An Endocannabinoid Catabolic Enzyme Faah and Its Paralogs in an Early Land Plant Reveal Evolutionary and Functional Relationship With Eukaryotic Orthologs

Endocannabinoids were known to exist only among Animalia but recent report of their occurrence in early land plants prompted us to study its function and metabolism. In mammals, anandamide, as an endocannabinoid ligand, mediates several neurological and physiological processes, which are terminated...

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Main Authors: Haq, Imdadul, Kilaru, Aruna
Published: Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/7719
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-59948-7
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spelling ndltd-ETSU-oai-dc.etsu.edu-etsu-works-89712020-10-03T05:04:08Z An Endocannabinoid Catabolic Enzyme Faah and Its Paralogs in an Early Land Plant Reveal Evolutionary and Functional Relationship With Eukaryotic Orthologs Haq, Imdadul Kilaru, Aruna Endocannabinoids were known to exist only among Animalia but recent report of their occurrence in early land plants prompted us to study its function and metabolism. In mammals, anandamide, as an endocannabinoid ligand, mediates several neurological and physiological processes, which are terminated by fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH). We identified nine orthologs of FAAH in the moss Physcomitrella patens (PpFAAH1 to PpFAAH9) with amidase signature and catalytic triad. The optimal amidase activity for PpFAAH1 was at 37 °C and pH 8.0, with higher specificity to anandamide. Further, the phylogeny and predicted structural analyses of the nine paralogs revealed that PpFAAH1 to PpFAAH4 were closely related to plant FAAH while PpFAAH6 to PpFAAH9 were to the rat FAAH, categorized based on the membrane binding cap, membrane access channel and substrate binding pocket. We also identified that a true ‘dynamic paddle’ that is responsible for tighter regulation of FAAH is recent in vertebrates and absent or not fully emerged in plants and non-vertebrates. These data reveal evolutionary and functional relationship among eukaryotic FAAH orthologs and features that contribute to versatility and tighter regulation of FAAH. Future studies will utilize FAAH mutants of moss to elucidate the role of anandamide in early land plants. 2020-02-20T08:00:00Z text https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/7719 https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-59948-7 ETSU Faculty Works Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University endocannabinoid catabolic enzyme faah Biological Sciences Biology
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic endocannabinoid catabolic enzyme faah
Biological Sciences
Biology
spellingShingle endocannabinoid catabolic enzyme faah
Biological Sciences
Biology
Haq, Imdadul
Kilaru, Aruna
An Endocannabinoid Catabolic Enzyme Faah and Its Paralogs in an Early Land Plant Reveal Evolutionary and Functional Relationship With Eukaryotic Orthologs
description Endocannabinoids were known to exist only among Animalia but recent report of their occurrence in early land plants prompted us to study its function and metabolism. In mammals, anandamide, as an endocannabinoid ligand, mediates several neurological and physiological processes, which are terminated by fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH). We identified nine orthologs of FAAH in the moss Physcomitrella patens (PpFAAH1 to PpFAAH9) with amidase signature and catalytic triad. The optimal amidase activity for PpFAAH1 was at 37 °C and pH 8.0, with higher specificity to anandamide. Further, the phylogeny and predicted structural analyses of the nine paralogs revealed that PpFAAH1 to PpFAAH4 were closely related to plant FAAH while PpFAAH6 to PpFAAH9 were to the rat FAAH, categorized based on the membrane binding cap, membrane access channel and substrate binding pocket. We also identified that a true ‘dynamic paddle’ that is responsible for tighter regulation of FAAH is recent in vertebrates and absent or not fully emerged in plants and non-vertebrates. These data reveal evolutionary and functional relationship among eukaryotic FAAH orthologs and features that contribute to versatility and tighter regulation of FAAH. Future studies will utilize FAAH mutants of moss to elucidate the role of anandamide in early land plants.
author Haq, Imdadul
Kilaru, Aruna
author_facet Haq, Imdadul
Kilaru, Aruna
author_sort Haq, Imdadul
title An Endocannabinoid Catabolic Enzyme Faah and Its Paralogs in an Early Land Plant Reveal Evolutionary and Functional Relationship With Eukaryotic Orthologs
title_short An Endocannabinoid Catabolic Enzyme Faah and Its Paralogs in an Early Land Plant Reveal Evolutionary and Functional Relationship With Eukaryotic Orthologs
title_full An Endocannabinoid Catabolic Enzyme Faah and Its Paralogs in an Early Land Plant Reveal Evolutionary and Functional Relationship With Eukaryotic Orthologs
title_fullStr An Endocannabinoid Catabolic Enzyme Faah and Its Paralogs in an Early Land Plant Reveal Evolutionary and Functional Relationship With Eukaryotic Orthologs
title_full_unstemmed An Endocannabinoid Catabolic Enzyme Faah and Its Paralogs in an Early Land Plant Reveal Evolutionary and Functional Relationship With Eukaryotic Orthologs
title_sort endocannabinoid catabolic enzyme faah and its paralogs in an early land plant reveal evolutionary and functional relationship with eukaryotic orthologs
publisher Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
publishDate 2020
url https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/7719
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-59948-7
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