The MAP-kinase pathways are intracellular signaling modules that are likely to exist in all eukaryotes. We provide an evolutionary
model for these signaling pathways by focusing on the gene duplications that have occurred since the divergence of animals
from yeast. Construction of evolutionary trees with confidence assessed by bootstrap clearly shows that the mammalian JNK
and p38 pathways arose from an ancestral hyperosmolarity pathway after the split from yeast and before the split from
C. elegans. These coduplications of interacting proteins at the MAPK and MEK levels have since evolved toward substrate specificity,
thus giving distinct pathways. Mammalian duplications since the split from
C. elegans are often associated with divergent tissue distribution but do not appear to confer detectable substrate specificity. The
yeast kinase cascades have undergone similar fundamental functional changes since the split from mammals, with duplications
giving rise to central signaling components of the filamentous and hypoosmolarity pathways. Experimentally defined cross-talk
between yeast pheromone and hyperosmolarity pathways is mirrored with corresponding cross-talk in mammalian pathways, suggesting
the existence of ancient orthologous cross-talk; our analysis of gene duplications at all levels of the cascade is consistent
with this model but does not always provide significant bootstrap support. Our data also provide insights at different levels
of the cascade where conflicting experimental evidence exists.
Key words: Gene duplication — Signal transduction — MAP kinase — MEK — MKK — MEKK — JNK — p38
Received: 2 December 1998 / Accepted: 9 June 1999