMVNHAEASRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL 1
2 GLLASVPSNPNG^NGGFMGYSAENIPGCSSSG 1
2 SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHLLKQ 1
2 GRSSMGTGLSGGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN* 0

Below the frog protein CRY7 is marked up for its various domains and motifs according to Pfam, Blast and PDB searches. Blue shows the antenna domain with predicted α/β secondary structure, purple the possibly catalytic FAD domain with predicted all α secondary structure, magenta the UIM ubiquitin motif, purple two compositionally simple regions rich is basic residues predicted not to have definite fold, dark red the conserved region of unknown function upstream of the UIM ubiquitin motif, and dark blue the conserved carboxy terminal motif of unknown function.

>CRY7_xenTro Xenopus tropicalis (frog) 
0 MDLEPFERAQIDDVLQQLESGSVQADEFLCLVLSILGSSRTYSQFPAILQSLSRKEPAMYRELMDLHAEYFRK 0
0 EPADLETLGYETDLELAIALSLQEHNQLTDTASFASEVDPAPKISFADAAKLSHFSHKHNKKNSSSKTEITKLKDNVAAMNLYQERKRYHINGQEKTCISN
CYNGQPEPEDCVLKSEDGEDVFHVETSRPRESKAKHSRRSRKKKKSAPSRGLVAMKPVLVWFRRDLRLHDNPALISALEHGVPVIPVFLWCINEETGQNFTLATGGAT
KYWLHHALLKLNQSLIQRFGSHIIFRVARSCEEELVSLVHETGADTIIINAVYEPWLKERDDLISETLRRHGVELKKHHSYCLYEPDSVSTEGVGLR 1
2 GIGSVSHFMSCCKRNNSAPIGMPLDAPRCLPAPCNWPESDHLDTLELGKMPHRKDGTL 0
0 IDWAVTIRESWDFSEDGAYTCLANFLQD 1
2 GVKHYEKESGRADKPYTSHISPYLHFGQISPRTVLHEAYFTKKNVPKFLRKLAWRDLAYWLLILFPDMPSEPVRPAYK 0
0 SQRWSSDLNHLRAWQKGLTGYPLVDAAMRELWLTGWMCNYSRHVVASFLVAYLHIHWVHGYRWFQ 0
0 DTLLDADVAINAMMWQNGGMSGLDHWNFVMHPVDSALTCDPYGSYVRKWCPELAGLPDEYIHKPWKCAPSQLRRA 1
2 GVILGRNYPHRIVLDLEERREQSLKDVVEVRKKHLEYLDEVSGCDMVQIPDQLLALTLGHTSGEDEVVRNRTGSFLLPVITRKEFKYKTLQPDTKDNPYNTVLKGYV
SRKRDETIAYMNERHFTASTINEGAQRHERIERTNRLMEGLPAPSDAKNKSRRTPKKDPFSIIPPSYLHLAN* 0
CRY7pdb.jpg

Using Swissmodel with CRY64 from Drosophila as template (PDB:1UC3. 31% identity), the tertiary structure of CRY7 can be successfully modeled from over the region PVLLWF...ALVRRR of salmon CRY7 (corresponding to residues 13-497 of the experimentally determined structure). The predicted two domain structure very much resembles that of any cryptochrome or photolyase and allows preliminary identification of beta strands and helices.

The quality of the model varies by position, as shown by the B factor score coloring in the figure on the left. The overall Z-Score quality of fit is -3.74, not too shabby for a large protein but no substitute for an actual experimental structure determination. (The other template option, an Arabidopsis cryptochrome, gives an unsatisfactory Z-Score.) Note the amino terminal conserved domain, the UIM motif, and the C-terminal conserved domain cannot be modeled at all without a template.

The FAD binding site exhibits moderate steric interference but that molecule could be docked if a few residues were re-positioned slightly. The antenna site is more problematic: while present in the 3D structure, the nature of the antenna molecule (if any) cannot really be predicted. The early divergence of CRY7 from CRY64 and the lack of evolutionary persistence (consistency) of antenna molecules makes it very uncertain whether the Drosophila antenna molecule in CRY64 and CPD -- recently determined to be 5-deazariboflavin -- is actually the antenna molecule for CRY7.

Although 5-deazariboflavin is the best historic option, CRY7 has been lost from Drosophila and 5-deazariboflavin is not known to occur in vertebrates or molluscs (the phylogenetic setting for CRY7 today). Since they cannot synthesize it, it would amount to a new vitamin in these species.

Alternatively, the antenna molecule could be 6,7-dimethyl-8-ribityl-lumazine, folate, FMN, FAD or related molecules (as seen in other members of the gene family. No antenna molecule might be appropriate in view of the UIM domain and the implied signaling role, yet that does not account for the observed conservation of the antenna domain.

Predicted alpha helices (h) and beta strands (s) of CRY7:

CRY7  PVLLWFRRDL RLHDNPAVIG SLEAGGPVIP VFIWCPEEEE GPGVTVAMGG ACKFWLHQAL SCLSSALEHI GSHLVFLRPD EEREGIGSSL RALRSLVRET
CRY7  csivwfrrdl rvednpalaa avrag-pvia lfvwapeeeg hyhpg----r vsrwwlknsl aqldsslrsl gtclitkrs- ------tdsv aslldvvkst                                                                     
CRY7   sssss          hhhhh hhh     ss ssss  hh              hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhhhhhh     sssss           h hhhhhhh   
CRY7   sssss          hhhhh hhhh  ssss ssss  hh            h hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhhhhhh     sssss           h hhhhhhh   

CRY7  GAQTVLASAL YEPWLRERDQ VVVSALQKDR VEVNMVHSYC LRDPYTVTTE GVGLRGIGSV SHFMSCCQMN PGPGLGVPLD PPISLPSPSV WPRGCPLEGL
CRY7  gasqiffnhl ydplslvrdh rakdvltaqg iavrsfnadl lyepwevtde lgrpfsm-fa afwerclsmp ydpesp--ll ppkkiisgdv sk--cvadpl                                                                      
CRY7    sssssss    hhhhhhhh hhhhhhh     sssss                           hhhhhhh                                    
CRY7    sssssss    hhhhhhhh hhhhhhh     sssss                        hh hhhhhhh                          hh        

CRY7  GLARMPCRKD GTTIDWAANI RSSWDFSEEG AQSRLEAFLN DGVYRYEKES GRADAPNTSC LSPYLHFGQL SARWLLWDTK GA-------- ----RCRPPK
CRY7  v------fed dsekgsnall arawspgwsn gdkalttfin gplleysknr rkadsattsf lsphlhfgev svrkvfhlvr ikqvawaneg neageesvnl                                                                     
CRY7             hhhhhhhhhh h      hhh hhhhhhhh    hh   hh               hhhh       hhhhhhh                     hhh
CRY7             hhhhhhhhhh hhh    hhh hhhhhhhhhh                        hhhh       hhhhhhhhh hhhhhhhh    hhhhhhhhh

CRY7  FIRKLAWRDL AYWQLTLFPD LPWESLRPPY KALRWSNERG HLKAWQKGRT GYPLVDAAMR QLWLTGWMNN YMRHVVASFL IAYLHLPWQE GYRWFQDTLV
CRY7  flksiglrey sryisfnhpy sherpllghl kffpwavden yfkawrqgrt gyplvdagmr elwatgwlhd rirvvvssff vkvlqlpwrw gmkyfwdtll                                                                   
CRY7  hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhhh                       hh hhhhhhh      hhhhhhhh hhhh     h hhhhhhhhhh hhh     hh hhhhhhh 
CRY7  hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhhh                       hh hhhhhhh      hhhhhhhh hhhh     h hhhhhhhhhh hhh     hh hhhhhhh 


CRY7  DADVAIDAMM WQNGGMCGLD H--WNFVMHP VDAAMTCDPY GNYVRKWCTE LAVLPDDLIH KPWKCPASML RRAGVVLGQS YPERVVTDLE ERRSQSLQDV
CRY7  dadlesdalg wqyitgtlpd srefdridnp qfegykfdpn geyvrrwlpe lsrlptdwih hpwnapesvl qaagielgsn yplpiv-gld eakarlheal                                                                     
CRY7     hhhhhhh hhhhh               h hhhhhhh     hhhhh   h h                hhhh hhh                 h hhhhhhhhhh
CRY7     hhhhhhh hhhhh               h hhhhhhh     hhhhh   h h                hhhh hhh                hh hhhhhhhhhh


CRY7  LAVLPDDLIH KPWKCPASML RRAGVVLGQS YPERVVTDLE ERRSQSLQDV ALVRRR
CRY7  lsrlptdwih hpwnapesvl qaagielgsn yplpiv-gld eakarlheal sqmwql                                                                     
CRY7  h                hhhh hhh                 h hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhh
CRY7  h                hhhh hhh                hh hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhh

Standard lab mouse C57BL/6J has a mutated CRY1 cryptochrome gene

Lab mouse has an odd mutation in its 10th exon where a century of inbreeding may have inadvertently fixed a very serious 54 bp tandem stutter mutation resulting in 18 additional amino acids (the NGGLMGYAPGENVPSCSGG red and blue repeats in NM_007771 reference sequence) that would very likely disrupt the C-terminal region of the protein. The repeat is preceded by the substitution of a serine (shown in magenta in the alignment below) for a strictly invariant proline (back to chondrichthyes).

CRY1dotplot.png

Although this region lies beyond the two main domains and has a complex evolutionary history, phylogenetic comparison to the eight available rodent and lagomorph sequences implies that this change in lab mouse will have serious functional consequences. A mutation in this critical pacemaker gene could plausibly affect lifespan, metabolic disorder and tumor progression; such a change is completely unprecedented in rodents including rat and indeed in vertebrates.

All 14 available transcripts exhibit the same anomaly -- this is not limited to one strain of mouse, not a somatic mutation, not an unfortunate heterozygous allele. The affected ESTs came from C57BL/6J, C57BL/6, C57BL/6J x DBA/2J, 129 FVB/N and embryo, eye, ventricle, thymus, mammary tumor; the affected GenBank NR entries add a keratinocyte cell line Pam. The mouse genome project used C57BL/6J, the most widely used inbred strain according to the Jackson Laboratory:

"Although C57BL/6J is refractory to many tumors, it is a permissive background for maximal expression of most mutations. C57BL/6J mice are resistant to audiogenic seizures, have a relatively low bone density, and develop age related hearing loss. They are also susceptible to diet-induced obesity, type 2 diabetes, and atherosclerosis. C57BL/6J mice are used in a wide variety of research areas including cardiovascular biology, developmental biology, diabetes and obesity, genetics, immunology, neurobiology, and sensorineural research. C57BL/6J mice are also commonly used in the production of transgenic mice. Overall, C57BL/6 mice breed well, are long-lived, and have a low susceptibility to tumors. Primitive hematopoietic stem cells from C57BL/6J mice show greatly delayed senescence relative to BALB/c and DBA/2J. This is a dominant trait. Other characteristics include: 1) a high susceptibility to diet-induced obesity, type 2 diabetes, and atherosclerosis; 2) a high incidence of microphthalmia and other associated eye abnormalities; 3) resistance to audiogenic seizures; 4) low bone density; 5) hereditary hydrocephalus (early reports indicate 1 - 4 %); 6) hairloss associated with overgrooming, 7) a preference for alcohol and morphine; 8) late-onset hearing loss; and 9) increased incidence of hydrocephalus and malocclusion."

Although this distal region is not modelled in any PDB structure as of March 2012, it has been specifically addressed in 4 of the 195 articles on mouse CRY1 or CRY2.

"purified mCRY1/2CCtail proteins form stable heterodimeric complexes with two C-terminal mBMAL1 fragments. The longer mBMAL1 fragment (BMAL490) includes Lys-537, which is rhythmically acetylated by mCLOCK in vivo. mCRY1 (but not mCRY2) has a lower affinity to BMAL490 than to the shorter mBMAL1 fragment (BMAL577) and a K537Q mutant version of BMAL490. Using peptide scan analysis we identify two mBMAL1 binding epitopes within the coiled coil RLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYR and tail regions of mCRY1/2 and document the importance of positively charged mCRY1 residues for mBMAL1 binding."

CRY1BMAL1.png

"mammalian CRY1 and CRY2 are integral components of the circadian oscillator. However, the function of their C terminus remains to be resolved. Here, we show that the C-terminal extension of mCRY1 harbors a nuclear localization signal and a putative coiled-coil domain that drive nuclear localization via two independent mechanisms and shift the equilibrium of shuttling mammalian CRY1 (mCRY1)/mammalian PER2 (mPER2) complexes towards the nucleus. Importantly, deletion of the complete C terminus prevents mCRY1 from repressing CLOCK/BMAL1-mediated transcription, whereas a plant photolyase gains this key clock function upon fusion to the last 100 amino acids of the mCRY1 core and its C terminus. Thus, the acquirement of different (species-specific) C termini during evolution not only functionally separated cryptochromes from photolyase but also caused diversity within the cryptochrome family."

"The mCRY1 and mCRY2 genes are located on chromosome 10C and 2E, respectively, and are expressed in all mouse organs examined. We raised antibodies specific against each gene product using its C-terminal sequence, which differs completely between the genes. Immunofluorescent staining of cultured mouse cells revealed that mCRY1 is localized in mitochondria whereas mCRY2 was found mainly in the nucleus. The subcellular distribution of CRY proteins was confirmed by immunoblot analysis of fractionated mouse liver cell extracts. Using green fluorescent protein fused peptides we showed that the C-terminal region of the mouse CRY2 protein contains a unique nuclear localization signal, which is absent in the CRY1 protein. The N-terminal region of CRY1 was shown to contain the mitochondrial transport signal. Recombinant as well as native CRY1 proteins from mouse and human cells showed a tight binding activity to DNA Sepharose, while CRY2 protein did not"

"genetic screening assay for mutant circadian clock proteins that is based on real-time circadian rhythm monitoring in cultured fibroblasts. By using this assay, we identified a domain in the extreme C terminus of BMAL1 that plays an essential role in the rhythmic control of E-box-mediated circadian transcription. Remarkably, the last 43 aa of BMAL1 are required for transcriptional activation, as well as for association with the circadian transcriptional repressor CRY1"

                                                507       517       527       537       547        557       567        577       587       597
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CRY1_musMus   NHAEASRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL GLLASVPSNSNGNGGLMGYAPGENVPSCSSSGNGGLMGYAPGENVPSCSGG NCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHSLKQ GRSSAGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDAQSVGPKVQRQSSN*
CRY1_ratNor   NHAEASRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL GLLASVPSNPNGNGGLMGYAPGENVPSGGSGG------------------G NCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTNPLKQ GRSSMGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDAQSVGPKVQRQSSN*
CRY1_criGri   NHAEASRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL GLLASVPSNPNGNGGLMGYTTGENLPSCSGGG------------------- SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQAHLLKQ GRSSMGTSLSSGKRPSQEEETRSVDPKVQRQSSN*
CRY1_spaJud   NHAEASRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL GLLASVPSNPNGNGGLMGYTPGENIPNCSSSG------------------- SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQAHLLKQ GSSSMGHGLSNGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN*
CRY1_dipOrd   NHAEASRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL GLLASVPSNPNGNGGLMGYAAGDNLPGSSSSG------------------- SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQMHLLKQ GRSSMGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDSQSIGPKVQRQSTN*
CRY1_hetGla   NHAEASRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL GLLASVPSNPNGNGGLMGYAPGESIPGSSGSG------------------- SCAHGSGILPCAHTDGQQAHLLKP GRNCVGPVLSSGKRPSQEEDAQSIGPKLQRQSTD*
CRY1_cavPor   HHAEASRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL GLLASVPSNPNGNGGLLGYAPGESTPGSGGG-------------------- SCVPGSSSAGVSHCAQGEAPQAPP GRDPAGPGLGGGKRPSQEEDAQSTGHKIQRQSPD*
CRY1_speTri   NHEASL  NIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL GLLASVPSNPNGNGGLMAYAPGENIPGCSSSG------------------- SCTQGSSILHNAHGDSQQTHLLKQ GRSSMGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN*
CRY1_oryCun   NHAEASRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL GLLASVPSNPNGNGGLMGYSPGENIPGCSSSG------------------- SCSQGSGILHYAQGDTQQTQLLKQ GRSSMGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN*

CRY1_musMus   NHAEASRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL GLLASVPSNSNGNGGLMGYAPGENVPSCSSSGNGGLMGYAPGENVPSCSGG NCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHSLKQ GRSSAGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDAQSVGPKVQRQSSN*
CRY1_ratNor   .......................... .........P.................GG.G.------------------. ...................NP... ....M.............................
CRY1_criGri   .......................... .........P.........TT...L....GG.------------------- S.................A.L... ....M..S...........ETR..D.........
CRY1_spaJud   .......................... .........P.........T....I.N.....------------------- S.................A.L... .S..M.H...N.........T..I........T.
CRY1_dipOrd   .......................... .........P..........A.D.L.GS....------------------- S.................M.L.... ...M...............S..I........T.
CRY1_hetGla   .......................... .........P.............SI.GS.G..------------------- S.AH.....PC..T.G..A.L..P. .NCV.PV...............I...L....TD
CRY1_cavPor   H......................... .........P......L......ST.GSGGG-------------------- S.VP..SSAGVS.CAQGEAPQAPP. .DP..P..GG............T.H.I....PD
CRY1_speTri   ......--.................. .........P.......A......I.G.....------------------- S.T...S...N.........L.... ...M...............T..I........T.
CRY1_oryCun   .......................... .........P.........S....I.G.....------------------- S...........Q..T...QL.... ...M...............T..I........T.

Coiled coil:     RLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYR for CRY1_musMus 480-493 
478 R	e 0.644
479 L	f 0.644 
480 N	g 0.806
481 I	a 0.806
482 E	b 0.806
483 R	c 0.806
484 M	d 0.806
485 K	e 0.806
486 Q	f 0.806 
487 I	g 0.806
488 Y	a 0.806
489 Q	b 0.806
490 Q	c 0.806
491 L	d 0.806
492 S	e 0.806
493 R	f 0.806 
494 Y	d 0.375
495 R	e 0.375 

Full length CRY1 sequences are available for 10 Glires in the cryptochrome refSeq collection:

CRY1_musMus Mus musculus (mouse) NM_007771                 CRY1_ratNor Rattus norvegicus (rat) NM_198750
CRY1_criGri Cricetulus griseus (hamster) XM_003505292      CRY1_spaJud Spalax judaei (blind_mole_rat) AJ606298
CRY1_dipOrd Dipodomys ordii (kangaroo_rat) ABRO01202522    CRY1_hetGla Heterocephalus glaber (blind_mole-rat)
CRY1_cavPor Cavia porcellus (guinea_pig)                   CRY1_speTri Spermophilus tridecemlineatus (squirrel)
CRY1_oryCun Oryctolagus cuniculus (rabbit)                 CRY1_ochPri Ochotona princeps (pika)

Lost distal exon in placental cryptochrome CRY1

Although cryptochromes are highly conserved in their two main domains, the C-terminal region in CRY1 has a reputation for variability. This is attributable in part to loss of an ancient exon encoding 32 amino acids in placental mammals. However this exon persists in contemporary marsupials, monotremes, birds, alligators, turtles, lizards, snakes and frogs, so its conservation implies a continuing functional role maintained by selective pressure for several hundred million years of tetrapod evolution.

In addition, some distal motifs in CRY1 are compositionally simple, predisposing not only to the replication slippage event described above for mouse but also to smaller indels in the repetitive regions, notably the 2 aa deletional synapomorphy in placentals in GLLASVPSNPNGN--GGFM (the conserved methionine is at position 514 in human) and possibly the loss of proline (P518) in post-tarsier divergence primates.

The exon loss may have preceded in stages, beginning with alternative splicing that skipped it (this conserves reading frame as the ancestral gene ends with three consecutive phase 12 exons). Later, the exon came not to be used at all and thereafter rapidly degenerated to the point it cannot be detected today by blastx of the relevant region in any placental mammal. The exon does not plausibly contribute to the core fold (photolyase and FAD domains) though it could form a better defined structure upon interacting with other proteins.

The functional consequences of exon loss are unknown; the timing matches that of overall collapse of the photolyase family in placentals. (Note the first half of placental evolution -- about 90 myr -- lacks any living representative, so events can pile up there by coincidence.) Possibly when CYT4, Cyt64, DASH and CPD were lost, the remaining two cryptochromes, especially CRY1, compensated for that loss (without however taking up catalytic roles in dna repair), with exon loss somehow contributing adaptively to that adjustment.

The loss of this exon raises certain questions about the use of marsupial model systems to understand CRY1 functionality in mouse (in turn a model system for human). For example, CRY1 of the marsupial Potorous tridactylus would still retain the exon but to date it has not been placed in a CRY1-- mouse. It would also be feasible to insert just the missing exon into an otherwise intact, ectopically expressed rat CRY1 gene, after first disentangling the effects of the mouse expansion in this same region (shown as ^^ below) as well as proline P518 removal. Note the lab mouse expansion somewhat restores length relative to marsupials, but in the wrong place.

CRY1_homSap    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGFMGYS AENIPGCSSSG    <-- lost exon in placentals -->   SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSMGTGLSGGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_ponAbe    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGFMGYS AENVPGCSSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSMGTGLSGGKRASQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_nomLeu    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGFMGYS AENIPGCSSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSMGTGLSGGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_macMul    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGFMGYS TENIPGCSSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHYTHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSMGTGLSGGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_calJac    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGFMGYS AENIPGCTSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHCAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSMSTGISGGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_saiBol    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGFMGYS AENIPGCTSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHCAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSMSTGLGGGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_tarSyr    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGFMGYSPAENTPGCSSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSVGTGLSGGKRPSQEEDPQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_otoGar    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GSFMEYSPPENIPGCSSSG                                      NCSQGSGILHYAPGDGQQPHLLKQ  GRSSMGTGLSGGKRPSQEEDMQSVGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_musMus    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNSNGN^^GGLMGYAPGENVPSCSSSG                                      NGGLGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHSLKQ  GRSSAGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDAQSVGPKVQRQSSN
CRY1_ratNor    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYAPGENVPSGGSGG                                      GNCSQGGILHYAHGDSQQTNPLKQ  GRSSMGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDAQSVGPKVQRQSSN
CRY1_criGri    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYTTGENLPSCSGGG                                      SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQAHLLKQ  GRSSMGTSLSSGKRPSQEEETRSVDPKVQRQSSN
CRY1_spaJud    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYTPGENIPNCSSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQAHLLKQ  GSSSMGHGLSNGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_dipOrd    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYAAGDNLPGSSSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQMHLLKQ  GRSSMGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDSQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_hetGla    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYAPGESIPGSSGSG                                      SCAHGSGILPCAHTDGQQAHLLKP  GRNCVGPVLSSGKRPSQEEDAQSIGPKLQRQSTD
CRY1_speTri    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMAYAPGENIPGCSSSG                                      SCTQGSSILHNAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSMGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_oryCun    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENIPGCSSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHYAQGDTQQTQLLKQ  GRSSMGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_oviAri    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENIPGCSSSA                                      SCTQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSTAAGLGSGKRPSQEEDTQSVGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_bosTau    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENIPGCSSNA                                      SCTQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSTGAGLGSGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_susScr    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENIPGCSSSG                                      SCPQGSGILHYAHGESQQNHLLKQ  GRSSTGSGLSSAKRPSQEEDTQSIIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_ailMel    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPANPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENIPGCSSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSMGSGLSSGKRPSEEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_turTru    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENIPGYSSSG                                      SCTPGSGILHYAYGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSTCTGLSSGKRPSQEEDTQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_equCab    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENIPGCSSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSLGPGLSSGKRPGPEEDTQGIGPKVQRQSTT
CRY1_canFam    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENIPGCSSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSMGTGLSSGKRPSEEEDTQTISPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_myoLuc    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENIPGCSSSG                                      SYAQGSGILHYALGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSVGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDTQSIGRKVQRQSTN
CRY1_pteVam    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENIPGCSSSG                                      SCSQGSGSLHYAHGDCQQTHLLKQ  GRSSMGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDMQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_loxAfr    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENTPGCNSSG                                      SCSQGSGILHYVHGDS....LLKQ  GRSPTGTGVSSGKRPSQDEETQTLGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_triMan    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENIPGCSSNG                                      SCPQGNGILHYAHRDSQQAHLLKQ  GRSPTGTGVSSGKRPSQEEETQSIGPKVQRQSAN
CRY1_proCap    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLIGYSPGESIPGCSNSG                                      SCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQAHLLKP  GRSPMGTGISSGKRPSQEEETQTVGRKVQRQSTN  
CRY1_echTel    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENTTGCSSGG                                      GCPPGNGILHYAHGDSQQAALLKQ  GRSPLGTGLSSGKRPSQEEDTQSVGPKVQRQSSN
CRY1_dasNov    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYAPGENILGCSSSG                                      SCAQGSSILHYAHGDNQQTHLLKQ  GRSSMGTVLSSGKRPSQEEETQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_choHof    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYSPGENIPGCSSSG                                      sCSQGSGILHYAHGDSQQTHLLKQ  GRSSMGIGLSSGKRPSQEEETQGIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_monDom    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GSLMAYTPGENIPGCSSGG    GAPVGASDGQIL..QACVLPEPPTGTSGVQQP  GYSQGSGISHYSHEDSQQAYMLKQ  GRSSL..GVGGGKRPRQEEETQSINPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_macEug    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GSLMGYTTGENIPTCSSSGG   GAPAGASDGQIL..QACVLPEPPTGTSGVQQP  GGYSQGGISHYSHEDSQQAYVLKQ  GRNSL....GGGKRHRQEEETQSIGSKMQRQSVN
CRY1_sarHar    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYTSGENGPACNSGG    GAPVGASDGQIL..QSCALPEPPAGASCIQQS  GYSQGSGISHYSHEDSQQAYILKQ  GRSSL....SGGKRPRQEEETQSVGPKVQRQSVN
CRY1_triVul    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGN  GGLMGYAPGENIPACSSSGG   GAPAGVGDGQIL..QACALPEPPTGASGVQQP  GYSQGSGISHYAHEDSQQAYMLKQ  GRSSL...SGGGKRHRQEEEAQSIGPKMQRQSVN
CRY1_ornAna    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNANGSGGLMAYSPGENIPGCSSGGG   GVQMGASESHLL..QTCVLGESHLGPSGIQQQ  GYCQGSGVLYYANGE....SHLTQ  GRSSLTPGLSGGKRPCQEEESQSIGPKVQRQSTD
CRY1_tacAcu    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNANGSGGLMAYSPGENIPGCSSGG    GAQIGASESHLL..QTCVLGESHLGPSGIQQQ                            GRSSLTPGLSGGKRHCQEEESQSIGPKVQRQSTD
CRY1_galGal    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLATVPSNPNGNGNGGLMSFSPGESISGCSSAG    GAQLGTGDGQTVGVQTCALADSHTGGSGVQQQ  GYCQASSILRYAHGDNQQSHLMQP  GRASLGTGISAGKRPNPEEETQSVGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_melGal    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLATVPSNPNGNGNGGLMSFSPGESISGCSSAG    GAQLGTGDGQTVGVQSCALGDSHTGGNGVQQQ  GYCQASSILRYAHGDNQQPHLMQP  GRASLGTGISAGKRPNPEEETQSVGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_eriRub    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLATVPSNPNGNGNGGLMGYSPGESISGCGSTG    GAQLGTGDGHTV.VQSCTLGDSHSGTSGIQQQ  GYCQASSILHYAHGDNQQSHLLQA  GRTALGTGISAGKRPNPEEETQSVGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_sylBor    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLATVPSNPNGNGNGGLMGYSPGESISGCGSTG    GAQLGAGDGHSV.VQSCALGDSHTGTSGVQQQ  GYCQASSILHYAHGDNQQSHLLQA  GRTALGTGISAGKRPNPEEETQSVGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_taeGut    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLATVPSNPNGNGNGGLMGYSPGESISGCGSTG    GAQLGTGDGHSV.VQSCALGDSHTGTSGIQQQ  GYCQASSILHYAHGDNQQSHLLQA  GRTALGTGISAGKRPNPEEETQSVGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_parWeb    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLATVPSNPNGNGNGGLMGYSPGESISGCGSTG    GAQLGTGDGHSV.VQSCALGDSHTGTSGIQQQ  GYCQASSILHYAHGDNQQSHLLQA  GRTALGTGISAGKRPNPEEETQSVGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_allMis    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLATVPSNPNGNGNGGLMGYSPGENVSGCGSTG    GAQMGSSDGHTVSVQPCALGESHGGSNGIQQQ  GYFQASSILHFPHGDDQQSHLLQQ  GRTSLSSGISAGKRPNPEEETQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_anoCar    MKQMYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNGNGNGNGGLMGYSTGENIPGCTNTN    GSQMGMNEGHIGNVQACTMGESHTGTSGIQQQ  GYSQGSGILLYSHGDNQKTHSAQK  GRISLGTGVCTGKRPSPEVETQSVGPKVQRQSSN
CRY1_podSic    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPLNGNGNGNGGLMGYSTGENIPGCTNTN    GSQMGTNEAHTGSVQTCTLGESHTGTSGIQQQ  GYPQGSDILHYAHGEGQKTHLIQQ  GRASLVAGVCTGKRPNPEEETQSIGPKVQRQSSK
CRY1_pytMol    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL                                        GAQMGTSEGHTGNVQACTLGETHTGTSGIQQQ  GYSQGNSGILHYAHGDSQKTLLMQ  GRTSLSVGVCTGKRPNPEEGIQSIGPKVQRQSSN
CRY1_chrPic    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLATVPSNPNG..NGGLMGYSPGENISGCSSAS    GAQMGSNDGHTVGVQTCSLEDSHAGSSGIQQH  GYSQGNSIVHYAQGDHQQSHLLQQG GRTVST GISTGKRPNPEKETQSIGPKVQRQSTN
CRY1_xenTro    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNGNGNGGLMSYSPGESMSGCSNNG    GGQMGVNEGSSASNPNANKGEVHPGTSGLQ..  GYWQGSSILHYSHSDSQQSY LMQ  ARNPLHSVVSSGKRPNPEEETQSIGPKVQRQSSH
CRY1_xenLae    MKQIYQQLSRYRGL  GLLASVPSNPNG..NGGLMSYSPGESMPGCSNNG    GGQMGAIEGSSASNPNPNQGEVLPGTSGLQ..  GYWQGSSILHYSHSDNQQSY LMQ  ARNPLHSVVSSGKRPNPEEETQSVGPKVQRQSTH
CRY1_latCha    MKQIYQQLSRYRGM  GLLASVPSNPNGNGGLGCSLAENIPVCNSAA       GAQMGGDDGHKVSVLAYTQGDSRAGEIEMQQQ
CRY1_danRer    MKQIYQQLSCYRGL  GLLAMVPSNPNGNGENSTSLMGFQTGDMTKEVTTPS  GYQMPPTSQGEWHGRTMVYSQGDQQTSSIMTSQ GFGNNGSTMCYRQDAQQIT       GRGLHSSIIQTSGKRHSEESGPTTVSKVQRQCSS

When the terminal four exons of CRY1 are compared to those of its nearest homolog class CRY2, no similarity can be detected beyond the first 8 residues of the tenth exon of CRY1 (2 GLLASVPS) vs the tenth and penultimate exon of CRY2 (2 CLLASVPS). This raises the question of what the last common ancestor had for terminal exons and -- given no counterpart in CRY4, CRY64, DASH, or CPD -- where they originated. Note that last two exons of CRY2 are strongly conserved in their own right, proving a separate conserved functionality from that of CRY1. Since the tenth exons begin homologously and end after a similar length with a phase 1 splice donor, these exons could possibly be homologous their entire length, just diverged distally. The eleventh exon of CRY2 could then correspond (allowing for total sequence divergence) to any of exons 11-13 in CRY1.

CRY2_homSap   CLLASVPSCVEDLSHPVAEPSSSQAGSMSSA GPRPLPSGPASPKRKLEAAEEPPGEELSKRARVAELPTPELPSKDA
CRY2_panTro   ............................... ..............................................
CRY2_gorGor   ...........................V... ..............................................
CRY2_ponAbe   ...........................V... ..............................................
CRY2_rheMac   ...........................VN.. ...............................K..............
CRY2_papHam   ...........................VN.. ...............................K..............
CRY2_calJac   ............................... .............................................V
CRY2_micMur   ..............................T .................................T............
CRY2_musMus   ....................G......I.NT ...A.S.....................T.....T.M..Q.PA...S
CRY2_ratNor   ....................G......I.NT .....S...........................T.M.AQ.P....S
CRY2_criGri   ...........................I.NT .S...S...........................T.M.AQ.PQT...
CRY2_spaJud   ........................P..ITNT .....ST..........................T...A..PA....
CRY2_cavPor   .....................L.....ST.T ......G.................................P.....
CRY2_hetGla   ....................TL.....S..T ...S..D..............................A..PT....
CRY2_speTri   ....................G......I..T .....S..Q.....................................
CRY2_oryCun   ...........................V.G. A..................................V........AV
CRY2_turTru   .........M....N...........G.... ................G.................G..PS..L...V
CRY2_bosTau   ..............N.......I....S..V ......G.................G..........SLPS....RGV
CRY2_susScr   ..............N............V.A. .....................................PT...GR.V
CRY2_canFam   ..............N.........T...... ..........................................CR.V
CRY2_ailMel   ..............N.........T...... .....................................A..P..R.V
CRY2_myoLuc   .........M....N......L..T...... ..K..................................AT....R.V
CRY2_pteVam   .............NN.........T...NN. .....................................A.....R.V
CRY2_loxAfr   ..............S............SN...........T........................K..G.......V
CRY2_proCap   ..............N........P..H.....L................................K..G.....T..
CRY2_choHof   ..............N....................V............................T...........V
CRY2_macEug   .........M....S.M..T.MG....V..T..K...CS..........T..ASR..H.....M.A..V...A.---
CRY2_monDom   .........L....S.MV.A.LG...AV.GP.LK...CS..........T..A....H.......R..GS..AG..V
CRY2_ornAna   ..............SAA..SGLG....NI.TA...-.P.............GL.....C..PK..GR.G..P.GE..
CRY2_galGal   ..............G..TDSAPG.-..ST.TAV.LPQ.DQ......H.G...LCT...Y...K.TG..A..I.G.SS
CRY2_taeGut   ............I.G..PDSA.G.-.CST.TAV.LSQAEQ......H.G....CS...Y...K.TG...S.ISG.SL
CRY2_allMis   G........A....G..TD.A.V.-.CST.TALK.SQ..Q......H.GI..MCT.D.Y...K.TG.HG..I...SL
CRY2_anoCar   .........M....N...DT...H-.NCIGTAS.QTHC.QT.....HDVVQ.YK-...Y...K.VASQFA.N.RQEL 
CRY2_xenTro   .I.......M...GG.M.DS.QNISEAGKM.P.SHTSGESVLAAQYTAGI---------------------------
CRY2_ranCat   .I......S.....G.M.D.A...Q..SD---.A.RLCAVD.....H.DLD----G..C.K..LQCVQEM.RAA..F

A distal alternative splice in avian cryptochrome CRY1 not used for magnetosensing

Bird CRY1 presents a further curious situation with respect to the terminal extentional exons of CRY1: an alternative splice in exon 11, more accurately a failure to recognize its splice donor with subsequent read-out to the first stop codon encountered. The vast majority of such events are misinterpreted artifacts -- the transcript terminated too soon, providing no splice acceptor and so no way for the intervening intron to be removed.

However here two types of transcripts were found in both Erithacus rubecula (Euro robin) and Sylvia borin (warbler) in targeted experiments by separate research groups. The long form, called there CRY1A, has the usual four terminal exons of vertebrates; the short form, CRY1B, provides 25 new amino acids before a stop codon.

Comparative genomics is capable of resolving artifact, coincidence, and functional. First note that GenBank chicken transcripts has a supportive entry (BU143111) that surfaced in a large transcript program not focused on particular genes. Secondly, the read-out of exon 11 in species without transcripts is highly conserved in amino acid sequence. While a certain amount of nucleotide conservation might be expected because splice sites are larger than just GT-AG and the intron may contain enhancers or conserved non-coding, and conservation can persist for a time just because of coldspots and mutational inertia, the conservation here at the protein level significantly exceeds what these factors could contribute. Gray shows species lacking conservation; blue conserved amino acids within birds.

Exon 11 read-out of CRY1    genSpp                                         transcript support of read-out

GISKNTF*                    monDom Monodelphis domestica (opossum)
GISDNTFLTLTQSRGSLGIPHQS..*  macEug Macropus eugenii (wallaby)
GISQNTFESVRLS*              sarHar Sarcophilus harrisii (tasmanian_devil)
GISKLFSFIFKNTFN*            ornAna Ornithorhynchus anatinus (platypus)
GRSSLTPGLSGGKRHCQEEESQN..*  tacAcu Tachyglossus aculeatus (echidna)
GIMAVPVCRGSPNPCNYRKPDKTSK*  taeGut Taeniopygia guttata (finch)
GIMAVPVCRGSPNACNYGKPDKTSK*  eriRub Erithacus rubecula (robin)               AY585717
GIVAVAVCRGSPNPCNYGKPDKTSE*  sylBor Sylvia borin (warbler)                   DQ838738
GIMAVPVCRGSSNPCNCGKTDKTSK*  melUnd Melopsittacus undulatus (parakeet) 
GMTGVLVCRGSPGSHNYGKKDKT*    anaPla Anas platyrhynchos (duck)
GIVGVPICRGSADLCN*           galGal Gallus gallus (chicken)                  BU143111
GTVGVPICRGSANWYK*           melGal Meleagris gallopavo (turkey)
GIIQQVKCLQRICKFL*           allMis Alligator mississippiensis (alligator)
GAQMGSNDGHTVGVQTCSLEDSH..*  chrPic Chrysemys picta (turtle)
GKTL*                       anoCar Anolis carolinensis (lizard)
GKLAAPLISVSSIIGVFHTHEPQ..*  xenTro Xenopus tropicalis (frog)

The data thus support the notion of birds having evolved a distinct function for the read-out option at exon 11 -- with nothing comparable in other reptiles (including the immediate outgroup crocodillians) or mammals. Many more bird genomes are expected in 2012 (notably Corvus, Ficedula, Geospiza, Manacus and Paradoxornis) that can confirm if read-out conservation patterns conform to the avian phylogenetic tree. However the more common CRY1 form retaining the usual extra exons is also conserved in birds (as seen in the earlier alignment of this region).

CRY1retina.jpg

Here it has been reported that the long form only is expressed in SWS1 opsin cones of retinas of migrating birds where it detects the earth's magnetic field via electron spin pairing in tryptophan and FAD. The short form is apparently expressed in the ganglion cell layer.

Note the vertebrate ciliary opsin SWS1 has no counterpart in fruit flies which do however have two rhabdomeric opsins with peak sensitivity in the ultraviolet, RH5 and RH7, with characteristic lysine at position 90 and a short third cytoplasmic loop. RH5 is located in the larval Bolwig organ; RH7 has not been assigned an anatomical site but may be located in antenna.

Human CRY2, also strongly expressed in retina but not so specifically in cone cell outer segment membranes, can reportedly replace the invertebrate cryptochrome CRY1B in the drosophila magnetic field detection system (as can insect CRY1A). The final exon of human CRY2 bears no clear relationship to the terminal exons of CRY1 nor to the read-out exon 13 of birds and is only secondarily related homologically to invertebrate CRY1B cryptochromes.
The alignment below shows very limited distal homology between tetrapod CRY2 and invertebrate CRY1B. The primary sequence correspondence does not even extend to the coiled coil region of vertebrate CRY2 which is not always evident in invertebrate CRY1B, much less to distal exons of CRY2 (indicated by spacing). On the flip side, just distal to the its missing coiled coil, invertebrate CRY1B has a conserved 16 residue motif known to imitate a damaged DNA base with a tryptophan; vertebrate CRY2 is itself conserved here but not relative to the CRY1B spoof motif and contains no counterpart to the key aromatic residue.

Amino acids are shown only when 50% or more conserved within the total alignment column:

CRY2_homSap    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPES.QKAAKCIIGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_rheMac    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPES.QKAAKCIIGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_calJac    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPES.QKAAKCIIGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_micMur    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPES.QKAAKCIIGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_musMus    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPESVQKAAKCIIGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_cavPor    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPES.QKAAKCIIGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_oryCun    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPESVQKAAKCIIGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_bosTau    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPES.QKAAKC.IGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQ.YQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_ailMel    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPES.QKAAKCIIGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_pteVam    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPES.QKAAKCIIGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDL..P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_loxAfr    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPES.QKAAKCIIGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_choHof    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPES.QKAAKCIIGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_monDom    RYLP.LK.FP.RYIYEPWNAPE.VQKAAKCIIGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSC.EDLS.P.......Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........E..KRA.V......E......
CRY2_ornAna    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPESVQKAAKC.IGVDYP.PIVNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.........Q.G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KR..V......E......
CRY2_galGal    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPESVQKAAKCIIGVDYP.P.VNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVEDLS.P.......Q-G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_taeGut    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPESVQKAAKCIIGVDYP.P.VNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSCVED.S.P.......Q-G............ ........SPKRK.E........EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_allMis    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPESVQKAAKCIIGVDYP.P.VNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL .LLASVPSC.EDLS.P.......Q-G............ ........SPKRK.E.........L.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_anoCar    RYLP.LK.FPSRYIYEPWNAPESVQKAAKCIIGVDYP.P.VNHAE.SRLNIERMKQIYQQLSRYRGL CLLASVPSC.EDLS.P........-G............ ........SPKRK.......-..EL.KRA.V......E......
CRY2_ranCat    RYLP.LK..PSRYIYEPWNAPESVQK.AKCI.GVDYP.P.VNHAE.SRLNIERMKQ.YQQLSRYRGL C.LASVPS.VEDLS.P.......Q.G...---...... ........SPKRK.E....----EL.K.A........E......
                                                                                 PPHCRPSNEEEVRQFMWLP: helix conserved within CR!B whose tryptophan spoofs damaged DNA base
CRY1B_strPur   RYLP.LK..P.RY..EPW.AP..VQ..AKCI.G.DYP.P.V.H...S..N.E.M......L.... ......S....V.......
CRY1B_lytVar   RYLP.LK..P.RY..EPW.AP..VQ..AKCI.G.DYP.PIV.H...S..N.E.M......L.... ......S....V.......
CRY1B_parLiv   RYLP.LK..P.RY..EPW.AP..VQ..AKCI.G.DYP.PIV.H...S..N.E.M......L.... ......S....V.......
CRY1B_aplCal   RY.P.LK..P..Y..EPW.AP...Q....CIIG.DYP.P.V.H...S......M..I.--..... ...........V..L....
CRY1B_octVul   .Y.P.LK..P..Y...PW.AP...Q..A.CIIG.DYP.PIV.H...S..N...M......L.... ...........V.......
CRY1B_craGig   RYLP.LK..P.RY..EPW.AP..VQ..AKCI.--DYP.P.V.H...S...I..MK.....L.... ......S........S...
CRY1B_acyPis   RY.P.LK..P....YEPW..PESVQK...CIIG.DYP..IV.H...S..N...M........... ......S....V.......
CRY1B_dapPul   RY.P.L..F...YI.EPW.AP...Q..A.CIIG.DYP...V.H.E....N.E.MK...Q..-... ......S..S.V.......
CRY1B_diaNig   RY.P.LK..P..Y.YEPW.AP..VQ..A.CI.G.DYP..I..H...S..N...M..I.-...... ......S............
CRY1B_danPle   RY.P.L...P..YIYEPW.AP..VQ.AA.C.IG.DYP.P.V.H......N...M....-.L.... ......S....V....... *
CRY1B_mamBra   RY.P.L...P..YIYEPW.AP...Q..A.CIIG.DYP.P.VNH......N...MK...-...... ......S............ *
CRY1B_helArm   RY.P.L...P..YIYEPW.AP..VQ..A.C.IG.DYP.P.VNH......N...MK...-...... ......S............ *
CRY1B_bomMor   RY.P.L...P..YIYEPW.AP..VQ..A.CIIG.DYP.P.VNH......N...M....-.L.... ......S............
CRY1B_droMel   .Y.P.L...P.....EPW......Q....C.IGV.YP..I.........N...MK.....L....  .....S....V.......
CRY1B_anoGam   RYLP.L...P.....EPW.A....Q....C.IG..YP.P.V..A..S..N...M......L.... ......S............
CRY1B_neoBul   .Y.P.L...P..YI.EPW..P...Q....C.IG..YP............N...M......L.... ......S............
CRY1B_bacCuc   .Y.P.L...P..YI.EPW..P...Q....C.IGV.YP..IV..A..S..N...M....Q.L.... ......S....V.......
CRY1Bcoils.png

The graphic above shows separate predictions for distal coiled coil prediction for each of 17-20 concatenated vertebrate distal sequences for each of the eight cryptochromes and photolyases that occur in bilaterans. The species are presented in phylogenetic order left to right (ie as listed in refSeq collection). Invertebrate CRY1B clearly does not have the domain not consistently present. The three largest CRY1B peaks (indicated by asterisks in the alignment) are all lepidoptera; the Drosophila protein does not contain this structural motif motif. Given the duplications of the gene tree, the coiled coil domain probably arose once in an early ancetral cryptochrome but was been lost in some gene tree lineages in some species groups such as dipteran flies. The new crystallographic structure PDB:3TVS confirms the lack of coiled-coil motif in CRY1B.

C-terminal deletions of the Drosophila cryptochrome have been extensively studied. While informative, the poor distal correspondence to mammalian cryptochromes makes carry-over of such results -- annotation transfer -- to mammalian cryptochromes a dubious proposition since key sequence motifs used in signalling are not present in the C-terminus of this model species (and vice versa!).

Evolutionary origin of the α/β photolyase fold

Comparative genomics (lots of phylogenetically structured primary sequences) synergizes strongly with three-dimensional structural determinations, the former providing the conserved so presumably functional regions and the latter their structural interpretation. In the case of cryptochrome and photolyase structures, it is quite important that full length proteins be considered because N- and C-terminal extensions can provide the very properties that distinguish an orthology class from its paralogs.

However the N-terminus can also be evolving haphazardly from compositionally simple sequence, be quickly trimmed from newly synthesized protein by cellular proteases, lack assignable structure in a crystal, and be functionally irrelevant. Similarly, an extended C-terminus can represent meaningless run-out through junk DNA to the first stop codon encountered. In these situations, sequence conservation will not extend beyond the genus level (a few million years).

The overall fold of all cryptochromes and photolyases is basically the same: two distinct globular domains held together in part by a long lasso thrown out by the second domain. The amino terminal domain lies at the far end of the protein from the DNA binding site. It consists of a 5-stranded parallel beta sheet sandwiched between 4 alpha helices whose axes are anti-parallel to the sheet. The strands are ordered 32145 with the helices alternating in position. The first two helices form the top of a sandwich, the second two the bottom with strand 3 transitioning. The binding site for the antenna molecule is at the edge of the sandwich between the two domains; it is not intimately associated with the helices or central strands themselves but rather with helix-strand turns.

CRYHS.png

Surprisingly, the βαβαβαβαβ pattern of alternating helix and sheet with the outer layer of helices packing against the central core in 32145 order is not necessarily indicative of evolutionary relatedness but instead a default supersecondary structure for cytoplasmic proteins. Its inevitability was first explained by C. Chothia et al in 1977 as complementarity between the right handed twist of a beta sheet and the rotating i+4 ridge of helix side chains (due to its 3.4 residues per turn) -- close packing of side chains in the hydrophobic core is entropically favorable and so the same basic fold commonly arises regardless of evolutionary relatedness.

In terms of evolutionary characters, the fold is homoplasic, having arisen many times independently rather than having descended from a single ancestral fold. (The same is true for the more complex TIM beta barrel, an eightfold repeat of the βαβ pattern found in 15 gene families with no bona fide sequence homology.)

With photolyases, coincidence extends to antenna molecules, some of which are similar to the NAD of the Rossmann fold homology group. However the binding site location is different. Photolyases do not have a stand-alone pocket in the α/β amino terminal domain but utilize portions of the following fold (not to mention a the composite route of excitation transfer). In fact, it's not clear that the antenna binding site is fixed in all homologs. Further, there is no conservation of key residues nor any convergence of ancestral sequences to homology.

In summary, the photolyase fold is not homologous to the classic nucleotide binding fold. Searching PDB with a given protein to find related fold structures thus requires careful overall evaluation of candidates to ensure actual evolutionary relatedness. While the α/β domain draws a blank, the resemblance found by Dali in the catalytic domain of primases and 4Fe-4S photolyases to previously studied photolyases/cryptochromes is beyond coincidence.

CRY1B3TVS.jpg

Many large eukaryotic proteins are chimeric, having arisen from genetic fusions of mobile domains. Alternatively, certain common folds have arisen independently in situ in different gene families rather than been shuffled in. Initially, modular proteins fold as their constituent pieces, with less substantive interaction in the final product than an ordinary non-covalent heterodimer might have, but over time more intimate structural codependencies evolve. Photolyase may once have been a heterodimer of a small redox protein that passes antenna excitations to a larger catalytic subunit, becoming later a genetically fused modular protein, but today the α/β amino terminal domain is quite integrated with the all-alpha domain -- the long lasso holding them together is preceded by the essential protrusion loop that binds DNA in the second domain. (This connector region was reported attached by a reported disulfide but the cysteines are not conserved and cytoplasmic proteins generally lack disulfides in vivo.)

Separating the two domains with limited trypsin digestion (or better, genetic methods) has not yet been attempted and might not be feasible with retention of functionality if the domains are structurally interdependent. This could explain why cryptochromes that lack antenna molecules have not lost the α/β domain under the evolutionary principle of 'use it or lose it'. That is, if no selective pressure persisted in this region, what weeds out structurally deleterious mutations or keeps a large N-terminal deletion from being fixed? Not only has CRY1B of drosophila retained the antenna pocket, but it also exhibits very high levels of conservation of individual amino acids and small motifs beyond what is needed for folding and stability.

The main alternatives to structural integration are (1) evolution has not caught up yet with very recent loss of antenna molecule in CRY1B and other cryptochromes, (2) an unsuspected, undetected new antenna molecule is present and important in vivo which maintains selective pressure and (3) a signalling or magnetosensing role for the α/β domain, either from direct participation in a conformational shift or through homodimeric or heterologous binding to other proteins. The first possiblity can be rejected because seemingly antenna-less cryptochromes fall into different groups, each of long standing. The second seems inconsistent with careful experimentation, yet reconstitution experiments are no better than the antenna molecules included, with the very recent discovery of lumazine casting further doubt on the completeness of that set. The third is a distinct possibility yet does not seem sufficent to provide the level of conservation observed.

Taking phylogenetically distributed representatives from each cryptochrome/photolyase class (excluding 4Fe-4S photolyases and primases), the alignment below shows the regions of conservation within the α/β domain. While it is easy and informative to align all 250 sequences, to avoid excess display only 4 of each orthology class are shown. However the full set of sequences was separately aligned to determine conservation at the 70% level, again with key species (experimental models and those with PDB structures) shown. It can be seen immediately that universally conserved residues do not correlate particularly with secondary structure (even though that is strongly conserved).

                      10        20        30        40        50        60        70        80        90       100       110       120       130       140       150       160       170       
                       |         |         |         |         |         |         |         |         |         |         |         |         |         |         |         |         |    
                bbbbbb         aaaaaaaaa     bbbbbbbbb           aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa        bbbbbb  aaaaaaaaaa bbbbbbbb        aaaaaaaaaaaa  bbbbbbb
CRY1_homSap   MGVNAVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALKECIQGAD-TIRCVYILDP------WFAGSSNVGINRWRFLLQCLEDLDANLRKLNSRLFVIRGQPADVFPRLFKEWN-ITKLSIEYDSEPFGKERDAAIKKLATEAGVEVIVRISHTLYDLDKIIELNGGQPPLTYKRFQTLISKMEPLEIP
CRY1_musMus   MGVNAVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALKECIQGAD-TIRCVYILDP------WFAGSSNVGINRWRFLLQCLEDLDANLRKLNSRLFVIRGQPADVFPRLFKEWN-ITKLSIEYDSEPFGKERDAAIKKLATEAGVEVIVRISHTLYDLDKIIELNGGQPPLTYKRFQTLVSKMEPLEMP
CRY1_galGal   MGVNAVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALRECIRGAD-TVRCVYILDP------WFAGSSNVGINRWRFLLQCLEDLDANLRKLNSRLFVIRGQPADVFPRLFKEWS-IAKLSIEYDSEPFGKERDAAIKKLASEAGVEVIVRISHTLYDLDKIIELNGGQPPLTYKRFQTLISRMEPLEMP
CRY1_xenTro   MGVNAVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALRECIQGAD-TVRCVYILDP------WFAGSSNVGINRWRFLLQCLEDLDANLRKLNSRLFVIRGQPADVFPRLFKEWK-ITKLSIEYDSEPFGKERDAAIKKLASEAGVEVIVRISHTLYDLDKIIELNGGQPPLTYKRFQTLISKMDPLEIP
CRY2_homSap   DSASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGAR-CVRCVYILDP------WFAASSSVGINRWRFLLQSLEDLDTSLRKLNSRLFVVRGQPADVFPRLFKEWG-VTRLTFEYDSEPFGKERDAAIMKMAKEAGVEVVTENSHTLYDLDRIIELNGQKPPLTYKRFQAIISRMELPKKP
CRY2_musMus   DGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGAR-CVRCVYILDP------WFAASSSVGINRWRFLLQSLEDLDTSLRKLNSRLFVVRGQPADVFPRLFKEWG-VTRLTFEYDSEPFGKERDAAIMKMAKEAGVEVVTENSHTLYDLDRIIELNGQKPPLTYKRFQALISRMELPKKP
CRY2_galGal   GFCRSVHWFRRGLRLHDNPALQAALRGAA-SLRCIYILDP------WFAASSAVGINRWRFLLQSLEDLDNSLRKLNSRLFVVRGQPTDVFPRLFKEWG-VTRLTFEYDSEPFGKERDAAIIKLAKEAGVEVVIENSHTLYDLDRIIELNGNKPPLTYKRFQAIISRMELPKKP
CRY2_xenTro   PSVSSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLSALRGAN-SVRCVYILDP------WFAASSSGGVNRWRFLLQSLEDLDTSLRKLNSRLFVVRGQPADVFPRLFKEWG-VSRLTFEYDSEPFGKERDAVIMKLAKEAGVEVVVENSHTLYDLDRVIELNGHSPPLTYKRFQAIISRMELPRRP
CRY1A_triCas  QDKHMVHWFRRGLRLHDNPSLREGLKGAR-TFRCVFVLDP------WFAGSSNVGINKWRFLLQCLEDLDRSLRKL-SRLFVIRGQPADALPKLFKEWG-TTALTFEEDPEPFGGVRDHNLTTLCQELGISVVQKVSHTLYHLQDIIDRNGGRAPLTYHQFLAIIACMGPPPQP
CRY1A_bomImp  MGKHTVHWFRKGLRLHDNPSLREGLTGAT-TFRCVFVLDP------WFAGSTNVGINKWRFLLQCLEDLDCSLRKLNSRLFVIRGQPADALPKLFKEWG-TTNLTFEEDPEPFGRVRDHNISALCKELGISVVQKVSHTLYKLDEIIERNGGKPPLTYHQFQNVVASMDPPEPS
CRY1A_nasVit  MKKHTVHWFRKGLRLHDNPSLREGLAGAS-TFRCVFVLDP------WFAGSANVSINKWRFLLQCLEDLDRSLHQLNSRLFVIRGQPADALPKLFREWG-TTSLTFEEDPEPYGRVRDENITTLCKELGITVVQRVSHTLYKLDEIIEKNGGKPPLTYHQFQNVIARMDPPEYP
CRY1A_anoGam  RDKHTVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALREGLRGAR-TFRCVFIIDP------WFAGSSNVGINKWRFLLQCLDDLDRNLRKLNSRLFVIRGQPADALPKLFKEWG-TTCLTFEEDPEPFGRVRDHNISEMCKELGIEVISAASHTLYNLERIIEKNGGRAPLTYHQFQAIIASMDAPPQP
CRY1B_strPur  PGGACIHWFRHGLRLHDNPALLEGMTLGK-EFYPVFIFDN------EVAGTKTSGYNRWRFLHDCLVDLDEQLKAAGGRLFVFHGDPCLIFKEMFLEWG-VRYLTFESDPEPIWTERDRRVKALCKEMKVECIERVSHTLWNPDIIIEKNGGTPPITYSMFMECVTEIGHPPRP
CRY1B_octVul  KQKIAVHWFRHGQRLHDNPALLDALKDCD-EFYPVFIFDG------EVAGTKLCGFNRWRFLLENLKDLDESFSEYGGRLYTFQGKPVEVFANLQNEWG-ITHITAEIDPEPIWQERDDAVKEFCQKSGIKCDFFNSHTLWDPKRLLKKNGGTPPLTFELFQLVTSSLGPPPRP
CRY1B_danPle  MLGGNVIWFRHGLRLHDNPSLHSALEDASSPFFPIFIFDG------ETAGTKMVGYNRMRYLLEALNDLDQQFRKYGGKLLMIKGRPDLIFRRLWEEFG-IRTLCFEQDCEPIWRPRDASVRALCRDIGVSCREHVAHTLWNPDTVIKANGGIPPLTYQMFLHTVEIIGNPPRP
CRY1B_droMel  TRGANVIWFRHGLRLHDNPALLAALKDQGIALIPVFIFDG------ESAGTKNVGYNRMRFLLDSLQDIDDQLQDGRGRLLVFEGEPAYIFRRLHEQVR-LHRICIEQDCEPIWNERDESIRSLCRELNIDFVEKVSHTLWDPQLVIETNGGIPPLTYQMFLHTVQIIGLPPRP 3TVS
CRY4_galGal   MRHRTIHLFRKGLRLHDNPALLAALQSSE-VVYPVYILDR------AFTSSMHIGALRWHFLLQSLEDLRSSLRQLGSCLLVIQGEYESVVRDHVQKWN-ITQVTLDAEMEPFYKEMEANIRGLGEELGFQVLSLMGHSLYNTQRILELNGGTPPLTYKRFLRILSLLGDPEVP
CRY4_xenTro   MPHRTIHIFRKGLRLHDNPTLVTALETSD-VVYPVYILDR------NFTSSSVIGSKRWNFFLQSIEDLHCNLQKLNSCLFVIQGDYERVLREHVEKWN-ITQVTFDLEIEPYYKGLDERIRAMGQELGFEVVSMVAHTLYDIKKILALNCGKPPLTYKNFLRVLSMLGNPDKP
CRY4_latCha   MTHRTIHIFRKGLRLHDNPILLAALEFSR-VVYPVYILDR------KLESGVIIGALRWRFILQSLEDLHRNLVKLNSRLFVIQGDYEQILREYVQKWT-ITQVTFDTEIEPFYKEMDKKVRLMGKEMGFTVLFSVAHALYDVARIVENNGGQPPLTYKKFLHVLSKLGDPERP
CRY4_danRer   MSHRTIHLFRKGLRLHDNPSLLGALASSS-ALYPVYVLDR------VFQGAMHMGALRWRFLLQSLEDLDTRLQAIGSRLFVLCGSTANILRELVAQWG-ITQISYDTEVEPYYTRMDKDIQTVAQENGLQTYTCVSHTLYDVKRIVKANGGSPPLTYKKFLHVLSVLGEPEKP
CRY64_xenTro  KHNSTIHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAMKDCA-ELYPIFILDP------WFPRNMKVSVNRWRFLIEALKDLDENLKKINSRLFVVRGKPTEVFPLLFKKWK-VTRLTFEVDTEPYSRQRDADVEKLAAEHNVQVIQKVSNTLYAIDRIIAENNGKPPLTYVRFQTVLALLGPPKRP
CRY64_danRer  SHNTTIHWFRKGLRLHDNPALIAALKDCR-HIYPLFLLDP------WFPKNTRIGINRWRFLIEALKDLDSSLKKLNSRLFVVRGSPTEVLPKLFKQWK-ITRLTFEVDTEPYSQSRDKEVMKLAKEYGVEVTPKISHTLYNIDRIIDENNGKTPMTYIRLQSVVKAMGHPKKP
CRY64_droMel  QRSTLVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALSHIFTGKY-FVRPIFILDP------GILDWMQVGANRWRFLQQTLEDLDNQLRKLNSRLFVVRGKPAEVFPRIFKSWR-VEMLTFETDIEPYSVTRDAAVQKLAKAEGVRVETHCSHTIYNPELVIAKNLGKAPITYQKFLGIVEQLKVPKKV 3CVU
CRY64_danPle  KVASVIHWFRLDLRLHDNLALRNAINRKQ-ILRPIYVIDP------DIKNWMRVGCNRLRFLFQSLKNLDTSLRKINTRLYVIKGKAIECLPKLFDEWH-VKFLTLQVDIDADLVKQDEVIEEFCEANNIFVVKRMQHTVYDFNSVVKKNNGSIPLTYQKFLSLVSDVQVKDKI
CRY1C_araTha  TGSGSLIWFRKGLRVHDNPALEYASKGSE-FMYPVFVIDP------HYPGSSRAGVNRIRFLLESLKDLDSSLKKLGSRLLVFKGEPGEVLVRCLQEWK-VKRLCFEYDTDPYYQALDVKVKDYASSTGVEVFSPVSHTLFNPAHIIEKNGGKPPLSYQSFLKVAGEPSCAKSE 3FY4
CRY1A_araTha  SGGCSIVWFRRDLRVEDNPALAAAVRAGR-PVIALFVWAP------EEEGHYHPGRVSRWWLKNSLAQLDSSLRSLGTCLITKRSDSVASLLDVVKSTG-ASQIFFNHLYDPLSLVRDHRAKDVLTAQGIAVRSFNADLLYEPWEVTDELGRPFSMFAAFWERCLSMPYDPESP 1U3C
DASH_taeGut   MAGTAICLLRCDLRAHDNQQVLHWAQHNADFVIPLYCFDPRHYLGTHCYRLPKTGPHRLRFLLESVKDLRETLKKKGSTLVVRKGKPEDVVCDLITQLGSVTAVVFHEEATQEELDVEKGLCQVCRQHGVKIQTFWGSTLYHRDDLPFRPIDRLPDVYTHFPKGLESGAKVRPT
DASH_xenTro   RARVIICLLRNDLRLHDNEVLHHWAHRNADQIVPLYCFDPRHYGGTHYFNFPKTGPHRLKFLLESVQDLRNTLKERGSNLLLRRGKPEEIIAGLVKQLGNVSAVTLHEEATKEETDVESAVRRVCTQLGVRYQTFWGSTLYHREDLPFRHISSLPDVYTQFRKAAETQGKVRST
DASH_danRer   ASRTVICLLRNDLRLHDNEVFHHWAQRNAEHIIPLYCFDPRHYQGTYHYNFPKTGPFRLRFLLDSVKDLRALLKKHGSTLLVRQGKPEDVVCELIKQLGSVSTVAFHEEVASEEKSVEEKLKEICCQNKVRVQTFWGSTLYHRDDLPFSHIGGLPDVYTQFRKAVEAQGRVRPV
DASH2_araTha  GKGVTILWFRNDLRVLDNDALYK-AWSSSDTILPVYCLDPRLFHTTHFFNFPKTGALRGGFLMECLVDLRKNLMKRGLNLLIRSGKPEEILPSLAKDFGA-RTVFAHKETCSEEVDVERLVNQGLKRVGTKLELIWGSTMYHKDDLPFD-VFDLPDVYTQFRKSVEAKCSIRSS 2VTB
CPD_galGal    GAECILYWMCRDQRVQDNWAFLYAQRLALKQELPLRVCFC------LVPAFLDATIRHYGFMLRGLREVAKECAELDIPFHVLLGCPKDVLPSFVVEHGVGGLVTDFCPLRVPRQWVEEVKERLPED--VPFAQVDAHNIVPCWVASPKQEYSARTIRAKIHSQLPEFLTEFPP
CPD_xenTro    DAQGIVYWMSRDQRVQDNWAFLYAQRLALKQKLPLHVTFC------LVPKFLDATIRHYGFMVKGLQEVAEECKELNIPFHLLIGYAKDILPNFVKKHAIGGVVTDFSPLRVPLQWVEDVSKRLPKD--VPLVQVDAHNIVPCWVASNKQEYGARTIRKKIHDQLSQFLTEFPP
CPD_droMel    SSLGVVYWMSRDGRVQDNWALLFAQRLALKLELPLTVVFC------LVPKFLNATIRHYKFMMGGLQEVEQQCRALDIPFHLLMGSAVEKLPQFVKSKDIGAVVCDFAPLRLPRQWVEDVGKALPKS--VPLVQVDAHNVVPLWVASDKQEYAARTIRNKINSKLGEYLSEFPP
CPD_orySat    PGGPVVYWMLRDQRLADNWALLHAAGLAAASASPLAVAFA------LFPRLLSARRRQLGFLLRGLRRLAADAAARHLPFFLFTGGPAE-IPALVQRLGASTLVADFSPLRPVREALDAVVGDLRRG--VAVHQVDAHNVVPVWTASAKMEYSAKTFRGKVSKVMDEYLVEFPE 3UMV
                bbbbbb         aaaaaaaaa     bbbbbbbbb           aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa        bbbbbb  aaaaaaaaaa bbbbbbbb        aaaaaaaaaaaa  bbbbbbb
CRY1_homSap   M..N..HWFRKGLRLHDNP.L.....G..-..RCVYILDP------WFAGSSNVGINRWRFLLQCLEDLDA.LRKLNSRLFVIRGQP.DVFPRLFKEW.-I..LS.EYDSEPFGKERDAAIKKLA.EAGVEVI.R.SHTLY.LD.IIELNGGQ.PLTYKRFQ.L.S.M.P...P 95% conservation
CRY1_musMus   M..N..HWFRKGLRLHDNP.L.....G..-..RCVYILDP------WFAGSSNVGINRWRFLLQCLEDLDA.LRKLNSRLFVIRGQP.DVFPRLFKEW.-I..LS.EYDSEPFGKERDAAIKKLA.EAGVEVI.R.SHTLY.LD.IIELNGGQ.PLTYKRFQ.L.S.M.P...P
CRY1_galGal   M..N..HWFRKGLRLHDNP.L.....G..-..RCVYILDP------WFAGSSNVGINRWRFLLQCLEDLDA.LRKLNSRLFVIRGQP.DVFPRLFKEW.-I..LS.EYDSEPFGKERDAAIKKLA.EAGVEVI.R.SHTLY.LD.IIELNGGQ.PLTYKRFQ.L.S.M.P...P
CRY1_xenTro   M..N..HWFRKGLRLHDNP.L.....G..-..RCVYILDP------WFAGSSNVGINRWRFLLQCLEDLDA.LRKLNSRLFVIRGQP.DVFPRLFKEW.-I..LS.EYDSEPFGKERDAAIKKLA.EAGVEVI.R.SHTLY.LD.IIELNGGQ.PLTYKRFQ.L.S.M.P...P
CRY2_homSap   ....SVHWFR.GLRLHDNPAL..A.....-..RC.YILDP------WFA....VG.NRWRFLL.SLEDLD.SLRKLNSRLFVVRGQP.DVFPRLFKEW.-VTRLTFEYDSEP.GKERDAAI.K.A.E.GVE....NSHTLY.LDRIIE.N...PPLT.KRFQ.I.SR..LP..P 95% conservation
CRY2_musMus   .....VHWFR.GLR.HDNPAL..A.....-..RC.YILDP------.FA.....G.NRWRFLL..LEDLD.SL.KL.SRLFVVRGQP.DVFPRLFKEW.-V..LTFEYD.EP.GKERD..I.K.A.E.GVE......HTLY.....IE.N...PPLT.KRFQ....R..LP..P
CRY2_galGal   .....VHWFR.GLR.HDNPAL..A.....-..RC.YILDP------.FA.....G.NRWRFLL..LEDLD.SL.KL.SRLFVVRGQP.DVFPRLFKEW.-V..LTFEYD.EP.GKERD..I.K.A.E.GVE......HTLY.....IE.N...PPLT.KRFQ....R..LP..P
CRY2_xenTro   .....VHWFR.GLR.HDNPAL..A.....-..RC.YILDP------.FA.....G.NRWRFLL..LEDLD.SL.KL.SRLFVVRGQP.DVFPRLFKEW.-V..LTFEYD.EP.GKERD..I.K.A.E.GVE......HTLY.....IE.N...PPLT.KRFQ....R..LP..P
CRY1A_triCas  ..K..VHWFR.GLR.HDNP.L..G.....-T.R..F..DP------WFA...N..INKWRFLL..L.DLD..L..L-.RLFV..GQPA..LP.L...W.-TT..TFE.DPEP.G.VRD.N.........I.V.....HTLY....II..N....PLTY..F.........P... 95% conservation
CRY1A_bomImp  ..K..VHWFR.GLR.HDNP.L..G.....-T.R..F..DP------WFA...N..INKWRFLL..L.DLD..L..L..RLFV..GQPA..LP.L...W.-TT..TFE.DPEP.G.VRD.N.........I.V.....HTLY....II..N....PLTY..F.........P...
CRY1A_nasVit  ..K..VHWFR.GLR.HDNP.L..G.....-T.R..F..DP------WFA...N..INKWRFLL..L.DLD..L..L..RLFV..GQPA..LP.L...W.-TT..TFE.DPEP.G.VRD.N.........I.V.....HTLY....II..N....PLTY..F.........P...
CRY1A_anoGam  ..K..VHWFR.GLR.HDNP.L..G.....-T.R..F..DP------WFA...N..INKWRFLL..L.DLD..L..L..RLFV..GQPA..LP.L...W.-TT..TFE.DPEP.G.VRD.N.........I.V.....HTLY....II..N....PLTY..F.........P...
CRY1B_strPur  .......WFRHGLRLHDNP.L........-.F.P.FIFD.------E.AGT...GYNR..FL...L.DLD......GGRL....G.P...F.....E.G-.....FE.D.EP.W..RD..VK..C......C.E.VSHTLW.P...I..NGG.PP.TY.MF......IG.PPRP 70% conservation
CRY1B_octVul  .....V.WFRHG.RLHDNP.L........-.F.P.FIFD.------E.AGT...G.NR..FLL..L.DLD......GGRL....G.P...F.....E.G-......E.D.EP.W..RD..VK..C......C....SHTLW.P......NGG.PPLT...F.......G.PPRP
CRY1B_danPle  .....V.WFRHGLRLHDNP.L........-.F.P.FIFD.------E.AGT...GYNR...LL..L.DLD......GG.L....G.P...F.....E.G-.....FE.D.EP.W..RD..V...C......C.E.V.HTLW.P...I..NGG.PPLTY.MF......IG.PPRP
CRY1B_droMel  .....V.WFRHGLRLHDNP.L........-...P.FIFD.------E.AGT...GYNR..FLL..L.D.D.......GRL....G.P...F........-......E.D.EP.W..RD......C........E.VSHTLW.P...I..NGG.PPLTY.MF......IG.PPRP
CRY4_galGal   M.HRTIH.FRKGLRLHDNP.LL.AL..S.-..YPVYILDR------.F......GALRW.F.LQSLEDL...L...GS.L.V..G......R..V.KW.I-TQ.T.D.E.EP.Y..M...I.....E.G..V.....H.LY...RI...NGG.PPLTYK.FL..LS.LG.PE.P 70% conservation
CRY4_xenTro   M.HRTIH.FRKGLRLHDNP.L..AL..S.-..YPVYILDR------.F......G..RW.F.LQS.EDL...L....S.L.V..G......R..V.KW.I-TQ.T.D.E.EP.Y......I.....E.G..V...V.H.LY....I...N.G.PPLTYK.FL..LS.LG.P..P
CRY4_latCha   M.HRTIH.FRKGLRLHDNP.LL.AL..S.-..YPVYILDR------........GALRW.F.LQSLEDL...L....S.L.V..G......R..V.KW.I-TQ.T.D.E.EP.Y..M.........E.G..V...V.H.LY...RI...NGG.PPLTYK.FL..LS.LG.PE.P
CRY4_danRer   M.HRTIH.FRKGLRLHDNP.LL.AL..S.-..YPVY.LDR------.F......GALRW.F.LQSLEDL...L...GS.L.V..G......R..V..W.I-TQ...D.E.EP.Y..M...I.....E.G......V.H.LY...RI...NGG.PPLTYK.FL..LS.LG.PE.P
CRY64_xenTro  .....IHWFRKGLRLHDNPAL..A.....-...PIF.LDP------.......V..NRWRFL...L.DLD..L.K.N.RLFV.RG.P.E..P.LF..W.V-..LT.EVDTEPY...RD..V...A....V.V...VS.T.Y........N.G..PLTY............P..P 70% conservation
CRY64_danRer  .....IHWFRKGLRLHDNPAL..A.....-...P.F.LDP------..........NRWRFL...L.DLD..L.KLN.RLFV.RG.P.E..P.LF..W..-..LT.EVDTEPY...RD..V...A....V.V....SHT.Y........N.G..P.TY............P..P
CRY64_droMel  ......HWFRKGLRLHDNPAL........-...PIF.LDP------.......V..NRWRFL...L.DLD..L.KLN.RLFV.RG.P.E..P..F..W.V-..LT.E.D.EPY...RD..V...A....V.V....SHT.Y........N.G..P.TY............P...
CRY64_danPle  .....IHWFR..LRLHDN.AL..A.....-...PI...DP------.......V..NR.RFL...L..LD..L.K.N.RL.V..G...E..P.LF..W.V-..LT..VD........D.............V.....HT.YD.......N.G..PLTY................
DASH_taeGut   .....ICLLR.DLR.HDN....HWA...A....PLYCFDPRHY.GT.....PKTGP.RL.FLLES..DLR..L...GS.L..R.GKPE.V...L..QLG.V..V....E.T.EE.DVE......C....V...T.WGSTLYHR.DLPF..I..LPDVYT.F.K..E....VR.. 70% conservation
DASH_xenTro   .....ICLLRNDLR.HDNE...HWA...A....PLYCFDPRHY.GT....FPKTGP.RL.FLLES..DLR..L...GS.L..R.GKPE.....L..QLG.V..V....E.T.EE.DVE......C....V...T.WGSTLYHR.DLPF.HI..LPDVYT.FRK..E....VR..
DASH_danRer   .....ICLLRNDLR.HDNE...HWA...A....PLYCFDPRHY.GT....FPKTGP.RL.FLL.S..DLR..L...GS.L..R.GKPE.V...L..QLG.V..V....E...EE..VE......C....V...T.WGSTLYHR.DLPF.HI..LPDVYT.FRK.VE....VR..
DASH2_araTha  .....I...RNDLR..DN.....-A........P.YC.DPR....T....FPKTG..R..FL.E...DLR..L...G..L..R.GKPE.....L....G.-..V....E...EE.DVE.................WGST.YH..DLPF.-...LPDVYT.FRK.VE.....R..
CPD_galGal    ......YWM.RDQRVQDNWA.L.AQ.LALK...PL.VCF------CL.P.FL.AT.R...F.L.GL.EV..EC..L.I.FH.L.G.....LP.FV.....G..V.DF.PLR.P..W...V...LP..--VP..QVDAHNIVPCW.AS.K.EY.ARTIR.KI...L..FLTEFPP 70% conservation
CPD_xenTro    ......YWM.RDQRVQDNWA.L.AQ.LALK...PL.V.F------CL.P.FL.AT.R...F...GL.EV..EC..L.I.FHLL.G.....LP.FV.....G..V.DF.PLR.P..W...V...LP..--VP..QVDAHNIVPCW.AS.K.EY.ARTIR.KI...L..FLTEFPP
CPD_orySat    ......YWM.RDQR..DNWA.L.A..LA.....PL.V.F------.L.P..L.A..R...F.L.GL.............F.L..G....-.P..V........V.DF.PLR........V...L...--V...QVDAHN.VP.W.AS.K.EY.A.T.R.K........L.EFP.
CPD_metMaz    ......YWM.RDQR..DNWA.L.....A.....P..V.F------CL...FL.A..R...F.L.GL.E.........I....L.G........FV.....G..V.DF.PLR....W...V....--.--.P...VDAHN.VPCW.AS.K.EY.A.T.R.K....L..FL.EFP.
                bbbbbb         aaaaaaaaa     bbbbbbbbb           aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa        bbbbbb  aaaaaaaaaa bbbbbbbb        aaaaaaaaaaaa  bbbbbbb

Three major indels occur. Using CPD and 4Fe-4S photolyases as outgroup, these can be resolved as either insertions or deletions (ie as derived traits or synapomorphies). The first indel is a 6 residue insertion found only in the DASH group; the second is a 1 residue deletion in stem post-DASH divergence proteins; and the third is a 2 residue insertion that occurred shortly after divergence from CPD. Even though 3D coverage of cryptochromes is inadequate, enough exists that each of these indels can be localized in an existing stucture and so visualized by precomputed structural co-alignments.

Indels can work as a standalone classifier. However this third of the protein provides discriminants only for CPD and DASH which are more easily identified just by a blast classifier using the reference sequences. Note too at position 30, ecdysozoans (minus orthopterans and crustaceans) show homoplasy, re-inserting a residue at a site where it had long been deleted.

CRYFAD.jpg

A deeper history of photolyase structural history must find a place for the 4Fe-4S cluster family (likelier as ancestral condition rathner than a development off to the side) and an explanation for the same cluster and structural homology to primase which is extensive butdoes not extend to the α/β domain. Here the unusual but conserved U-shaped conformation of the catalytic FAD may be a key piece of the history.

Here the rings of FAD's adenine and flavin each lie in a plane but these planes while not quite parallel are alignable by a rotation, and ring long axes are almost perpendicular. This configuration may allow them to bind two primer pyrmimidines much as the damaged DNA thymine dimer is bound. Indeed the 4Fe-4S cluster may create a transient cyclobutane bond in the primer. As usual, divalent magnesium binds the diphosphate and offsets its charge.
The table below list the current structural determinations for eukaryotic cryptochromes, photolyases and related folds available in March 2012. Archaeal and bacterial structures are included in the table when their eukaryotic alignment coverage or blast score warrants it -- they are surprisingly well conserved relative to metazoan, probably because of a 'floor' of essential core residues that prevents further percent divergence. (Opsins and the huge GPCR gene family have a similar floor but much lower, about 24%.) Overall, coverage is not ideal because not all orthology classes are represented yet -- while their core fold is easily predictable given high percent identities (eg 65% human to plant), critical functional nuances provided by actual extensions are not.

Date      PDB   Class  PubMed    Species          BestBlastP  Accession     Cofactors            Alternates 

Nov 2011  3TVS  CRY1B  22080955  Drosophila melanogaster (fruit_fly)   musMus 40%  AB019389      FAD no antenna       CRY1 cryptochrome 19722240
Dec 2008  1U3C  CRY1A  15299148  Arabidopsis thaliana (cress)          homSap 29%  NM_116961     FAD MTHF             CRY1-PHR  
Oct 2009  3CVU  CRY64  18956392  Drosophila melanogaster (fruitfly)    xenTro 57%  NM_165334     FAD [deazaflavin Fo] phr 6-4 
Apr 2009  3FY4  CRY1C  19359474  Arabidopsis thaliana (cress)          musMus 51%  NM_001035626  FAD                  UVR3 CRY3 
Dec 2008  2VTB  DASH2  19074258  Arabidopsis thaliana (cress)          xenTro 50%  NM_122394     FAD                  CRY3 
Dec 2011  3UMV  CPD    22170053  Oryza sativa (rice)                   galGal 53%  B096003       FAD                  PhrII Class II 
Sep 2011  2XRY  CPD    21892138  Methanosarcina mazei (euryarchaeota)  xenTro 49%  AE008384      FAD                  Class II
Mar 2012  3ZXS  PFES   22290493  Rhodobacter sphaeroides (bacteria)    ..........  CP000144      FAD 4Fe-4S lumazine  CryPro
Aug 2010  3L9Q  PRIM2  21346410  Homo sapiens (human)                  ..........  NM_000947     FAD 4Fe-4S           primase large subunit 3Q36 PMC3204975 
Apr 2010  3LGB  PRIM2  20404922  Saccharomyces cerevisiae (yeast)      ..........  NM_001179611  FAD 4Fe-4S           primase large subunit PriL PRI2_YEAST 

To what extent can the structures available now be used to model the vertebrate ones that so far are missing? That can be done at the primary and secondary structure level simply by aligning a batch of orthologs under a structurally determined sequence and transfering its features to non-gappy regions having signficant conservation. Multiple target sequences are essential to purge one-off accidental matches and to assess phylogenetic depth (ancestral persistance vs recent convergent origin).

When percent identity exceeds 25%, reasonably accurate 3D coordinates can be obtained by fitting the unstudied primary sequence to a PDB entry using SwissModel. A third approach uses DaliLite for pairwise comparisons of proteins with PDB coordinates, either real or modelled. NCBI's VAST allows any number of structures to be simultaneously aligned. The antenna pocket has also been examined by docking candidate receptor molecules.

For example, human CRY1 is not available. According to Blastp of PDB on 25 Mar 2012, the structure with the highest percent identity 53% and most extensive coverage (positions 6-522 out of 587 amino acids) is 3CVU from CRY64_droMel. Setting aside concerns about what the extra 65 amino acids at the end of the human protein might contribute to structure, that template request quickly yields PDB coordinates (with local error estimates) from SwissModel. And those in turn can be uploaded at DaliLite to structurally align human CRY1 with CPD and 4Fe-4S photolyases and primases which are too distant to align by primary sequence. This shows where the 4Fe-4S would sit in human cryptochrome had it been retained and also identifies the ancient structural core in the all-alpha domain that cryptochromes share with primases. These tools also rotate sequences so that all are in the same orientation.

In all three approaches, what emerges is not fact but prediction. Only the first provides homological (genetic) alignment; structural alignments provide the best geometrical fit but do not necessarily recapitulate evolutionary relatedness of residues near gaps. Because folds are far more deeply conserved than sequence, structural alignment of greatly diverged sequences can uncover very faint but real relationships. However the N- and C-terminal extensions are not modelable yet their strong conservation in some instances argues for important function and possibly fixed structure.

Syntentic relationships in vertebrate cryptochromes

Synteny -- the conservation of flanking gene relationships -- is critical (along with indels and intron structure) in establishing orthology and so to transferal of experimental information from a model species to another because primary sequence analysis alone can be give misleading results:

After gene duplication, both members of a retained pair may diverge rapidly in primary sequence if they subfunctionalize, whereas if one gene -- not necessarily the parent -- retains the original function and the other neofunctionalizes, only the latter may diverge rapidly. This behavior can lead to long branch attraction artefacts and major misclassification of relationships.

Cryptochromes and photolyases have experienced numerous duplications over evolutionary time. Those within multi-cellular organisms have all have been segmental duplications of limited extent. The alternative, retroprocessing, removes all introns. The sole known retroprocessed cryptochromes are CRY1 pseudogenes in naked mole rat, marmoset and sloth (AHKG01086374 ACFV01087645 ABVD01272190). These are easily recognized -- even far into pseudogenization -- as the top hits at genomic blast because as long contiguous matches they outscore multi-exonic ones. The existence of such features implies transcription of the parental gene in germline cells, typically testis.

Syntenic relationships can persist for billions of years of branch length but more commonly dissipate over a few hundred million years because of local inversions and other chromosomal rearrangements that shuffle gene order. The rate of dissipation varies greatly by clade, with vertebrates much slower than arthropods.

In vertebrates, synteny is typically well-retained back to the human-coelocanth divergence, with less certain correspondences extending to ray-finned fish and sometimes to chondrichthyes. Although complicated by poor quality assemblies, little synteny appears to persist back to lamprey, tunicate, amphioxus, sea urchin, and hemichordate. In contrast, synteny for a Drosophila gene rarely extends through dipteran flies, much less Insecta.

The primary method for determining synteny at the phylogenetic level is a Blast search against multiple assemblies. This can be done very efficiently by concatenating conserved and diagnostic regions of 4-5 adjacent human proteins centered on the target gene. As the percent identity falls off, the human probe can be replaced with an orthologous concatenate from chicken or frog using the UCSC 46-way to collect orthologs. If probes aren't known, blastx of the contig containing the cryptochrome will reveal its neighbors.

CRY1INVERT.gif

However the outcome also has been precomputed on a massive scale by Genomicus, the complication here being that only two cryptochromes persist into humans (meaning no HUGO gene names are available to enter Genomicus). To procede with CPD, DASH, CRY64, CRY4 in the tetrapods that have them, it is necessary to blat into a UCSC assembly that carries an Ensembl gene name track.

The figure (taken from the Genomicus synteny tool) shows that CRY1 experienced a small local inversion in amniotes subsequent to mammalian divergence. This may have carried all upstream regulatory regions along with it or left some behind, perhaps with significant effects altering gene expression. Since the event occurred some 350 myr ago, the boundaries of the inversion cannot be precisely determined today.

Genomicus works surprisingly well given that almost all the Ensembl gene models it uses are wrong, the explanation being a few missed exons, erroneous termini and retained introns don't signficantly affect best reciprocal blast. But Ensembl models are often absent altogether in non-mammalian tetrapods, for example missing out entirely for DASH in frog and lizard which have full length conserved genes in their assembly. Unlike the UCSC 46-way, Genomicus does not begin with a whole genome alignment. Consequently it can stub in an erroneous paralogs when a gene is missing (eg CRY4_latCha in place of DASH_latCha).

In some cases a gene appears absent but pseudogene debris in the expected syntenic position is still detectable. That says gene loss was fairly recent (last five million years), for example DASH pseudogenes in gallinaceous birds (chicken and turkey) but not duck (the immediate outgroup) or songbirds. Only very recent pseudogenes would be represented in either Genomicus or at the UCSC 46-way. Genes can also seem absent in spotty assemblies but individual exons can be recovered from raw trace reads (eg platypus CPD). Long processing lags prevent certain strategic assemblies from being represented in the 46-way or Genomicus (eg alligator, turtle, python, spotted gar) so they were considered separately here.

These sites also provide no resources for invertebrate synteny. It isn't currently possible to study CRY1A (which is missing from fruit fly) even though orthologs extend phylogenetically from honey bee (ecdysozoa) to molluscs (lophotrochozoa) to sea urchin (echinoderms) so method of concatenated queries must be employed. Convenient queries for the other ortholog classes are provided below:

Gene       Species  Genomicus entry     <--------------------------------- Synteny ---------------------------------->  Phylogenetic Depth
CRY1       homSap   CRY1                CMKLR1  ASCL4   PRDM4  PWP1  BTBD11  CRY1  MTERFD3   C12orf23 RIC8B    RFX4     to coelocanth, ray-finned fish
CRY2       homSap   CRY2                PRDM11  SYT13   CHST1  CTD   SLC35C1 CRY2  MAPK8IP1  C11orf94 PEX16    GYLTL1B  barely to ray-finned fish
CRY4       anoCar   ENSACAG00000004583  GPR37L1 ARL8A   PTPN7  LGR6  UBE2T   CRY4  LRIF1     CEPT1    ADORA1   MYOG     to coelocanth
CRY64      xenTro   ENSXETG00000003913          UBASH3B        STS1  RPL27A  CRY64 FOXRED1   SRPR     FAM118B  FAM55A   lizard to frog
CPD        monDom   ENSMODG00000018409  PCYT1A  ZDHHC19 TFRC   TNK2  IGFBP5  CPD   KIAA0226  FYTTD1   LRCH3    IQCG     barely to ray-finned fish
DASH       danRer   ENSDARG00000002396  CTDSPLA VILL    PLCD1A DLEC1 ACAA1   DASH  MYD66/88  OXSR1    SLC22A13 CSRNP1B  birds to ray-finned fish
CRY1B      droMel   FBgn0025680         SQZ     CG14282 CG5555 CG31475       CRY1B VIB       CG11703  CG5250   CG3773   ...
CRY1A      apiMel   concatenated blast  XM_395048       XM_393681            CRY1A Amel_5586 XM_391835                  ...

Synteny can be used to disentangle paralogs, especially important in zebrafish which has been studied to a certain extent -- despite the poor correspondence of its oversize cryptochrome repertoire to mammals -- because individual cell lines are cryptochrome-entrainable. Here zebrafish have four cryptochromes on four different chromosomes related to mammalian CRY1, a single copy of a cryptochrome clustering with mammalian CRY2, and single copies of CRY4, CRY64, DASH and CPD.

Because chondrichthyes, lobe-finned fish (coelocanth), and basal ray-finned fish (gars) already have two separate genes classifying as CRY1 (ie distinct from CRY2 and other photolyases), a gene duplication occurred in early vertebrates and persisted almost to amphibians. Since it is generally believed that a latter whole genome duplication took place in ray-finned fish following the divergence of gar, then the four CRY1 genes in zebrafish may represent retention of all copies whereas presumptive second copies of CRY4, CRY64, DASH and CPD were lost.

The new spotted gar assembly (Lepisosteus oculatus) has the photolyase and cryptochrome repertoire (ie two CRY1 and one CRY2) expected from this scenario but the contigs are too small to contain flanking genes. The same can be said for the new coelocanth assembly (here Genomicus works with scaffolds of unordered unoriented contigs, which really pushes the limits for synteny). The shark and skate assemblies consist mostly of kilobase-size contigs that cover at most 60% of the coding exons; both have CRY1A and CRY1B but not CRY2 (and skate CPD has pseudogenized).

The gar genome assembly as of April 2012 consists of 45,199 contigs (eg AHAT01025403) organized into 185 scaffolds (eg JH591278) organized further into 15 superscaffolds (eg CM001411) comprising 29 lingage groups (eg LG8) in 1012 pieces separated by gaps. Blast at NCBI can only access contigs. The entries for these contigs do not indicate their scaffold, superscaffold or linkage group. However those can be ferreted out with Entrez queries such as 'AHAT01025403 AND JH591*'. The cryptochrome contigs are too small to have any syntentic information, but the presence of a second gene within the same scaffold implies synteny.

Here CRY1B and CRY4 both lie in the JH591232 gar scaffold, as they do in coelocanth and zebrafish scaffolds, establishing this as an ancestral synteny. Shark and skate, cartilaginous vertebrates, have CRY1A and CRY1B but the assemblies are too poor to even consider syntenic questions. Lamprey assembly is a non-starter, tunicates are too diverged, and amphioxus is uninformative (the flanking genes NAV2 GIT2 TUBB5 CRY1 TBC1D17 do not correspond at all to vertebrate gene order).

Since frog and amniotes still have CRY4 in syntenic position with 7 other zebrafish genes but no cryptochrome, it follows that CRY1B was lost in the tetrapod stem. Thus it is CRY1A of fish that has continued in land animals under the name CRY1, as driven by human nomenclature convention (which is oblivious to other species).

The near-adjacency of CRY1B and CRY4 could either be coincidence or indicative of an earlier tandem duplication relationship. CRY4 has a limited phylogenetic distribution in fish but continues on to frog, lizard and birds. In one scenario, CRY4 is not particularly related to CRY64 but instead arose from CRY1B in early ray-finned fish. The tandem pair persisted to extant fish but only CRY4 continued on in amniotes, with both CRY4 and CRY1B absent from mammals.

Old RefSeq   Chr  S      Start       End  N-term   Pub      Accession           New RefSeq    #Syn  Comment

CRY1A_danRer   4  +   11078260  11088888  MVVNTVH  cry1a    ENSDARG00000045768  CRY1P2_danRer   2    whole genome duplicate of retained CRY1 duplicate  
CRY1A2_danRer 18  +   14692957  14714934  MVVNTVH  cry1b    ENSDARG00000011583  CRY1P1_danRer   7    old CRY1 duplicate retained as tetrapod CRY1
CRY1C_danRer  22  +     748902    787935  MSVNSVH  cry2b    ENSDARG00000091131  CRY1Q1_danRer   3    old CRY1 duplicate lost in tetrapods CRY1 C12ORF23 CRY4 in latCha too
CRY1B_danRer   8  +   21767736  21788261  MAPNSIH  cry2a    ENSDARG00000069074  CRY1Q2_danRer   1    whole genome duplicate  of lost CRY1 duplicate
CRY2_danRer   25  -    4289163   4311451  MVVNSVH  cry3     ENSDARG00000024049  CRY2_danRer     3    synteny retained far better in coelocanth
CRY4_danRer   22  -     800173    811759  MSHRTIH  cry4     ENSDARG00000011890  CRY4_danRer     7    adjacency to lost CRY1 suggests relationship
CRY64_danRer  10  -   40633074  40645329  MSHNTIH  cry5     ENSDARG00000019498  CRY64_danRer    2    poor synteny within fish, adjacent FOXRED1 in frog too
DASH_danRer   24  -   20802832  20816799  MSASRTV  cry-dash ENSDARG00000002396  DASH_danRer     1    strong synteny within fish, none to tetrapods
CPD_danRer     2  +   13740732  13773635  MSANKNN  cry-phr  ENSDARG00000054999  CPD_danRer      3    mediocre preservation of synteny
 
CRY1A_lepOcu  JH591278 . LG8    CM001411  MVVNTVH                 AHAT01025403  CRY1P_lepOcu    1    old CRY1 duplicate retained as tetrapod CRY1
CRY1B_lepOcu  JH591232 . LG3    CM001406  MGPNSIH                 AHAT01016727  CRY1Q1_lepOcu   1    old CRY1 duplicate lost in tetrapods   
CRY4_lepOcu   JH591232 . LG3    CM001406  MTHRTIH                 AHAT01016726  CRY1Q2_lepOcu   1    adjacency to lost CRY1 suggests relationship
CRY2_lepOcu   JH591436 . UNK23  ........  MVVNSVH                 AHAT01038797  CRY2_lepOcu     1    isolated small contig
CRY64_lepOcu  JH591390 . LG26   CM001429  MMHRSIH                 AHAT01024141  CRY64_lepOcu    1    retained
DASH_lepOcu   JH591300 . LG9    CM001412  MSTIRTI                 AHAT01010414  DASH_lepOcu     1    retained
CPD_lepOcu    JH591341 . LG14   CM001417  MSGRSPP                 AHAT01034265  CPD_lepOcu      1    retained

CRY1A_latCha  JH126600 -  326804  392530  MGVNAIH           ENSLACG00000008174  CRY1P_latCha    5    old CRY1 duplicate retained as tetrapod CRY1
CRY1B_latCha  JH126576 +  512532  551664  MVVNSVH           ENSLACG00000010538  CRY1Q1_latCha   2    old CRY1 duplicate lost in tetrapods  
CRY4_latCha   JH126576 -  707590  727148  MTHRTIH           ENSLACG00000012369  CRY1Q2_latCha   9    adjacency to lost CRY1 suggests relationship
CRY2_latCha   JH126568 + 3409780 3427400  MVVNSVH           ENSLACG00000018488  CRY2_latCha    25    remarkably conserved synteny
CRY64_latCha  ........ . ....... .......  .......           ..................  CRY64_latCha    .    apparently lost recently                      
DASH_latCha   ........ . ....... .......  .......           ..................  DASH_latCha     .    apparently lost  
CPD_latCha    ........ . ....... .......  .......           ..................  CPD_latCha      .    apparently lost  

This raises the question of the ancestral origin of mammalian CRY2. It has it earliest representatives in early diverging teleost fish. It may have arisen from CRY1 after its duplication to CRY1P and CRY1Q and then diverged rather rapidly. Alternatively, it might be an older duplication and simply be lost from the chrondrichthyes studied to date. The CRY2 region exhibits remarkable conservation of gene order which may help resolve this issue once better early assemblies become available. Note that gene order has also been quite stable around CRY1 for several hundred million years.

CRY2 must have arisen from a segmental duplication of the older CRY1 because their identical pattern of intronation could not have arisen independently. The size of the region duplicated in this event (ranging from one to several gene, or to a chromosome or even whole genome) could still be reflected by the extent of paralogous gene pairs. However subsequent inversions, gene losses, and rapid divergence might render these relationships opaque today.

Cry12syn.png

Seeking homologous pairs (using gene names as a proxy for homology) in 25 genes flanking each side of CRY1 and CRY2 in human turns up 5 candidate pairs, not particularly supportive of a large segmental duplication given the many intervening non-homologous genes. The most intriguing pair, PRDM4 and PRDM11, are closely related and documented to have arisen in the same time frame. Since these are nearly adjacent to CRY1 and CRY2 respectively, a small duplication of 2-3 genes is the best fit to the data.

One or even two rounds of whole genome duplication supposedly took place prior to vertebrate origins. Little supporting data for that scenario actually exists -- contrary to dozens of papers (all citing the same meagre investigations). The critical genome assemblies (amphioxus, tunicate and lamprey) are poor quality yet appear to have very similar numbers of protein coding genes. After a decade of manual curation, no more than 18,500 coding genes can be documented in human. That's a very long ways from the 30,000 expected from 1R (or 60,000 from 2R) relative to the 15,000 genes of cephalochordate.

The cryptochromes and photolyase gene family conflicts with both 1R and 2R hypotheses. If DASH, CPD, CRY64 and CRY1 were duplicated in such an event, then all duplicates were lost in all surviving lineages. The same is true for all three classes of opsins and many other gene families. If almost all duplicates from a whole genome duplication are lost, the outcome is effectively indistinguishable from the always-ongoing process of small segmental duplications with retention (the default hypothesis for paralogous gene origin).

However CRY1 did experience three separate duplications-with-retention at various points in vertebrate evolution, implying functionality for all paralogous copies. One of these did arise from a whole genome duplication in a sub-lineage of ray-finned fish; the other two did not. Continued retention has been uneven in land animals (as with DASH, CPD, and CRY64) and the process of loss continues to the present day (still-recognizable pseudogenes cannot be old). In the same time frame, vertebrates also experienced a great expansion of the other main photoreceptor family, the opsins. Tunicates and amphioxus have no imaging vision but lenses, four cone opsins and rhodopsin were firmly established at the time of lamprey divergence.

These quasi-simultaneous expansions may be correlated: cryptochromes are co-expressed in retinal, pineal and other light sensing cells and can function coordinately with opsins, as in the SWS1 cone cells of bird. This association may have a very long history as sponges, which have numerous GPCR genes but none with K296 retinol binding, may use cryptochromes alone as their larval photosensing system. In this scenario, they paired with a GPCR gene to signal; later that protein adapted retinoic acid signalling to retinal and took over the primary photosensing role in ctenophores and cnidarians which do have conventional opsins and neurons. The reference sequence collection contains 5 cryptochromes from 4 sponge species, Amphimedon, Suberites, Crateromorpha and Aphrocallistes.

Inconsequential N-terminal extension in vertebrate CRY2

CRY1 duplicated in early vertebrates giving rise to CRY2 which evidently carved out a distinct functional role as it has persisted in all species since including committed subterranean and cave species. The status of the gene in lamprey, hagfish and chondrichthyes cannot be resolved without better assemblies but there is no indication of a duplication there or in urochordates or cephalochordates.

Confusingly, Cry2 is also used for non-orthologous insect cryptochromes entries at GenBank. These represent a different duplication of a different parent gene called CRY1A here (which itself was subsequently lost in dipterans). The Drosophila 'CRY2' sequence, called CRY1B here, is not a valid model system for vertebrate CRY2 and indeed is equally unsuited as a invertebrate CRY1 proxy because properties can be expected to pull apart in species retaining both copies.

Vertebrate CRY2 has an extended amino terminus that arose in amniotes. Prior to that time, it was similar in length to vertebrate CRY1 (and still is from fish to frog). A few residues of this extension are conserved but overall the sequences displays compositional simplicity, to the point that RepeatMasker finds a variable length simple repeat (CCG)n within coding and in some species also upstream. Base composition alone then leads to inevitable amino acid conservation which however does not imply selective pressure or functionality.

While no applicable crystallographic structure has been determined, homology modeling reliably locates these extra residues outside the closed globular alternating beta strand/alpha helix structure of this domain. They are likely proteolytically trimmed off in mature protein leaving only 3-4 extra residues.

One scenario here posits that the initial methionine in stem amniotes was lost to mutation, leading to an upstream random in-phase ATG stepping in, followed by evolution of variable length as the new ATG lay in the (CCG)n repeat which was subject to expansions and contractions. While this had no adverse consequences, it did not lead to functional innovation in this region either -- a short amino terminal extension is necessarily remote from excitation transfer pathways, and antenna, FAD and substrate binding sites.

CRY1_homSap  ...............................MGVNAVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALKECIQGADTIRCVYILDPWFAGSSNVGINRWR  CRY1_homSap  ...............................MGVNA................KECIQ..DTI...........G..N.......
CRY2_homSap  ............MAATVATAAAVAPAPAPGTDSASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_homSap  ...........MAATV.ATAAAVAPAPAPGTDSASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR
CRY2_panTro  ............MAATVATAAAVAPAPAPGTDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_panTro  ................................G...................................................
CRY2_gorGor  ............MAATVATAAAVAPAPAPGTDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_gorGor  ................................G...................................................
CRY2_ponAbe  ............MAATVATAAAVAPAPAPGTDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_ponAbe  ................................G...................................................
CRY2_rheMac  ............MAATVATAAAVAPAPAPGTDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_rheMac  ................................G...................................................
CRY2_papHam  ............MAATVATAAAVAPAPAPGTDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_papHam  ................................G...................................................
CRY2_calJac  ............MAATVATAAAAVPAPAPGTDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_calJac  ......................AV........G...................................................
CRY2_micMur  .............MATAVATAAAAPTPASSTDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_micMur  ............M..A.VAT..A..T..SS..G...................................................
CRY2_musMus  .............MAAAAVVAATVPAQSMGADGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_musMus  ........MAAA.VVA......TV..QSM.A.G...................................................
CRY2_ratNor  .............MAAAAVVAATVPAQSMGADGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_ratNor  ........MAAA.VVA......TV..QSM.A.G...................................................
CRY2_criGri  ........MAAAAVVAGAPRGARVPALTMGADGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_criGri  ........MAAA.VVAG.PRG.RV..LTM.A.G...................................................
CRY2_spaJud  .............MAAASVVVATSAAPAMAVDGGSSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPSLLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_spaJud  ........MAAASVV.......TSA...MAV.GG................S.................................
CRY2_dipOrd  ............MAAAMVTAAVAVPAPPSGADGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_dipOrd  ..............AM.V...VAV...PS.A.G...................................................
CRY2_cavPor  ............MAAAVGTGTAAAPTPVTGAEGACSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_cavPor  ..............A..G.GT.A..T.VT.AEG.C.................................................
CRY2_hetGla  ............MAAAVGTGTGAAPTPATGAEGACSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_hetGla  ..............A..G.GTGA..T..T.AEG.C.................................................
CRY2_speTri  ...............MSASVVTTSATLLTPTSADVSSVHWFRKGLRLDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_speTri  ............S.S..V.TS.TLLT.TSA..DV..................................................
CRY2_oryCun  ............MAAAAAAAAAAVPAPAASANGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_oryCun  ..............AA..A...AV....ASANG...................................................
CRY2_turTru  ............MAAAVATSAVAAPAPAARAEGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALQAAVRGAHCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_turTru  ..............A....S.VA.....ARAEG...................Q......H........................
CRY2_bosTau  ...............MAAAAAAATQAPAARGDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGAHCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_bosTau  ........MAAA..........ATQ...ARG.G..........................H........................
CRY2_oviAri  .........MAAAAAATASAAAAAQAPAPRGDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGAHCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_oviAri  ........MAAA..AT..S...A.Q....RG.G..........................H........................
CRY2_susScr  ............MAAAVATAAASSPAPAAGAEGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGAHCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_susScr  ..............A.......SS....A.AEG..........................H........................
CRY2_equCab  MKKAAAPVRFIATSEAPAASAAAAATAAAGADGDSSVHWFRKGLRLHVNPALLAAVRFLRSVLCVYKNDPWFVASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_equCab  MKKAAAPVRFIATSEAP.AS..A.ATA.A.A.GD.............V.........FL.S.L...KN....V...........
CRY2_canFam  ............MAAAVVAAAAAAPVPTAGVDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_canFam  ..............A..VA...A..V.TA.V.G...................................................
CRY2_ailMel  ........................PAPAAGVDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_ailMel  ............................A.V.G...................................................
CRY2_myoLuc  ............MAANAVTAAAAAPAPAAGTDGASSVYWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVLCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_myoLuc  ..............NA.V....A.....A...G....Y........................L.....................
CRY2_pteVam  ............MAATVGTAAAAASAPAAGTDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_pteVam  .................G....A.S...A...G...................................................
CRY2_loxAfr  ............MAAAVVTAGAAALVPIPSMDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_loxAfr  ..............A..V..G.A.LV.I.SM.G...................................................
CRY2_triMan  ............MAATVVTAAAAALAPAPSIDGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_triMan  .................V....A.L....SI.G...................................................
CRY2_choHof  .............MAATAVMAGSAAPAPASGTEGASSVHWFRKGLLHDNPALLAAVRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_choHof  ...............A.VM.GSA.....S..EG...................................................
CRY2_monDom  ............MAAAVVTMTAAAPAPAPSPEGASSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALQAALRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_monDom  ..............A..V.MT.A......SPEG...................Q..L............................
CRY2_macEug  ..........MAATTAVTVTVPAAAPAPAPEEGASSVHWFRMGLRLHYNPVLYSALRGARCVRCVFFLYSWFAASSSVVFFLWL  CRY2_macEug  .........MAATTA.TV.VP.A......E.EG........M.....Y..V.YS.L.........FF.YS........VFFL.L
CRY2_galGal  ......................MAAAASPPRGFCRSVHWFRRGLRLHDNPALQAALRGAASLRCIYILDPWFAASSAVGINRWR  CRY2_galGal  ......................M.A.AS.PRGFCR......R..........Q..L...ASL..I...........A.......
CRY2_allMis  ................MAASRSFPSSVPARAGPCRAVHWFRRGLRMHDNPALQAALRDAASVRCIYILDPWFAASSAVGINRWR  CRY2_allMis  ................M.ASRSFPSSVPARAGPCRA.....R...M......Q..L.D.AS...I...........A.......
CRY2_anoCar  ........................MAALPGPLGRCSVHWFRRGLRLHDNPALQAAIRDGGPVRCIYILDPWFAASSSVGINRWR  CRY2_anoCar  ........................M.AL..PLGRC......R..........Q..I.DGGP...I...................
CRY2_xenTro  ...........................MEGKPSVSSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLSALRGANSVRCVYILDPWFAASSSGGVNRWR  CRY2_xenTro  ...........................ME.KP.V...................S.L...NS................G.V....
CRY2_ranCat  ............................MEGPAVSSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAALRGARCVRCVYILDPWFAASSSGGVNRWR  CRY2_ranCat  ...........................ME..PAV.....................L.....................G.V....
CRY2_lepOcu  ...............................MVVNSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALQEALNISDTVRCVYILDPWFAASANVGINRWR  CRY2_lepOcu  ...............................MVVN.................QE.LNISDT..............AN.......
CRY2_danRer  ...............................MVVNSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALQEALNGADTVRCVYILDPWFAGSANVGVNRWR  CRY2_danRer  ...............................MVVN.................QE.LN..DT............G.AN..V....
CRY2_oreNil  ...............................MVVNSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALQEALNGADAVRCVYILDPFFAGAANVGINRWR  CRY2_oreNil  ...............................MVVN.................QE.LN..DA.........F..GAAN.......
CRY2_tetNig  ...............................MVVNSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALQEALSGADSLRCVYVLDPWFAGAANVGINRWR  CRY2_tetNig  ...............................MVVN.................QE.LS..DSL....V......GAAN.......
CRY2_takRub  ...............................MVVNSVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALQEALSGADSLRCVYVLDPWFAGAANVGINRWR  CRY2_takRub  ...............................MVVN.................QE.LS..DSL....V......GAAN.......
CRY1_homSap  ...............................MGVNAVHWFRKGLRLHDNPALKECIQGADTIRCVYILDPWFAGSSNVGINRWR  CRY1_homSap  ...............................MGVNA................KECIQ..DTI...........G..N.......
CRY2_homSap (CGG)n  46 bp                                                                   atggcggcgactgtggcgacggcggcagctgtggccccggcgccagcg
                                                                                             M  A  A  T  V  A  T  A  A  A  V  A  P  A  P  A  
CRY2_rheMac (CCG)n  46 bp                                                                   atggcggcgactgtggcgacggcggcagctgtggccccggcgccagcg
                                                                                             M  A  A  T  V  A  T  A  A  A  V  A  P  A  P  A 
CRY2_musMus (CCG)n  38 bp                                                            ggcggcgatggcggcggctgctgtggtggcagcgacgg
                                                                                       A  A  M  A  A  A  A  V  V  A  A  T    
CRY2_oryCun (CGG)n 116 bp       ggcggggctcgcggcgccgccgggggcggagcggcggtggctccggcagtctgagctgtgatggcggcggcggcggcagtgggtcctgcggcggcggcggtccccgcgccggcggc
                                 G  G  A  R  G  A  A  G  G  G  A  A  V  A  P  A  V  -  A  V  M  A  A  A  A  A  V  G  P  A  A  A  A  V  P  A  P  A    
CRY2_canFam (CCG)n 101 bp gcggcgccggcgggggcggagcggcggagcggcggagcggcggaggcctgagcagtcggagcggtgatggcggcggctgtggtggcggcggcagcggcggc
                           A  A  P  A  G  A  E  R  R  S  G  G  A  A  E  A  -  A  V  G  A  V  M  A  A  A  V  V  A  A  A  A  A    
CRY2_bosTau (CGG)n  31 bp                                                            ggcggtgatggcggcggcggcggcggcggcg
                                                                                       A  V  M  A  A  A  A  A  A  A  
CRY2_myoLuc CCG)n   57 bp                                                            ggcggcgatggcggcgaatgcggtgacggcagcagcggcggccccagcgccagcggc
                                                                                       A  A  M  A  A  N  A  V  T  A  A  A  A  A  P  A  P  A    
CRY2_loxAfr (CCG)n  98 bp    ggaggtggggcccgcggcgctgtcgggggcggagcgccgccggccagagcagtctaggcggtgatggcggcggcagtggtgacggcgggagcggcggc
                              G  G  G  A  R  G  A  V  G  G  G  A  P  P  A  R  A  V  -  A  V  M  A  A  A  V  V  T  A  G  A  A  

The full set of 43 vertebrate CRY2 sequences is here. These are mostly pre-curated provisional sequences taken from the UCSC 46-way genomic alignment relative to human except where the fasta header displays an accession number. This source misses small insertions and indeed whole exons when very diverged or lie in isolated small contigs or unassembled traces.

The final exons, being quite variable especially in fish, are best determined from transcripts when available and then extended by blastx homology to species within the same clade that lack transcripts. After these corrections, the sequences are aligned and additional anomalies are confirmed or discarded on a case-by-base basis.

It has been previously reported that the PKRK motif in the last exon of mouse CRY2 represents a nuclear localization signal. This motif is indeed conserved in all tetrapod sequences from frog to human. While neither coelocanth nor gar sequence extends to this region, it is definitely absent from other ray-finned fish. Thus nuclear localization may be an innovation of land vertebrates.

It appears that the last exon in fish has lost all homology (and so functionality), in some cases simply running out into junk dna until a stop codon is encountered. Exon seven is broken up in some fish with an extra intron that might have some use in fish taxonomy as a derived characteristic.

Invertebrate cryptochromes: distal CRY1B spoofs a damaged DNA base

Nomenclature of cryptochromes is both a historic and continuing source of confusion, with experimentalists oblivious to anything outside a personal narrow clade and seemingly befuddled by simple concepts such as the timing of gene duplications within eukaryotic phylogeny and orthologouse classification. Another bizarre aspect is functional taxonomy -- like lumping penguins and fur seals together because both eat fish -- whereas enzyme vs circadian signaling vs magnetosensing, single-stranded vs duplex DNA, 6-4 lesions vs thimine dimer have every prospect of multiple origins, gains and losses, cross-overs and reversibility. For example, Arabidopsis UVR3/CRY3 may very well repair 6-4 lesions but it certainly has nothing to do with the CRY64 ortholog group, classifying as it does with CRY1.

With the number of complete genomes available today, it is clear that early bilateran ancestor contained two distinct cryptochromes (in addition to three photolyases), all of which persisted into early deuterostomes (sea urchin). These cannot be denoted CRY1 and CRY2 because those gene names have been assigned to human cryptochromes by international agreement, excluding their re-use in invertebrates or plants for weakly related homologs. The two invertebrate cryptochromes are denoted CRY1A and CRY1B here to distinguish them from the later gene duplication of CRY1A in vertebrates giving rise to tetrapod CRY1 and CRY2. CRY1B is the most commonly studied gene in Drosophila. It has no orthologous counterpart in vertebrates because the definition of orthology requires descent from a single genetic locus in the last common ancestor.

CryAcryB.png

Some lophotrochozoa, notably molluscs, retained both cryptochromes (and indeed a third in a few species not clustering with either CR1A OR CRY1B). Within arthropods, generally one cryptochrome was retained but not always the same one. However some dipterans, hemipterans and lepidopterans retain both. It appears that the CRY1A/CRY1B gene duplication itself took place after divergence from cnidarians.

The two cryptochromes are intronated quite characteristically, with the first class (called CRY1A here) most similiar to that of vertebrate CRY1/2, in agreement with closer blastp clustering. The second class (called CRY1B below) bears less relevance to the cryptochromes retained in mammals but unfortunately is the only one retained in Drosophila and most studied. Annotation transfer from study of CRY1B proteins to mammals is thus exceedingly problematic given that the CRY1A family retains far more sequence similarity and is not descended from CRY1B. Clade-delimited gene duplications can lead to accelerated divergence as the two copies must subfunctionalize to garner selective pressure support.

A remarkable recent crystallographic result establishes an important role for tryptophan W536 near the end of the variable region of drosophila CRY1B. This aromatic residue and its associated helix arch back to occupy the site normally occupied by a damaged dna nucleotide, spoofing the presence of a damaged dna residue for conformational change purposes.

Cry1Bspoof.jpg

The tryptophan is part of a larger motif PPHCRPSNEEEVRQFMWLP conserved in the CRY1B orthologs from insects, crustaceans, molluscs and surprisingly three echinoderms. It is erroneously denoted the FFW motif in the fruit fly cryptochrome literature. Since 3.4 residues are needed for a full alpha helix turn, the 16 residues of the motif are enough for 4.7 turns (more than the 3 actually observed). Note the full motif is quite well conserved in amino acid sequence whereas the protrusion motif is not conserved either in residue or length.

CRY1BlogoMotif.png

However two substitutions should be noted, cysteine and tyrosine in daphnia and aphid respectively, suggesting that the overall motif is more critical than just a tryptophan. Further, no comparable residue or motif exists in invertebrate CRY1A proteins, vertebrate cryptochromes or other photolyase homologs. The observed phylogenetic distribution (which is unlikely to reflect convergent evolution) implies the spoofing mechanism arose in an early bilateran after to the gene duplication giving rise to CRY1A/CRY1B but before the protostome/deuterostome split.

A threonine at position 518 is reported phosphorylated in CRY1B_droMel but has no real phylogenetic support even within drosophilids, also lying outside the motif detected by WebLogo. This post-translational modification could nonetheless have regulatory signficance in the limited spectrum of species that could have it but more likely it represents an aberrant event.

For a full set of 38 invertebrate CRY1A and CRY1B sequence available in Mar 2012, see the curated reference sequences.

                         PPHCRPSNEEEVRQFMWLP
CRY1B_strPur   KVVNKLRDTGIVHCAPSTQREVREFVWLPEKMAGGGSCRADQNCEGILGL echinoderm
CRY1B_lytVar   KVINRLRDSGIVHCAPSTQKEVREFVWLPEKMAGGGSCRADQNCEGILGL echinoderm
CRY1B_parLiv   KVINRLRDSGIVHCAPSTQKEVREFVWLPEKMAGGGSCRASQNCEGRTGS echinoderm

CRY1B_aplCal   MEAIKKVSKDVPHIAPANEEEVLTLMWSGKQTRSELMDA----------- mollusc
CRY1B_craGig   AVKDALIGKEIPHCAPSEEIEARRFSWLP--------------------- mollusc
CRY1B_octVul   KVKEHLLHQDVPHCGPTNETEVWKFAWLPPIEHHDLAHNI---------- mollusc
CRY1B_rudPhi   KNKLVQQGKDLEHCRPTNVEEVRMFVWMPGAHKGACGQEVPLDDKELCDG mollusc
CRY1B_plaOce   MDRIKNLCKGIPHVAPTNENEVLSYMWLDKSNSEAMEESLFEACSHLSSV mollusc

CRY1B_dapPul   KEFRQKFKETPAHCQPSSNSEVYKFFCLPDDSLPF--------------- crustacean
CRY1B_diaNig   DEIRNRLMNPPPHCRPSSEKETRQFMWFPDDCSEHSSQ------------ orthoptera
CRY1B_acyPis   LRVSMTNENRVPHCCPSDREEVQKFMYLPDECMQQLLPLENQDSKAYDIY hemiptera
CRY1B_danPle   QELRRLLEKAPPHCCPSSEDEVRQFMWLGDDSQPELTTT----------- lepidoptera
CRY1B_bomMor   EELRMLLEKAPPHCCPSSEDEIRQFMWLNE-------------------- lepidoptera
CRY1B_mamBra   GELRHFLQKAPPHCCPSSEDEIRQFMWLNE-------------------- lepidoptera
CRY1B_helArm   KELRHMLQKAPPHCCPSSEDEIRQFMWLNE-------------------- lepidoptera
CRY1B_droMel   KSLRNSLITPPPHCRPSNEEEVRQFFWLADVVV----------------- diptera
CRY1B_anoGam   REKLVDGGSTPPHCRPSDIEEIRQFFWLADDAATEA-------------- diptera
CRY1B_neoBul   LIAEGAPDNGPPHCRPSNEEEIRNFFWLAD-------------------- diptera
CRY1B_bacCuc   LIAGGAPDEGPPHCRPSNEEEVHQFFWLVE-------------------- diptera
                 
          CRY1B: C-terminal conservation in drosophilids    *                  *
Drosophila melanogaster YECLIGVHYPERIIDLSMAVKRNMLAMKSLRNSLI T PPPHCRPSNEEEVRQFFWLAD
Drosophila simulans     ................................... . .....................
Drosophila sechellia    ................................... . .....................
Drosophila yakuba       ............................T...... . .....................
Drosophila erecta       ................T...Q.......A...... . .....................
Drosophila rhopaloa     ............................A.....M . .....................
Drosophila elegans      ............................A.....M . .....................
Drosophila takahashii   ..................Y.........A.....M . .....................
Drosophila ficusphila   .................L..........A...... . .....................
Drosophila eugracilis   ............M....L..........A...... . .....................
Drosophila biarmipes    .................VY.....M...A...... . .....................
Drosophila kikkawai     .................K.........TA...... . .....................
Drosophila mojavensis   ..........D......L.S........A...... E .....................
Drosophila persimilis    ................K......M..TA...... . ....................N
Drosophila pseudoobscur .................K......M..TA...... . ....................N
Drosophila bipectinata  ..........D.L...TK...G.........D... . ..............T......
Drosophila ananassae    ..........D.L....K...G......T..D... . ..............T......
Drosophila willistoni   ...........P.....L.L...T...TN...... . ....................E
Drosophila grimshawi    ................L.S....A...A......E . T.................DE.
Drosophila virilis      ....L.F...Q......L.S...TM...A...... E ...................TN

Cryptochrome CRY4 evolutionary origin

This orthology class has been studied to a limited extent in fish, frog and birds, often without full knowledge of the overall cryptochrome repertoire in the given species. Literature search is confused by erratic nomenclature practises in publications and gross mislabelling of GenBank reference sequences such as NM_001095521, which is CRY4 of Xenopus laevis rather than CRY1 as stated.

CRY4 has 19 reported transcripts originating from frog testes, oocytes, ovary and whole embryo whereas orthologous zebrafish transcripts have come from retina, eye, brain, heart, liver, paraxial mesoderm, caudal fin, tail bud, and embryo. Chicken has transcripts from brain, heart, kidney, limb, muscle, ovary; sparrow from brain; finch from embryonic brain. If these are representative -- rather than merely reflecting experimental focus -- this does not suggest continuity of function.

Cry4 has been lost in multiple clades and is missing from echinoderms,chondrichthyes, perciform fish, crocodillians, turtles and snakes, and all mammals. It is diverging quite rapidly in amphibians, with Xenopus laevis only 89% identical to Xenopus tropicalis. However according to Blast classification, it is present in tunicate and amphioxus.

The evolutionary orign of CRY4 has some puzzling aspects, though being restricted to deuterostomes it has limited parental gene options, basically CRY64 or CRY1. The 8th exon -- the far end of the FAD domain -- is split by a phase 21 intron. This is a derived condition since it is absent at homologous position in bilateran CRY64, CRY1, CRY2, CRY1A and CRY1B. Intron gain is quite rare in vertebrates but not in some earlier diverging bilaterans.

Split exon 8 cryptochromes (imputed* for processed transcripts in non-genomic species): 

CRY4_galGal Gallus gallus (chicken) 
CRY4_melGal Meleagris gallopavo (turkey) 
CRY4_anaPla Anas platyrhynchos (duck) 
CRY4_pasDom Passer domesticus (sparrow)*
CRY4_taeGut Taeniopygia guttata (finch) 
CRY4_anoCar Anolis carolinensis (lizard) 
CRY4_xenTro Xenopus tropicalis (frog) 
CRY4_xenLae Xenopus laevis (frog) 
CRY4_latCha Latimeria chalumnae (coelocanth) 
CRY4_lepOcu Lepisosteus oculatus (spotted_gar) 
CRY4_danRer Danio rerio (zebrafish)
CRY4_molTec Molgula tectiformis (tunicate)*
CRY4_braFlo Branchiostoma floridae (amphioxus) 

CRY1_braFlo Branchiostoma floridae (amphioxus)
CRY1A_strPur Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (urchin)

However the same intron is present in two amphioxus and sea urchin cryptochromes which classify as CRY1 and CRY1A rather than CRY4. These early deuterostome cryptochromes may be misclassified -- divergence is fairly high and synteny is gone, leaving match quality, introns and indels as the remaining diagnostic criteria. However blast classifier data shows high confidence classification of both, with the top 43 matches of the 278 reference gene set all being CRY1-class cryptochromes, with the best match of CRY64 and CRY4 from any species far more distantly related:

CRY1_braFlo   Branchiostoma floridae (amphioxus) XM_00260...  2982  3.9e-314
CRY1_melUnd   Melopsittacus undulatus (parakeet) AGAI0106...  2303  3.5e-242
CRY2_anoCar   Anolis carolinensis (lizard) XM_003214641       2141  5.2e-225
CRY1A_aedAeg  Aedes aegypti (mosquito) XM_001655728 dipte...  2062  1.2e-216
CRY64_xenTro  Xenopus tropicalis (frog) synteny: STS1 RPL...  1595  3.7e-167
CRY4_xenTro   Xenopus tropicalis (frog) NP_001123706          1428  1.9e-149
CRY1B_octVul  Octopus vulgaris (octopus) JR450373 transcr...  1166  1.1e-121
CRY7_hapBur   Haplochromis burtoni (chichlid) AFNZ01022319     380  7.0e-36

CRY1A_strPur  Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (urchin) XM_0...  3045  7.7e-321
CRY1_xenTro   Xenopus tropicalis (frog) NM_001087660 1153...  1966  1.8e-206
CRY2_anoCar   Anolis carolinensis (lizard) XM_003214641       1919  1.7e-201
CRY1A_apiMel  Apis mellifera (bee) NM_001083630 AADG06001...  1900  1.8e-199
CRY64_anoCar  Anolis carolinensis (lizard) XM_003225714 6...  1562  1.2e-163
CRY4_lepOcu   Lepisosteus oculatus (spotted_gar) AHAT0101...  1429  1.5e-149
CRY1B_parLiv  Paracentrotus lividus (sea_urchin) AM599080...  1292  4.8e-135
CRY7_tetNig   Tetraodon nigroviridis (fugu)                    369  1.8e-34

In a gene with 530aa x 3bp/aa x 3 phases, there are 4770 ways of creating a new intron, so it is wholly implausible that the event was fixed twice. Thus the origin of CRY4 must be entangled with these other cryptochromes.

The amphioxus CRY4 sequence also has a fusion of exon 2 and exon 3. This also occurs in amphioxus CRY64 but nowhere else. Echinoderms lack CRY4, either having lost it or never having had one. A third peculiar feature of amphioxus CRY4 is the phase 12 intron between exon 4 and exon 5, representing a shift from ancestral phase 00. Amphioxus CRY64 also shares this phase shift but again earlier and later diverging orthologs do not.

The anomalous CRY1 sequences of amphioxus and sea urchin share another odd feature, a new phase 00 intron internal to exon 7. This intron does not occur in any other CRY1, CRY4 or CRY64 sequence and so is derived. Echinoderms and cephalochordates arose from separate divergence nodes; the event could not have taken place in a common ancestral stem. Regretably, no cryptochromes have been retained in the hemichordates, sister group to echinoderms, based on the Saccoglossus kowalevskii genome project.

Recall CRY4 is nearly adjacent to CRY1B of fish, the earlier CRY1 gene duplication preceding fish whole genome duplication lost in tetrapods. That could reflect tandem duplication or improbable but possible accidental juxtapositioning.

It takes a fairly complicated scenario to reconcile these observations. Suppose the earliest deuterostomes acquired the intron gain between exon 8-9 in CRY64. Assume further that this engaged in heterologous recombination with CRY1, leading to a polymorphic state that was never really fixed but persisted across the divergence of echinoderms and cephalochordates, with lineage sorting leaving CRY1 and CRY1A in those species with the extra intron but not those genes vertebrates.

After amphioxus diverged, its CRY64 acquired the fusion of exon 2-3 and phase shift between exon 4-5. It then duplicated, giving rise to amphioxus CRY4, but later lost the intron between exon 8-9 (though amphioxus CRY4 retained it). This would cause best-blast of amphioxus CRY4 to be amphioxus CRY64 rather than lie with other CRY4, as observed. In this case, the two amphioxus genes should be renamed CRY64A and CRY64B (replacing CRY4).

Gene_genSpp   Exon 2-3 fusion  Exon 4-5 phase shift  Exon7 new 00 intron  Exon 8 new 21 intron  CRY1B sytney

CRY1_other         no                 no                     no                 no                no
CRY1_braFlo        no                 no                     yes                yes               no
CRY1A_strPur       no                 no                     yes                yes               no

CRY4_other         no                 no                     no                 yes               yes
CRY4_braFlo        yes                yes                    no                 yes               no
CRY4_strPur        ---                ---                    ---                ---               ---  

CRY64_other        no                 no                     no                 no                no
CRY64_braFlo       yes                yes                    no                 no                no
CRY64_strPur       no                 no                     no                 no                no

Cryptochrome 64 photolyases

CRY64 is a mainstream catalytic photolyase that gave rise to many cryptochromes over time via sequential gene duplications. It originated in prokaryotes and persists into many invertebrates and amniotes though not birds or mammals (which requires two distinct loss events). The reasons for gene loss, the adequacy of compensatory repair processes, and the consequences to mutational rate are not well understood.

2WQ7limits.jpg

Its carboxy terminus is a bit curious; the last two exons are shown below. Note the sequence becomes unalignable, though all members retain the same phase 12 splice donor. Even clamping to the conserved exon break does not put the sequences into register for long -- even restricting to ray-finned fish for which data is unfortunately overweighted. However the deuterostome sequences all retain a high content of basic residues at the end as shown below. (Other invertebrates have lost their introns and so lack the device for re-registration of the alignment.)

The available 3D structures (from Drosophila) only partly clarify the role of the carboxy terminal basic residues in vertebrates. The last determinable residues of CRY64 form a long terminal alpha helix highlighted in yellow in the adjacent image (and as hhh in the alignment below). However this extends (magenta) beyond the limit of blast alignability to vertebrates (blue) and the remained residues studied (gray dots) did not form a stable enough conformation to show up as fixed electron density. However this region clearly is positioned near the substrate binding site.

Possibly the terminal residues provide positively charged residues that offset phosphates in the DNA chain. In this scenario, the primary sequence itself is not so important as long as it provides a sufficient number of flexibly positionably lysines and arginines. Thus it exhibits no linear sequence conservation but is nonetheless important to function. That could readily be tested by small terminal deletions.


                                                         hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh.............
CRY64_droMel   2WQ7                                      HEVVHKENIKRMGAAYKVNREVRTGKEEESSFEEKSETSTSGKRKVRRATGSAPKRKR
CRY64_anoCar   KYLPFLRKFSNDYIYEPWKAPRSLQERAGCIIGQDYPKPIVEHEKVYKRNLERMKAAYARRSPNLVIQAKDKVSQKK   GVNRKRPEAPTKAKVQAKKV
CRY64_chrPic   KYLPFLRKFPAEYIYEPWKAPRSMQEQAGCVIGRDYPKPIVVHEVVSKRNVERMKAAYARRSSSTTAQLEGGGGKKGI  GAKRRTPAGPSVAELLTKKP
CRY64_allMis   KYLPILRKFPAEYIYEPWKAPRSMQEQAGCIIGRDYPKPIVEHEALSKRNIMRMKAAYAQRSHSKAAQVEKESTKKGN  GGKRKLPAGPSVVELLTKKP
CRY64_croPor   KYLPILRKFPAEYIYEPWKAPRSMQEQAGCIIGRDYPRPIVEHEAVSKRNIMRMKAAYAQRSHSKSAQVEKEGTKKGN  GGKRKLPAGPSVVELLTKKP
CRY64_xenTro   KYLPILKKFPAEYIYEPWKAPRSLQERAGCIIGKDYPKPIVEHDVASKQNIQRMKAAYARRSGSTAEVDKDSGQSNKN  GAKRKVAGGPSVAELFKKNK
CRY64_lepOcu   KYLPVLKKFPSAYIYEPWKAPRSVQEQAGCIVGKDYPRPIVDHDVVSKKNIQRMKLAYARRAQLGGEQEGTGK       GMKRKGQSVADLLTKKQKRN
CRY64_danRer   KYLPVLKKFSTEYIYEPWKAPRSVQERAGCIVGKDYPRPIVDHEVVHKKNILRMKAAYAKRSPEDKTINK          GEKRKASPSIKEMFQKKAKR
CRY64_salSal   KYLPHLKKYPAQYIYEPWKAPRSVQEAAGCIVGKDYPRPIVEHEVISKKNIQRMKAAYAKRSPHSSEESP          GKKEKGRKHKAPSVVDMLMK
CRY64_gadMor   KYLPVLKKFPVEYIYEPWKAPLSVQKAAGCIVGKDYPSPIVEHEVISKQNIQRMKTSYGKRSQGVSESPQPMKAEKRK  GPSVLDMMKNKKKK
CRY64_takRub   KFLPHLKKFPAEYIFEPWKAPQSVQQAAGCIVGKDYPHPIVQHEVVSKKNIQRMKAAYAKRSANTAKSLSKIQ       GLKRKPSSSVDMLKKKKKNN
CRY64_tetNig   KYLPHLKKFPAQYIYEPWKAPQSIQKAAGCIIGKDYPHPIVKHEEVSKKNIQRMKLAYARRSTSNAASPKKT        GVKRKGPSVVDLLKKKRKKI
CRY64_gasAcu   KYLPLLKKFPAEYIYEPWKAPRSVQQAAGCIVGKDYPQPIAKHEVISKKNIQRMKLAYAKRSGDSAESANKSPVKRQ   GTKRKAPSVVDMLKKKDRRK
CRY64_oryLat   KYLPILKKFPPQYIYEPWKAPRSVQQAAGCIVGKDYPKPIIEHEVISKKNIQRMKQAYARRTSGSTESPTKKQ       GVKRKAPTVVDLIQKKQKRS
CRY64_oreNil   KYLPLLKKFPAEYIYEPWKAPRSIQQAAGCIVGKDYPHPIVQHEVISKKNIQRMKLAYAKRSPDTTESPSKSK       GVKRKAPSIIEMIKKKAKVK
CRY64_braFlo   HYLPVLKNFPKEYIYEPWKAPRNVQEKAGCIVGKDYPRPIVDHKEASQRNLDIMRDVRKDQKETAAVTL           GYGK
CRY64_strPur   KYIPALNKLPAEYIYEPWTAPRSVQEAAGCIIGRDYPRPIVDHSIVSKRNIGRMKDARACQPGKKA              EKRPAEPSKQDNNGKKVRKITSMLKKK
CRY64_lytVar   KYIPIMERFPAQYIYEPWTAPRSVQEAAGCIIGRDYPRPIVDHSVVSKRNIGRMKDARACQPGKSA              EKRPTDASNKNSNGKVRKITSMLKKK

For the full set of 22 metazoan CRY64 sequences, see the curated reference sequence section. A single representative sequence is shown below.

>CRY64_anoCar Anolis carolinensis (lizard) XM_003225714 6-4 photolyase synteny: DCPS TIRAP CRY64 SRPR FOXRED1
0 MAHVSIHWFRKGLRLHDNPALLAAMKNSAEIYPIFILDPWFPKNMQVSINRWRFLIESLKDLDESLKKLNSR 2
1 LFVVRGRPAEVFPELFTKWKVTRLAFEVDTEPYARRDAEVVRLAAEHGVQVIQKVSHTLYDTER 2
1 IIVENSGKAPLTYTRLQTLVASLGPPKQPVPAPKLEDMK 1
2 DCCTPVKEDHDLEYGTPSYEELGQDPKTAGPHLYPGGETEALARLDLHMKRT 0
0 SWVCNFKKPETHPNSLTPSTTVLSPYVKFGCLSVRMFWWKLAEVYQG 0
0 RKHSDPPVSLHGQLLWREFFYTAGAGIPNFDRMENNPVCVQVDWDNNQEYLRAWRE 0
0 GQTGYPFIDAIMTQLRTEGWIHHLARHAVACFLTRGDLWISWEEGQK 0
0 VFEELLLDADWSLNAANWQWLSASAFFHQFFRVYSPVTFGKKTDKNGEYIK 2
1 KYLPFLRKFSNDYIYEPWKAPRSLQERAGCIIGQDYPKPIVEHEKVYKRNLERMKAAYARRSPNLVIQAKDKVSQKKGV 1
2 NRKRPEAPTKAKVQAKKVKTKSS* 0

Cryptochrome CRY7 photolyases

For the full set of 14 bilateran CRY7 sequences, see the curated reference sequence section.

Below the frog protein CRY7 is marked up for its various domains and motifs according to Pfam, Blast and PDB searches. Blue shows the antenna domain with predicted α/β secondary structure, purple the possibly catalytic FAD domain with predicted all α secondary structure, magenta the UIM ubiquitin motif, green two compositionally simple regions rich is basic residues predicted not to have definite fold, red the conserved region of unknown function upstream of the UIM ubiquitin motif, and light blue the conserved carboxy terminal motif of unknown function.

>CRY7_xenTro Xenopus tropicalis (frog) 
0 MDLEPFERAQIDDVLQ QLESGSVQADEFLCLVLSILGSSRTYSQFPAILQSLSRKEPAMYRELMDLHAEYFRK 0
0 EPADLETLGYETDLELAIALSLQEHNQLTDTASFASEVDPAPKISFADAAKLSHFSHKHNKKNSSSKTEITKLKDNVAAMNLYQERKRYHINGQEKTCISN
CYNGQPEPEDCVLKSEDGEDVFHVETSRPRESKAKHSRRSRKKKKSAPSRGLVAMKPVLVWFRRDLRLHDNPALISALEHGVPVIPVFLWCINEETGQNFTLATGGAT
KYWLHHALLKLNQSLIQRFGSHIIFRVARSCEEELVSLVHETGADTIIINAVYEPWLKERDDLISETLRRHGVELKKHHSYCLYEPDSVSTEGVGLR 1
2 GIGSVSHFMSCCKRNNSAPIGMPLDAPRCLPAPCNWPESDHLDTLELGKMPHRKDGTL 0
0 IDWAVTIRESWDFSEDGAYTCLANFLQD 1
2 GVKHYEKESGRADKPYTSHISPYLHFGQISPRTVLHEAYFTKKNVPKFLRKLAWRDLAYWLLILFPDMPSEPVRPAYK 0
0 SQRWSSDLNHLRAWQKGLTGYPLVDAAMRELWLTGWMCNYSRHVVASFLVAYLHIHWVHGYRWFQ 0
0 DTLLDADVAINAMMWQNGGMSGLDHWNFVMHPVDSALTCDPYGSYVRKWCPELAGLPDEYIHKPWKCAPSQLRRA 1
2 GVILGRNYPHRIVLDLEERREQSLKDVVEVRKKHLEYLDEVSGCDMVQIPDQLLALTLGHTSGEDEVVRNRTGSFLLPVITRKEFKYKTLQPDTKDNPYNTVLKGYV
SRKRDETIAYMNERHFTASTINEGAQRHERIERTNRLMEGLPAPSDAKNKSRRTPKKDPFSIIPPSYLHLAN* 0

DASH cryptochrome CRY3 sequences

DASH is yet another member of the cryptochrome and photolyase family. It was identified only recently as active only on ssDNA repair, reportedly because of a barrier to flipping the damaged cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer dinucleotide out of dsDNA into its active repair site unless it is in a loop. In the species investigated to date, this enzyme uses folate (MTHF) and FAD, activated by blue light. It is a fairly remote outgroup to the cytochromes, with only CPD further diverged.

Its name is a peculiar acronym of Drosophila, Arabidopsis, Synechocystis and Homo -- yet the gene was never present in Drosophila or placentals. In Arabidopsis, the two copies are called CRY3 and PHR2. The many genome projects available today allow a quick determination of its rather unusual phylogenetic distribution.

CyrDASH.jpg

Although originally studied in plants and cyanobacteria, the DASH photolyase surprisingly extends into fish, frogs, salamanders, turtle, lizard, and birds -- duck, finch and budgerigar but not chicken or turkey -- but not any mammal. It's not clear however if the protein function has stayed the same in all these taxa or drifted in new roles like CRY1 and CRY2 or has acquired multiple functions in single species.

Using blastx on the syntenic region in gallinaceous birds (chicken and turkey) establishes that they have a fairly degenerate multi-exonic pseudogene at the expected location and orientation. Here duck, which has an intact gene, is the immediate outgroup, diverging at 80 myr. It is not currently possible to date this more precisely nor determine whether pseudogenization occurred in a common ancestor or independently on account of separate domestications. Platypus does not have any pseudogene debris at the expected location but the assembly has a break here. Marsupials and placentals again appear never to have had this enzyme as it had been lost in the earliest mammals.

DASH is also missing from alligator and crocodile assemblies, the lobe-finned coelocanth assembly, and chondrichthyes genomes and transcripts. These probably represent additional, independent gene losses rather than just poor assemblies -- the overall sequence conservation of DASH is much less stringent than most cytochromes suggesting loosened constraints or even a measure of functional redundancy.

The phylogenetic loss pattern of DASH parallels the [Opsin_evolution:_trichromatic_ancestral_mammal|massive loss of opsins] that also occured early in mammalian evolution -- which GT Walls in 1942 attributed to mammals experiencing a sustained period of deep nocturnality where these systems did not need to function (no UV damage) and indeed could not function (insufficient blue light even with antenna) and so were lost, implying they were not sustained by a Piatigorskyian secondary functionality such as circadian rhythm, lunar calendaring, or magnetosensing.

The great oxygenation event gave rise to a stratospheric ozone protective layer at 2.4 gyr but reached an even higher lever during the early Cambrian (based indirectly on oxygen levels). This may have favored independent but simultaneous gene loss events in various clades.

However the first land plants and animals risked greatly increased levels of UV damage that may correlate with DASH retention. Here it must be clarified whether repairable damage can arise from direct oxidative damage in addition to ultraviolet light which could not plausibly be an issue for benthic marine organisms that still retain this enzyme.

The amniote DASH proteins can be modeled structurally using nearly 50% matches in Arabidopsis (cryptochrome 3: 2IJG) or equally suitable cyanobacterium Synechocystis (1NP7). The 14 exons share only one match with vertebrate CRY1 and CRY2 which is more likely coincidental than indicative of a shared ancestral protein subsequent to the era of eukaryotic intronation onset.

For a full set of metazoan DASH sequences, see: Curated reference sequences for cryptochromes and photolyases


>DASH_taeGut Taeniopygia guttata (finch) ABQF01044665 ABQF01044669 ABQF01044671 synteny: ACAA1 DASH MYD66 OXSR1
0 MSGTAGTAICLLRCDLRAHDNQ 0
0 QVLHWAQHNADFVIPLYCFDPRHYLGTHCYRLPKTGPHRLRFLLESVKDLRETLKKKGS 2
1 TLVVRKGKPEDVVCDLITQLGSVTAVVFHEE 0
0 ATQEELDVEKGLCQVCRQHGVKIQTFWGSTLYHRDDLPFRPIDR 2
1 LPDVYTHFPKGLESGAKVRPTLRMADQLKPLAPGLEEGSIPTMEDFGQK 1
2 DPVADPRTAFPCSGGETQALMRLQYYFWDT 0
0 NLVASYKETRNGLVGMDYSTKFAPW 2
1 LALGCISPRYIYEQIQKYERERTANESTYW 2
1 VLFELLWRDYFRFVALKYGRRIFSLR 1
2 GLQSKDIPWKKDLQLFSCWQ 0
0 EGKTGVPFVDANMRELSATGFMSNRGRQNVASFLTKDLGLDWRMGAEWFEYLL 0
0 VDYDVCSNYGNWLYSAGIGNDPRDNRKFNMIKQGLDYDGN 0
0 GDYVRLWVPELQGIKGADIHTPWALSSAALSQAGVTLGETYPQPVVTAPEWSRHIHRRP 0
0 GGSPHPRGRRGPAQRKDRGIDFYFSRKKDAC* 0

Cryptochrome CPD photolyases

This dna repair enzyme (cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers for CPD) was studied in marsupials during the pre-genomic era (1994), with two groups concluding even that that no ortholog existed in placentals. Today we are certain of that because the gene is not present in any complete placental mammal genome; no pseudogene debris exists in the partly conserved syntenic location in any species. This strongly suggests that the gene was lost once in stem placental rather than many times in later subclades (as happened with encephalopsin). The gene remains very strongly conserved in species such as opossum with no indication of impending loss.

The loss in placentals is somewhat peculiar given that CPD is a very ancient (pre-eukaryotal) member of the photolyase family, with highly conserved orthologs readily recoverable in other commonly studied marsupials, monotremes, birds, alligators, turtle, lizard, snakes, frog, fish, agnathan, amphioxus, sea urchin, many invertebrates, cnidarians, plants and so forth. However it also appears to be lost in tunicate -- indeed Ciona has lost all its photolyases leaving it a bit mysterious how it repairs these types of dna damage. Hemichordates have also lost all members of this gene family including CPD.

It is very unlikely that placentals displaced CPD with something better. More likely, CPD was lost during a dark phase of placental evolution when UV damage to dna was a non-issue and its photo-repair infeasible. Genes cannot be retained without selection (use it or lose it). Coming back out into the light millions of years later (having also lost DASH, CRY64 and [[Opsin_evolution:_update_blog|13 of 21 opsin genes]), they evidently made do with a less efficient excision repair that overlaps repair photolyase functionality.

The CPD gene product is very diverged from other photolyases though still retains the photolyase and FAD binding domain folds. The antenna moiety is usually reported as MTHF (folate). The best available structures are from rice (3UMV: 53% identity to marsupial) and an archaeal methanogen (Methanosarcina mazei 2XRZ) which likely uses 5-deazariboflavin Fo as antenna (which it can synthesize de novo). The latter enzyme repairs cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in duplex DNA using blue or near-UV light.

Despite great divergence in primary sequence from other members of the gene family, fold conservation may explain in part the unexpected circadian compensatory capacity of marsupial CPD expressed in double CRY1/2 knockout mouse, seemingly driven by interaction of CPD with CLOCK of the CLOCK/BMAL1 system. CPD lacks any counterpart to the distal exons of placental CRY1.

CPD presents no special problems in classification as it clearly originated early in the history of prokaryotes and today serves as the outgroup to the overall metazoan photolyase gene family (though not as usefully as the less diverged DASH). It has never undergone gene duplication and divergence, at least none that stuck, and has been retained as single copy in the vast majority of species from choanflagellate to mammal. There are no noteworthy C-terminal expansions or supplemental exons within metazoan -- CPD is the exception among photolyases and cryptochromes for its lack of overt innovation. However as the knock-in experiment in mouse shows, CPD has unexpected properties.

The N-terminus has various extensions -- indeed the initial methionine is problematic -- but these are poorly conserved even within closely related taxa. Conservation sets in some 38 residues upstream of the first conserved methionine. While these 114 bp could represent conserved 5'UTR nucleotides rather than conserved amino acids, the two relevent crystallographic structures include this region (Methanosarcina 2XRY and rice 3UMV) as do many transcripts. Two in Xenopus (ES684787 BX851972) seem to rule out a cryptic short first exon splicing into the conserved region.

CPDragged.png

Some 32 curated CPD sequences spanning the whole of metazoan evolution are provided at the reference sequences. Many more could be extracted from GenBank should some research issue warrant more intensive surveying.

4Fe-4S photolyases and their relation to primases

An intriguing new subfamily of photolyases (1,2) recently surfaced that contains a 4Fe-4S cluster in the catalytic domain in addition to FAD. This meshes with the equally surprising finding of unmistakable fold similiarity between photolyases and the large subunit of archaeal-eukaryotic primase (eg the PRIM2 gene product in human), an ancient enzyme critical to the de novo synthesis of RNA primers neede DNA replication that also contains a 4Fe-4S cluster (as do various DNA repair enzymes such as helicases and endonucleases).

The photolyase antenna molecule, at least in Rhodobacter, is also new: the final intermediate in riboflavin biosynthesis, 6,7-dimethyl-8-ribityl-lumazine (which serves a similar role in biolumininescence). This illustrates again the flexibility of the antenna site -- the antenna molecule is unpredictable from primary sequence, indeed tertiary structure, even whether there is one. Given the list of possible antenna molecules might even now be incomplete, reconsitution experiments that don't find a suitable antenna molecule may simply have tested an insufficient range of molecules.

The new class of photolyase conflicts with the notion of a universal tryptophan triad chain in photolyases, agreeing with reports in other photolyases suggesting that the whole concept was wrong from the get-go. While there is no question that aromatic residues play a special role in this gene family and are often deeply conserved, so are many other amino acids.

Various inappropriate gene names -- PhrB already in use at GenBank for a different photolyase class, FeS-BCP inconsistent with observed phylogenetic distribution and hyphenated/capitalized in violation of nomenclature standards, CRYB for an non-cryptochrome enzyme -- won't be used here but instead PFES (photolyase iron sulfide). Reference sequences are provided below for two bacteria and two archaeal FeS photolyases, as well as yeast and human FeS primases; these suffice as GenBank probes.

Using the 4 conserved cysteines and aromatic residues as guide, representatives of the new photolyase class are readily located in bacteria (150 genera) but are more narrowly distributed in Archaea (8 genera of Euryarchaeota, no Crenarchaeota, Korarchaeota, Thaumarchaeota) suggesting horizontal gene transfer to them or gene loss. No eukaryotic photolyase yet has a 4Fe-4S domain (ignoring blast match XM_002537565 in castor bean that represents Agrobacterium contamination). Since eukaryotes arose from a relatively late symbiosis of an archaea and alphaproteobacter, one or even two homologs would initially have been present.

The 4Fe-4S cluster, being an ancient feature of primase and thus of the whole fold family, implies that FeS-photolyases are a relic, retaining a feature lost in subsequent gene duplications that gave rise first to CPD and then to the overall photolyase/cryptochrome gene family. The alternative scenario, that the 4Fe-4S cluster represents convergent evolution in photolyases (later independent acquisition) is wholly implausible given the complex requirements of geometry and the lack of utility of intermediate states.

Although in most of biochemistry, 4Fe-4S clusters serve a clear redox function, such a role has not been established for primases, helicases, other DNA repair enzymes, much less PFES photolyases. Conceivably the redox state of the 4Fe-4S cluster can sense the status of a DNA helix and facilitate rapid scanning for the odd damaged base among billions of normal ones. Since the FeS-photolyase role is not understood, the functional consequences of the loss of the cluster, presumably first in CPD, then CRY64 and its downstream duplications including cryptochromes, is difficult to evaluate.

Primase may be among the very oldest of enzymes since it is essential for DNA replication (ie, perhaps for exiting the hypothetical earlier RNA world). However UV damage is also a very old problem. Priming is not needed for RNA replication or transcription nor in DNA replication in mitochondria; bacteria generally use a non-homologous system.

One very intriguing idea starts with the observation that FAD mimics two free RNA bases with its flavin and adenine rings which are are stacked like bases (U-folded) in all studied photolyases. In primase -- which has no FAD -- two purine ribonucleotides at the FAD site, recognizing two bases of template DNA by conventional hydrogen bonding that perhaps resemble the flipped out cyclobutane pair needing repair by a photolyase.

Indeed, the template dinucleotide could even be stabilized temporarily as a cyclobutane pair, reversing the normal sense of the reaction, borrowing reductive units from the 4Fe-4S cluster (UV/blue light is not a known primase requirement). This would explain primase preference for a pyrimidine template. Photolyases then arose by replacing the two mononucleotides with FAD and adding a Rossmann fold for the antenna, with the utilization of light displacing the need for the 4Fe-4S cluster except in the PFES class of photolyases

Human primase also undergoes a profound conformational change from a three-helix binding site for DNA to a helix-sheet site as it counts primer size and passes it along to the catalytic subunit and other protein parteners. That's not so clear for not-so-large subunits archael primases which seem to lack an internal domain duplication. A large conformational change -- not just internal changes in FAD redox status -- is also needed in cryptochrome signalling, possibly this same one.

>PFES_agrTum Agrobacterium tumefaciens (bacteria) NP_355900 aka: PhrB
MSQLVLILGDQLSPSIAALDGVDKKQDTIVLCEVMAEASYVGHHKKKIAFIFSAMRHFAEELRGEGYRVRYTRIDDADNAGSFTGEVKRAIDDLTPSRIC
VTEPGEWRVRSEMDGFAGAFGIQVDIRSDRRFLSSHGEFRNWAAGRKSLTMEYFYREMRRKTGLLMNGEQPVGGRWNFDAENRQPARPDLLRPKHPVFAP
DKITKEVIDTVERLFPDNFGKLENFGFAVTRTDAERALSAFIDDFLCNFGATQDAMLQDDPNLNHSLLSFYINCGLLDALDVCKAAERAYHEGGAPLNAV
EGFIRQIIGWREYMRGIYWLAGPDYVDSNFFENDRSLPVFYWTGKTHMNCMAKVITETIENAYAHHIQRLMITGNFALLAGIDPKAVHRWYLEVYADAYE
WVELPNVIGMSQFADGGFLGTKPYAASGNYINRMSDYCDCRYDPKERLGDNACPFNALYWDFLARNREKLKSNHRLAQPYATWARMSEDVRHDLRAKAAAFLRKLD*

>PFES_rhoSph Rhodobacter sphaeroides (bacteria) CP000144 PDB|3ZXS PMID:22290493 6,7-dimethyl-8-ribityl-lumazine antenna aka CryPro 4Fe-4S photolyase
MRGSHHHHHHGIRMLTRLILVLGDQLSDDLPALRAADPAADLVVMAEVMEEGTYVPHHPQKIALILAAMRKFARRLQERGFRVAYSRLDDPDTGPSIGAE
LLRRAAETGAREAVATRPGDWRLIEALEAMPLPVRFLPDDRFLCPADEFARWTEGRKQLRMEWFYREMRRRTGLLMEGDEPAGGKWNFDTENRKPAAPDL
LRPRPLRFEPDAEVRAVLDLVEARFPRHFGRLRPFHWATDRAEALRALDHFIRESLPRFGDEQDAMLADDPFLSHALLSSSMNLGLLGPMEVCRRAETEW
REGRAPLNAVEGFIRQILGWREYVRGIWTLSGPDYIRSNGLGHSAALPPLYWGKPTRMACLSAAVAQTRDLAYAHHIQRLMVTGNFALLAGVDPAEVHEW
YLSVYIDALEWVEAPNTIGMSQFADHGLLGSKPYVSSGAYIDRMSDYCRGCAYAVKDRTGPRACPFNLLYWHFLNRHRARFERNPRMVQMYRTWDRMEET
HRARVLTEAEAFLGRLHAGEPV* 

>PFES_metMah Methanohalophilus mahii (Euryarchaeota) CP001994 4Fe-4S photolyase
MRHYAEKLRNRGADITYIKTAELEKSLSRWIKKKGIDELNIAEPANITLKEYLGKLNIDCKIVFVDNKQFIWSIPEFNTWASSRKNLIMEDFYRTGRKNSEI
LLEKDGKPSGGKWNLDRENRKLPPKNGFQKKPPQHIKFSPDKITKEIIAEVERSEYPTYGKGKDFNLAVTHEDAQKALDFFIEEKLSNFGPYQDIMLTGDNVLWHSILSPYLNLGL
LHPLNVIKKAELAYYQKNLPLNSIEGFIRQILGWREYMHCIYKYTGDKYLKSNWFDHERELPDIYWYPERTSMNCMASVIEEVLNTGYAHHIQRLMILSNFALLAEVNPAKVKNWF
HAAFIDAYDWVMQPNVIGMGQFADGGILATKPYISSANYINKMSDYCQNCTYNHNHRTGEDACPFNYLYWAFLHKNNEKLRDIGRMKLILKNLDRINKKELKQIMTHADDFLKSLK*

>PFES_natPha Natronomonas pharaonis (Euryarchaeota) CR936257 4Fe-4S photolyase
MTVLVLGDCLTEFGPLASDARSTDERVLCIEARAFARRKPYHPHKLTLVFSAMRHFRDRLREAGYTVDYRRVETFAEGLDAHFAAHPEDHIVTVRRTAHGAT
DRLQRLVANRGGTVEFVADPRFHCSREEFDAWADGDPPYRHESFYRHMRRETGYLMDGDEPVGGEWNFDDENREFPGPEYVPPEPPQFEPDETTREVREWVDATFGEDGYDDAPYG
GAWADPEPFSWPVTREGALQALEAFIEERLPTFGPYQDAMLGDEWAMNHALLSSSLNLGLLSPSEVIEAALAAFEEGSVSIASVEGFLRQVLGWREFVRHAYRRTPGMAAANQLGA
AEPLPEFFWTGDTDMACVADAVDGVRTRGYAHHIERLMVLSNFATLYGVEPSRLNEWFHAAFVDAYHWVTTPNVVGMGTFGTDTLSTKPYVASANYIDRMSDHCSGCPYYKTKTTG
DGACPFNALYWDFLGRNESQLRSNHRMGLVYSHYDDKSDGEREAIADRAETLRQRARNGTL*

>PRIM2_homSap Homo sapiens (human) primase large subunit 4Fe-4S pdb|3L9Q,3Q36
MEFSGRKWRKLRLAGDQRNASYPHCLQFYLQPPSENISLIEFENLAIDRVKLLKSVENLGVSYVKGTEQYQSKLESELRKLKFSYRENLEDEYEPRRRDHISHFILRLAYCQSEELRRWF
IQQEMDLLRFRFSILPKDKIQDFLKDSQLQFEAISDEEKTLREQEIVASSPSLSGLKLGFESIYKIPFADALDLFRGRKVYLEDGFAYVPLKDIVAIILNEFRAKLSKALALTARSLPAV
QSDERLQPLLNHLSHSYTGQDYSTQGNVGKISLDQIDLLSTKSFPPCMRQLHKALRENHHLRHGGRMQYGLFLKGIGLTLEQALQFWKQEFIKGKMDPDKFDKGYSYNIRHSFGKEGKRT
DYTPFSCLKIILSNPPSQGDYHGCPFRHSDPELLKQKLQSYKISPGGISQILDLVKGTHYQVACQKYFEMIHNVDDCGFSLNHPNQFFCESQRILNGGKDIKKEPIQPETPQPKPSVQKT*
KDASSALASLNSSLEMDMEGLEDYFSEDS*

>PRIM2_sacCer Saccharomyces cerevisiae (yeast) P20457 aka: PRI2_YEAST primase large subunit PDB|3LGB
MFRQSKRRIASRKNFSSYDDIVKSELDVGNTNAANQIILSSSSSEEEKKLYARLYESKLSFYDLPPQGEITLEQFEIWAIDRLKILLEIESCLSRNKSIK
EIETIIKPQFQKLLPFNTESLEDRKKDYYSHFILRLCFCRSKELREKFVRAETFLFKIRFNMLTSTDQTKFVQSLDLPLLQFISNEEKAELSHQLYQTVS
ASLQFQLNLNEEHQRKQYFQQEKFIKLPFENVIELVGNRLVFLKDGYAYLPQFQQLNLLSNEFASKLNQELIKTYQYLPRLNEDDRLLPILNHLSSGYTI
ADFNQQKANQFSENVDDEINAQSVWSEEISSNYPLCIKNLMEGLKKNHHLRYYGRQQLSLFLKGIGLSADEALKFWSEAFTRNGNMTMEKFNKEYRYSFR
HNYGLEGNRINYKPWDCHTILSKPRPGRGDYHGCPFRDWSHERLSAELRSMKLTQAQIISVLDSCQKGEYTIACTKVFEMTHNSASADLEIGEQTHIAHP
NLYFERSRQLQKKQQKLEKEKLFNNGNH*

278 curated refSeqs for metazoan cryptochromes and photolyases

The full length sequences have been moved to a separate page; only headers are shown below. The sequences use augmented fasta format transparent to web tools: primary sequence broken into exons, codon phase (bp overhang) shown, marked up for features with color, grouped into orthologous clusters, and presented in phylogenetic order relative to human evolutionary history, with subtree order determined by assembly quality.

The fasta headers themselves are little databases showing gene name (following HUGO symbol rules), genus, species, common name, genomic and transcript accession number when not a routine NCBI blast match, PubMed id if specifically studied in a journal article, followed by an unstructured comment field. Both headers and sequences fall readily into desktop databases, allowing different sort orders for other investigative priorities.

The availability of some orthology classes is inherently limited due to recent origin, restricted phylogenetic retention and the uneven focus of sequencing effort across the phylogenetic tree of metazoans. Genomic sequencing of 10,000 vertebrates will not greatly benefit cryptochrome research because the vast majority will be mammals, birds and perch-like fish which are excessively represented already. What is needed are more and better assemblies for a handful of keystone species such as lamprey, hagfish, sharks and rays, bichir, lungfish, and especially amphibians and herptiles.

For species with good assemblies, the entire repertoire of cryptochromes and photolyases has been deduced. It is foolish to compare a gene in isolation across two species with different overall gene family complements because multiple roles and functional complementation may have evolved.

For a large gene with numerous exons, absence from the assembly usually means genuine absence from the genome. Even when only an exon or two gene fragment is available, the classifier can almost always assign the correct orthology class to it. However it is risky to assemble an entire gene from many unlinked single-exon contigs and that was not done here; however certain important clades such as cartilaginous fish lack coherent assemblies and adequate transcripts so provisional gene assemblies are provided.

A remarkable amount of the data has surfaced at GenBank only in the last six months, implying much weaker results had the project been done in 2011 but also that much better phylogenetic coverage will surface this year. For the full set of fasta sequences available in April 2012, see the reference sequence repository. Manually curated sequences -- which use all available data and internal orthology class consistency checks -- should not be equated with provisional unsupervised computerized efforts at GenBank (XM_ gnomon entries), the UCSC 46-way or Ensembl.

CRY1_homSap Homo sapiens (human)
CRY1_panTro Pan troglodytes (chimpanzee) XM_509339
CRY1_ponAbe Pongo abelii (orangutan) XM_002823690
CRY1_nomLeu Nomascus leucogenys (gibbon) XM_003269977
CRY1_macMul Macaca mulatta (rhesus) NM_001194159
CRY1_calJac Callithrix jacchus (marmoset) XM_002752946
CRY1_saiBol Saimiri boliviensis (squirrel_monkey) nearly identical to marmoset
CRY1_tarSyr Tarsius syrichta (tarsier) ABRT010205577 unsure if exon 2 is CRY1 or CRY2
CRY1_micMur Microcebus murinus (mouse_lemur) 
CRY1_otoGar Otolemur garnettii (bushbaby) AAQR03016495
CRY1_tupBel Tupaia belangeri (treeshrew)
CRY1_musMus Mus musculus (mouse) NM_007771 all transcripts support longer exon 10 lost splice donor
CRY1_ratNor Rattus norvegicus (rat) NM_198750
CRY1_criGri Cricetulus griseus (hamster) XM_003505292
CRY1_spaJud Spalax judaei (blind_mole_rat) AJ606298
CRY1_dipOrd Dipodomys ordii (kangaroo_rat) ABRO01202522 ABRO01202521
CRY1_hetGla Heterocephalus glaber (mole-rat) stop codon in place of conserved W8, last two exons very diverged
CRY1_cavPor Cavia porcellus (guinea pig) last two exons diverged 69 bp separation
CRY1_speTri Spermophilus tridecemlineatus (squirrel) Ictidomys
CRY1_oryCun Oryctolagus cuniculus (rabbit)
CRY1_oviAri Ovis aries (sheep) NM_001129735 19341811 19150926
CRY1_bosTau Bos taurus (cow) NM_001105415 XM_616063
CRY1_susScr Sus scrofa (pig) XM_003126079
CRY1_ailMel Ailuropoda melanoleuca (panda) XM_002927658
CRY1_loxAfr Loxodonta africana (elephant) XM_003405313
CRY1_triMan Trichechus manatus (manatee) AHIN01036366 AHIN01036362 very similar to elephant
CRY1_monDom Monodelphis domestica (opossum) XM_003341966
CRY1_macEug Macropus eugenii (wallaby) assembly frameshift
CRY1_sarHar Sarcophilus harrisii (tasmanian_devil) nearly identical to oppossum
CRY1_triVul Trichosurus vulpecula (possum) EC362500 terminal transcript
CRY1_ornAna Ornithorhynchus anatinus (platypus) XM_001508563 = rubbish, genomic frameshift, continuing exon 12
CRY1_tacAcu Tachyglossus aculeatus (echidna) SRR000649.130490 short read transcripts corrected for frameshifts, penultimate exon
CRY1_galGal Gallus gallus (chicken) PMID: 11684328,17324421,15459395 altSplExon11: GIVGVPICRGSADLCN* BU143111
CRY1_melGal Meleagris gallopavo (turkey) XM_003202363 altSplExon11: GTVGVPICRGSANWYK*
CRY1_anaPla Anas platyrhynchos (duck) scaffold157 altSplExon11: GMTGVLVCRGSPGSHNYGKKDKT*
CRY1_eriRub Erithacus rubecula (robin) AY585716 aka: CRY1A altSplExon11: GIMAVPVCRGSPNACNYGKPDKTSK* CRY1B
CRY1_sylBor Sylvia borin (warbler) AJ632120 aka: CRY1A PMID:15381765 altSplExon11: GIVAVAVCRGSPNPCNYGKPDKTSE* sylBor DQ838738 CRY1B
CRY1_taeGut Taeniopygia guttata (finch) XM_002196518 altSplExon11: GIMAVPVCRGSPNPCNYRKPDKTSK*
CRY1_melUnd Melopsittacus undulatus (parakeet) AGAI01062111 altSplExon11: GIMAVPVCRGSSNPCNCGKTDKTSK*
CRY1_parWeb Paradoxornis webbianus (parrotbill) JR867166 TSA transcript
CRY1_allMis Alligator mississippiensis (alligator) genome/blat
CRY1_anoCar Anolis carolinensis (lizard) XM_003220923 AAWZ02014443
CRY1_podSic Podarcis siculus (wall_lizard) DQ376040 16809482
CRY1_pytMol Python molurus (python) AEQU010547455
CRY1_chrPic Chrysemys picta (turtle) AHGY01469963 AHGY01469969
CRY1_xenTro Xenopus tropicalis (frog) NM_001087660 11533577 final four exons confirmed by many ESTs
CRY1A_latCha Latimeria chalumnae (coelocanth) AFYH01018055 AFYH01018053 AFYH01018050
CRY1B_latCha Latimeria chalumnae (coelocanth) last exons uncertain
CRY1A_lepOcu Lepisosteus oculatus (spotted_gar) AHAT01025403
CRY1B_lepOcu Lepisosteus oculatus (spotted_gar) AHAT01016727 AHAT01016728
CRY1A_danRer Danio rerio (zebrafish) NM_001077297 whole genome duplicate of retained CRY1 duplicate
CRY1A2_danRer Danio rerio (zebrafish) BC044558 AW184635 olfactory old teleost CRY1 duplicate syntenically retained as tetrapod CRY1
CRY1B_danRer Danio rerio (zebrafish) BC095305 EB921055 aka CRY2A whole genome duplicate of lost CRY1 duplicate
CRY1C_danRer Danio rerio (zebrafish) BC164795 EE210836 aka CRY2B old CRY1 duplicate lost in tetrapods CRY1 C12ORF23 CRY4 
CRY1A_leuEri Leucoraja erinacea (skate) AESE010236716 AESE011153531 AESE010038968 AESE010673288 AESE012524396
CRY1B_leuEri Leucoraja erinacea (skate) AESE011669465 AESE012563587 AESE010604630 AESE011547252
CRY1A_calMil Callorhinchus milii (shark) AAVX01551101 AAVX01266331 AAVX01354908 AAVX01055947
CRY1B_calMil Callorhinchus milii (shark) AAVX01090452 AAVX01101328 AAVX01636526 AAVX01201905
CRY1_petMar Petromyzon marinus (lamprey) Contig24766
CRY1_braFlo Branchiostoma floridae (amphioxus) XM_002609455 end uncertain
CRY1A_strPur Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (urchin) XM_001194752 same split exons as braFlo, end of gene uncertain, partially duplicated

CRY2_homSap Homo sapiens (human) 11 exons
CRY2_panTro Pan troglodytes (chimp)
CRY2_gorGor Gorilla gorilla (gorilla)
CRY2_ponAbe Pongo pygmaeus (orangutan)
CRY2_rheMac Macaca mulatta (rhesus) CJ488220 testis
CRY2_papHam Papio hamadryas (baboon)
CRY2_calJac Callithrix jacchus (marmoset)
CRY2_micMur Microcebus murinus (mouse_lemur)
CRY2_musMus Mus musculus (mouse) CF898022
CRY2_ratNor Rattus norvegicus (rat) DN948283 prostate
CRY2_criGri Cricetulus griseus (hamster) XR_135830
CRY2_spaJud Spalax judaei (blind_mole_rat) AJ606300
CRY2_dipOrd Dipodomys ordii (kangaroo_rat)
CRY2_cavPor Cavia porcellus (guinea_pig)
CRY2_hetGla Heterocephalus glaber (blind_mole_rat) EHA99865
CRY2_speTri Spermophilus tridecemlineatus (squirrel)
CRY2_oryCun Oryctolagus cuniculus (rabbit)
CRY2_turTru Tursiops truncatus (dolphin)
CRY2_bosTau Bos taurus (cow) EG706191 lens
CRY2_oviAri Ovis aries (sheep) NM_001129736 PubMed:19341811
CRY2_susScr Sus scrofa (pig) XM_003122835
CRY2_equCab Equus caballus (horse)
CRY2_canFam Canis familiaris (dog) XM_540761
CRY2_ailMel Ailuropoda melanoleuca (panda) XM_002922310 iMet lost to assembly gap
CRY2_myoLuc Myotis lucifugus (microbat)
CRY2_pteVam Pteropus vampyrus (macrobat)
CRY2_loxAfr Loxodonta africana (elephant)
CRY2_triMan Trichechus manatus (manatee) AHIN01126950 AHIN01126951
CRY2_choHof Choloepus hoffmanni (sloth)
CRY2_macEug Macropus eugenii (wallaby) FY652314 testis
CRY2_monDom Monodelphis domestica (opossum)
CRY2_ornAna Ornithorhynchus anatinus (platypus)
CRY2_galGal Gallus gallus (chicken) AJ396745 bursa 19456395 15459395
CRY2_taeGut Taeniopygia guttata (finch) FE716439 brain
CRY2_allMis Alligator mississippiensis (alligator) genome/blat
CRY2_anoCar Anolis carolinensis (lizard) XM_003214641
CRY2_xenTro Xenopus tropicalis (frog) NM_001088670 AY049035 CX389867 11533577 discrepancies
CRY2_ranCat Rana catesbeiana (bullfrog) GO458565 AY256684 extra SS removed
CRY2_lepOcu Lepisosteus oculatus (spotted_gar) AHAT01038797
CRY2_latCha Latimeria chalumnae (coelocanth) AFYH01005158 AFYH01005161 AFYH01005164
CRY2_danRer Danio rerio (zebrafish) aka CRY3 NM_131786
CRY2_oreNil Oreochromis niloticus (tilapia) XM_003449249 split exon 7 also in gasAcu, oryLat, tetNig not danRef or lepOcu
CRY2_sigGut Siganus guttatus (spinefoot) AB643456 full length? imputed introns Percomorpha PUBMED 22163321 lunar phase-recognition
CRY2_tetNig Tetraodon nigroviridis (fugu) CAAE01010345
CRY2_takRub Takifugu rubripes (fugu) HE592015

CRY1B_strPur Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (sea_urchin) XM_001183029 echinoderm lacks final 2 exons
CRY1B_lytVar Lytechinus variegatus (sea_urchin) AGCV01081039 echinoderm many small contigs
CRY1B_parLiv Paracentrotus lividus (sea_urchin) AM599080 echinoderm many transcripts
CRY1B_aplCal Aplysia californica (sea_hare) FF067636 AASC02010117 scaffold_151 mollusc
CRY1B_octVul Octopus vulgaris (octopus) JR450373 transcript assembly mollusc
CRY1B_craGig Crassostrea gigas (oyster) GQ415324 HS189569 mollusc
CRY1B_rudPhi Ruditapes philippinarum (clam) JO113369 mollusc
CRY1B_vilLie Villosa lienosa (mussel) JR510441 transcript assembly mollusc fragment
CRY1B_lymSta Lymnaea stagnalis (snail) ES576734 mollusc
CRY1B_plaDum Platynereis dumerilii (clam_worm) GU322429 annelid mRNA fragment
CRY1B_dapPul Daphnia pulex (water_flea) ACJG01002273 FE370447 FE356368 crustacean
CRY1B_diaNig Dianemobius nigrofasciatus (cricket) AB291231 orthoptera
CRY1B_acyPis Acyrthosiphon pisum (aphid) NM_001171061 ABLF02032292 HP303737 hemiptera
CRY1B_danPle Danaus plexippus (butterfly) AY860425 AGBW01012954 lepidoptera
CRY1B_bomMor Bombyx mori (silkworm) NM_001195699 wrong BABH01015108 moth lepidoptera
CRY1B_mamBra Mamestra brassicae (moth) AY947639 Glossata lepidoptera
CRY1B_helArm Helicoverpa armigera (cotton_bollworm) JN997418 moth lepidoptera
CRY1B_droMel Drosophila melanogaster (fruit_fly) AB019389 diptera PubMed:22080955 PDB:3TVS
CRY1B_anoGam Anopheles gambiae (mosquito) DQ219482 diptera PubMed:16332522
CRY1B_neoBul Neobellieria bullata (fleshfly) FJ373353 diptera
CRY1B_bacCuc Bactrocera cucurbitae (melon_fly) AB517608 diptera

CRY1A_dapPul Daphnia pulex (water_flea) FE418063 FE356487 ACJG01001137 crustacean
CRY1A_eupSup Euphausia superba (krill) FM200054 contig crustacean
CRY1A_pedHum Pediculus humanus (louse) XM_002430500=wrong AAZO01005932 phthiraptera very similar intron pattern to vertebrate but lacks last 4 exons
CRY1A_acyPis Acyrthosiphon pisum (aphid) NM_001171102 ABLF02035823 hemiptera cry2-2 PubMed:20482645 end uncertain
CRY1A_ripPed Riptortus pedestris (bean_bug) AB379863 hemiptera PubMed:18547745
CRY1A_triCas Tribolium castaneum (flour_beetle) AAJJ01000096 coleopetera
CRY1A_bomImp Bombus impatiens (bumble_bee) EF110521 AEQM02008194 hymenoptera PubMed:17244599
CRY1A_apiMel Apis mellifera (bee) NM_001083630 AADG06001305 hymenoptera
CRY1A_attCep Atta cephalotes (ant) ADTU01021771 hymenoptera 
CRY1A_exoRob Exoneura robusta (bee) HP928681 hymenoptera fragment
CRY1A_nylPub Nylanderia pubens (crazy_ant) JP792144 hymenoptera fragment
CRY1A_nasVit Nasonia vitripennis (wasp) XM_001606355 AAZX01001169 hymenoptera N-term shortened
CRY1A_antPer Antheraea pernyi (silkmoth) EF117812 lepidoptera PubMed:17244599 dropped long C-terminus
CRY1A_anoGam Anopheles gambiae (mosquito) DQ219483 diptera dropped long C-terminus
CRY1A_aedAeg Aedes aegypti (mosquito) XM_001655728 diptera dropped long C-terminus
CRY1_vilLie Villosa lienosa (mussel) JR505030 mollusc transcript assembly mollusc
CRY1_tetUrt Tetranychus urticae (spider-mite) CAEY01002034 chelicerate N-terminus uncertain
CRY1_aplCal Aplysia californica (sea_hare) scaffold_2275 mollusc small fragment

CRY4_galGal Gallus gallus (chicken) NP_001034685 CRY4 PubMed:19663499 synteny: ADIPOR1 UBE2T CRY4 LRIF1 DRAM2 CEPT1
CRY4_melGal Meleagris gallopavo (turkey) XM_003212851
CRY4_anaPla Anas platyrhynchos (duck) scaffold1663
CRY4_taeGut Taeniopygia guttata (finch) XM_002198497
CRY4_pasDom Passer domesticus (sparrow) AY494987 16687285 fragment
CRY4_anoCar Anolis carolinensis (lizard) FG650345 synteny: UBE2T CRY4 LRIF1 DRAM2 verified indel exon 3
CRY4_xenTro Xenopus tropicalis (frog) NP_001123706
CRY4_xenLae Xenopus laevis (frog) BC167313 only 89% identical to CRY4_xentro
CRY4_latCha Latimeria chalumnae (coelocanth) AFYH01009222
CRY4_lepOcu Lepisosteus oculatus (spotted_gar) AHAT01016726
CRY4_danRer Danio rerio (zebrafish) BC164413 adjacency to lost CRY1 suggests relationship
CRY4_molTec Molgula tectiformis (tunicate) CJ347377 CJ411442 CJ358785 fragment imputed introns
CRY4_braFlo Branchiostoma floridae (amphioxus) Un:610812841 XM_002609457 exon 4,7,8 wrong

CRY64_anoCar Anolis carolinensis (lizard) XM_003225714 6-4 photolyase synteny: DCPS TIRAP CRY64 SRPR FOXRED1
CRY64_chrPic Chrysemys picta (turtle) AHGY01135270 AHGY01135271 no synteny
CRY64_allMis Alligator mississippiensis (alligator) blat
CRY64_croPor Crocodylus porosus (crocodile) blat/genome
CRY64_xenTro Xenopus tropicalis (frog) synteny: STS1 RPL27A CRY64 FOXRED1 SRPR PubMed:19715341 19345672 9016626
CRY64_lepOcu Lepisosteus oculatus (spotted_gar) AHAT01024141
CRY64_danRer Danio rerio (zebrafish) BC044204 6-4 photolyase aka CRY5 synteny: FOXRED1
CRY64_salSal Salmo salar (salmon) BT058852
CRY64_oreNil Oreochromis niloticus (tilapia) XM_003437598 AERX01000034
CRY64_braFlo Branchiostoma floridae (amphioxus) BW780666 FE555184 XM_002595028 fused exons 2-3 fusion exons 2-3 odd splice phases exon 5-6, no split 8-9 short final exon 
CRY64_strPur Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (urchin) XM_001189626 extra 1st exon unwarranted MCGAPRSYVEIRDSEEHSRRHVARLQFQFQSDLP 12 K
CRY64_eucTri Eucidaris tribuloides (pencil_urchin) JI324408 fragment imputed introns
CRY64_aplCal Aplysia californica (sea_hare) scaffold_427
CRY64_vilLie Villosa lienosa JR505030 transcript assembly mollusc
CRY64_droMel Drosophila melanogaster (fruitfly) 6-4 photolyase PDB:3CVW CG2488 uses 5-deazariboflavin
CRY64_danPle Danaus plexippus (butterfly) EF117813 PubMed:17244599 two novel exons
CRY64_acyPis Acyrthosiphon pisum (aphid) XM_001945977 single exon
CRY64_anoGam Anopheles gambiae (mosquito) XM_314748
CRY64_bomMor Bombyx mori (silkworm) AK381942 frameshift
CRY64_craMey Crateromorpha meyeri (sponge) PubMed:20121950
CRY64A_triAdh Trichoplax adhaerens (placozoa) XM_002108524 ABGP01000049 no UIM domain affinity to CRY class
CRY64B_triAdh Trichoplax adhaerens (placozoa) XM_002107723 ABGP01000051 anti-parallel tandem no UIM domain

CRY7_xenTro Xenopus tropicalis (frog) XP_002938187 AAMC01077621 AAMC01077620 many transcripts CDK10+ CRYM+ GCSH- PDK1L2- BCMO1+ GL172982 1U3C 34% 3CVW 29%
CRY7_xenLae Xenopus laevis (frog) transcripts DC068968 EG576829 BU901325
CRY7_latCha Latimeria chalumnae (coelocanth) AFYH01265207 pseudogene
CRY7_lepOcu Lepisosteus oculatus (gar) AHAT01010533 AHAT01010534
CRY7_danRer Danio rerio (zebrafish) ENSDART00000125725 no synteny to frog
CRY7_salSal Salmo salar (salmon) AGKD01006863
CRY7_hapBur Haplochromis burtoni (chichlid) AFNZ01022319 
CRY7_gasAcu Gasterosteus aculeatus (stickleback) DN725444
CRY7_oryLat Oryzias latipes (medaka) CRYM+ GCSH- two transcripts, very small introns
CRY7_oreNil Oreochromis niloticus (tilapia) 
CRY7_tetNig Tetraodon nigroviridis (fugu)
CRY7_takRub Takifugu rubripes (fugu)
CRY7_gadMor Gadus morhua (cod) CAEA01536921
CRY7_xipMac Xiphophorus maculatus (platyfish) AGAJ01012112
CRY7_rudPhi Ruditapes philippinarum (clam) JO112203 gonad transcript missing first half of antenna domain note filter feeder
CRY7_craGig Crassostrea gigas (oyster) HS138673

DASH_taeGut Taeniopygia guttata (finch) ABQF01044665 ABQF01044669 ABQF01044671 synteny: ACAA1 DASH MYD66 OXSR1
DASH_anaPla Anas platyrhynchos (duck) scaffold1769
DASH_melUnd Melopsittacus undulatus (budgerigar) AGAI01061648
DASH_galGal Gallus gallus (chicken) syntentic pseudogene, numerous indels, frameshifts, internal stops
DASH_melGal Meleagris gallopavo (turkey) ADDD01036185 syntenic pseudogene
DASH_anoCar Anolis carolinensis (lizard) XM_003221869 14 exons
DASH_chrPic Chrysemys picta (turtle) AHGY01416294 first exon off contig
DASH_xenTro Xenopus tropicalis (frog) XM_002938001 PubMed:15147276 synteny: ACAA1 DASH MYD66 transcripts AL790297 CR419606 etc
DASH_hymCut Hymenochirus curtipes (frog) fragment
DASH_ambMex Ambystoma mexicanum (axolotl) CO785483 fragment
DASH_latCha Latimeria chalumnae (coelocanth) AFYH01055296 AFYH01281932 probable pseudogene
DASH_lepOcu Lepisosteus oculatus (spotted_gar) AHAT01010414
DASH_danRer Danio rerio (zebrafish) NM_205686
DASH_oreNil Oreochromis niloticus (tilapa) XM_003439198
DASH_patPec Patiria pectinifera (starfish) HP101597
DASH_strPur Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (urchin)
DASH_aplCal Aplysia californica (sea_hare) scaffold_151:75,790-145,485
DASH_vilLie Villosa lienosa (mussel) JR504188 transcript assembly mollusc
DASH_nemVec Nematostella vectensis (sea_anemone) XP_001623243 ABAV01026885
DASH_hydMag Hydra magnipapillata (cnidarian) XM_002166508 single exon ABRM01055505
DASH_monBre Monosiga brevicollis (choanoflagellate) XP_001745157 ABFJ01000402
DASH1_araTha Arabidopsis thaliana (cress) PHR2 NM_130327 AFNA01010806
DASH2_araTha Arabidopsis thaliana (cress) NM_122394 AFMZ01019177 aka:CRY3 PDB:2VTB
DASH_phaTri Phaeodactylum tricornutum (diatom) XM_002178853 CPF2
DASH_thaPse Thalassiosira pseudonana (diatom) XM_002291289

CPD_monDom Monodelphis domestica (opossum) NP_001028149:wrong OPC1 PubMed:7937136 synteny: TNK1 MUC4 CPD KIAA0226 FYTTD1
CPD_sarHar Sarcophilus harrisii (tasmanian_devil) AEFK01107967
CPD_potTri Potorous tridactylus (rat_kangaroo) D26020 PubMed:7813451
CPD_ornAna Ornithorhynchus anatinus (platypus) 
CPD_taeGut Taeniopygia guttata (finch) XM_002190577
CPD_melUnd Melopsittacus undulatus (budgerigar) AGAI01046895
CPD_galGal Gallus gallus (chicken) XM_422729
CPD_melGal Meleagris gallopavo (turkey) XM_003209143
CPD_allMis Alligator mississippiensis (alligator) genome/blat
CPD_chrPic Chrysemys picta (turtle) AHGY01112360 incomplete
CPD_anoCar Anolis carolinensis (lizard) XM_003226963
CPD_pytMol Python molurus (python)
CPD_xenTro Xenopus tropicalis (frog) NP_001135721
CPD_lepOcu Lepisosteus oculatus (spotted_gar) AHAT01034265
CPD_danRer Danio rerio (zebrafish) NM_201064
CPD_petMar Petromyzon marinus (lamprey) rough revised sequence
CPD_braFlo Branchiostoma floridae (amphioxus) XP_002586934 FE570347 fixed frameshift exon 4
CPD_strPur Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (urchin) JT122393 JT102939 FJ812411
CPD_aplCal Aplysia californica (sea_hare) scaffold_446:238,174
CPD_vilLie Villosa lienosa (mussel) JR505029 transcript assembly mollusc
CPD_droMel Drosophila melanogaster (fruitfly) thymidine dimer photolyase CG11205 uses 5-deazariboflavin
CPD_nasVit Nasonia vitripennis (wasp) XM_001603235 trimmed N-terminal
CPD_bomImp Bombus impatiens (bumble_bee) XM_003488984
CPD_apiMel Apis mellifera (bee) XM_003250426
CPD_anoGam Anopheles gambiae (mosquito) XM_313925 trimmed N-terminal
CPD_aedAeg Aedes aegypti (mosquito) XM_001653905 trimmed N-terminal
CPD_acyPis Acyrthosiphon pisum (aphid) XM_001949116 trimmed N-terminal
CPD_nemVec Nematostella vectensis (anemone) ABAV01006764 XM_001636204 bad BACK01030119
CPD_acrDig Acropora digitifera (coral) BACK01030119 cnidarian one intron missing
CPD_ampQue Amphimedon queenslandica (sponge) ACUQ01006132 XM_003388698 bad
CPD_monBre Monosiga brevicollis (choanflagellate) ABFJ01000652 related intronation but numerous differences
CPD_salSpp Salpingoeca species (choanflagellate) ACSY01000967 different intronation still
CPD_araTha Arabidopsis thaliana (cress) PHR1 NM_179320 AFMZ01000529 GC-AG splice exon 6-7
CPD_orySat Oryza sativa (rice) B096003 BACJ01049170 aka:PhrII,Class II PMID:22170053 PDB:3UMV 

CRY1A_acrMil Acropora millepora (coral) EF202589
CRY1B_acrMil Acropora millepora (coral) EF202590
CRY1A_nemVec Nematostella vectensis (anemone) XM_001623096
CRY1B_nemVec Nematostella vectensis (anemone) XM_001623096
CRY1C_nemVec Nematostella vectensis (anemone) XM_001630979
CRY1D_nemVec Nematostella vectensis (anemone) XM_001632799
CRY1E_nemVec Nematostella vectensis (anemone) XM_001632800
CRY64_nemVec Nematostella vectensis (anemone) XP_001636303 ABAV01006592 last exon uncertain
CRY2_ampQue Amphimedon queenslandica (sponge) XM_003386521
CRY_ampQue Amphimedon queenslandica (sponge) XM_003386534
CRY_subDom Suberites domuncula (sponge) FN421335
CRY_aphVas Aphrocallistes vastus (sponge) PubMed:14499587
CRY1A_araTha Arabidopsis thaliana (cress) NM_116961 AFNC01018176 aka:CRY1,HY4 PDB:2VTB
CRY1B_araTha Arabidopsis thaliana (cress) CRY2 PHH1 NM_100320 AFNB01000167 no antennal chromophore
CRY1C_araTha Arabidopsis thaliana (cress) NM_001035626 AFNC01013058 aka:UVR3,CRY3 PDB:3FY4
CRY_phaTri Phaeodactylum tricornutum (diatom) XM_002180059 PMID:19424294
CRY_thaPse Thalassiosira pseudonana (diatom) XM_002291108 

PFES_agrTum Agrobacterium tumefaciens (bacteria) NP_355900 aka: PhrB
PFES_rhoSph Rhodobacter sphaeroides (bacteria) CP000144 PDB|3ZXS PMID:22290493 6,7-dimethyl-8-ribityl-lumazine antenna aka CryPro 4Fe-4S photolyase
PFES_metMah Methanohalophilus mahii (Euryarchaeota) CP001994 4Fe-4S photolyase
PFES_natPha Natronomonas pharaonis (Euryarchaeota) CR936257 4Fe-4S photolyase

PRIM2_homSap Homo sapiens (human) primase large subunit 4Fe-4S pdb|3L9Q,3Q36
PRIM2_sacCer Saccharomyces cerevisiae (yeast) P20457 aka: PRI2_YEAST primase large subunit PDB|3LGB

Article authorship and data usage policy

Author.jpg

I researched this article in its entirety in the winter of 2012, not paying attention initially to previous studies which are excellent on reaction mechanisms and regulatory cycles but completely clueless on comparative genomics (10 years into the genomic era!). Cryptochromes are a moderately difficult topic as metazoan genes go because the timing of gene duplications largely falls between the cracks of phylogenetic coverage and because extenive gene losses in unrepresentative model organisms have distorted the overall evolutionary picture. I plan to greatly expand the treatment of 3D structural implications of comparative genomics during the summer of 2012.

My interests are primarily in the long range evolutionary acquisition and divergence of function-enabling structure, starting from primases and 4Fe-4S cluster photolyases and ending with circadian, magnetosensing and couplings with opsins. However comparative genomics has major applications to rapid hypothesis-testing in all aspects of cryptochrome and photolyase research, the main point being the strong coupling between sequence conservation (ie selective pressure) and functional importance. This means conservation never lasts very long without a reason, and conversely non-conserved features are not important.

Although copyrighted, all the information here is in the public domain and can be used by anyone without additional permissions if properly sourced; however if data, figures or original observations are taken wholesale for a peer-reviewed scientific publication, it might be appropriate (after consultation early on) to include me among secondary co-authors.

Rather than make article edits yourself, please contact me by email with clarifications, corrections or additions to the content so I can make edits while maintaining a consistent approach. For broader disagreements or different interests, a better option is to simply register at the UCSC genomeWiki site and create your own page within the comparative genomics category.

This is just a scientific research article on an old gene family, not an advisory resource for personal genomics issues, melatonin dietary supplementation or medical advice on jet lag and insomnia -- thanks in advance for not sending inappropriate email. Technical terms from genetics and molecular biology are not explained in the article when keywords have a satisfactory treatment at wikipedia or in undergraduate genetics texts; because of good keywords, the scientific literature is easily searched at PubMed so not duplicated here.

My last dozen published research papers in PNAS, Nature, Science etc can be found here. Watch for 4 additional comparative genomics paper to appear in 2012. I've also written over a thousand pages of comparative genomics for other human genes, authored the original user manual to the UCSC human genome browser and in 1999 an advanced tutorial on metazoan genome annotation still widely available online. I thank the UCSC Genomics Group (Hiram Clawson, Brian Raney, Maximilian Haeussler) for software, manuscript and literature resources, Evim Foundation for logistical support, and the Sperling Foundation for financial support under project grant 2012.GNTCS.006.