An adhesion GPCR regulates cell adhesion and mating in the closest living relatives of metazoans
The transition to metazoan multicellularity required the evolution of cell-surface receptors that coordinate adhesion and signaling under changing environmental conditions. We investigated potential regulators of cell interactions in the choanoflagellate Salpingoeca rosetta, one of the closest living relatives of metazoans. Here, we identify Cupidon, an adhesion G protein-coupled receptor that acts as a dual-function regulator of cell adhesion and mating. Under well-fed (i.e., nutrient-replete) conditions, Cupidon suppresses cell aggregation by inhibiting N-acetylglucosamine-dependent collar-mediated adhesion. Starvation of S. rosetta triggers gametogenesis, resulting in anisogametes: female