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1.
Phylogenetic analyses of gene and protein sequences have led to two major competing views of the universal phylogeny, the evolutionary tree relating the three kinds of living organisms, Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. In the first scheme, called "the archaebacterial tree, " organisms of the same type are clustered together. In the second scenario, called "the eocyte tree," the archaeal phylum of Crenarchaeota is more closely related to eukaryotes than are other Archaea. A major property of the evolution of functional ribosomal and protein-encoding genes is that the rate of nucleotide and amino acid substitution varies across sequence sites. Here, using distance-based and maximum-likelihood methods, we show that universal phylogenies of ribosomal RNAs and RNA polymerases built by ignoring this variation are biased toward the archaebacterial tree because of attraction between long branches. In contrast, taking among-site rate variability into account gives support for the eocyte tree.  相似文献   

2.
The origin of the eukaryotic cell is considered one of the major evolutionary transitions in the history of life. Current evidence strongly supports a scenario of eukaryotic origin in which two prokaryotes, an archaebacterial host and an α-proteobacterium (the free-living ancestor of the mitochondrion), entered a stable symbiotic relationship. The establishment of this relationship was associated with a process of chimerization, whereby a large number of genes from the α-proteobacterial symbiont were transferred to the host nucleus. A general framework allowing the conceptualization of eukaryogenesis from a genomic perspective has long been lacking. Recent studies suggest that the origins of several archaebacterial phyla were coincident with massive imports of eubacterial genes. Although this does not indicate that these phyla originated through the same process that led to the origin of Eukaryota, it suggests that Archaebacteria might have had a general propensity to integrate into their genomes large amounts of eubacterial DNA. We suggest that this propensity provides a framework in which eukaryogenesis can be understood and studied in the light of archaebacterial ecology. We applied a recently developed supertree method to a genomic dataset composed of 392 eubacterial and 51 archaebacterial genera to test whether large numbers of genes flowing from Eubacteria are indeed coincident with the origin of major archaebacterial clades. In addition, we identified two potential large-scale transfers of uncertain directionality at the base of the archaebacterial tree. Our results are consistent with previous findings and seem to indicate that eubacterial gene imports (particularly from δ-Proteobacteria, Clostridia and Actinobacteria) were an important factor in archaebacterial history. Archaebacteria seem to have long relied on Eubacteria as a source of genetic diversity, and while the precise mechanism that allowed these imports is unknown, we suggest that our results support the view that processes comparable to those through which eukaryotes emerged might have been common in archaebacterial history.  相似文献   

3.
By using affinity chromatography methods, we have purified elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) proteins from a host of archaebacteria covering all known divisions in the archaebacterial tree except halophiles, and from such distantly related eubacteria as Thermotoga maritima and Escherichia coli. Polyclonal antibodies were raised against the Tu proteins of Sulfolobus solfataricus, Thermoproteus tenax, Thermococcus celer, Pyrococcus wosei, Archaeoglobus fulgidus, Methanococcus thermolitotrophicus, Thermoplasma acidophilum, and Thermotoga and used to probe the immunochemical relatedness of elongation factors both within and across kingdom boundaries. A selection of the results, presented here, indicates that (i) every archaebacterial EF-Tu is closer (immunochemically) to every other archaebacterial EF-Tu than to the functionally analogous proteins of eubacteria and eukaryotes, with only one possible exception concerning the recognition of eukaryotic (EF-1 alpha) factors by Thermococcus EF-Tu antibodies, and (ii) within the archaebacteria there appears to be a correlation between EF-Tu immunochemical similarities and the phylogenetic relatedness of the organisms inferred from other (sequence) criteria. On the whole, immunochemical similarity data argue against the proposal that the archaebacterial taxon should be split and redistributed between two superkingdoms.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The amino acid sequences of the largest subunits of the RNA polymerases I, II, and III from eukaryotes were compared with those of archaebacterial and eubacterial homologs, and their evolutionary relationships were analyzed in detail by a recently developed tree-making method, the likelihood method of protein phylogeny, as well as by the neighbor-joining method and the parsimony method, together with bootstrap analyses. It was shown that the best tree topologies predicted by the first two methods are identical, whereas the last one predicts a distinct tree. The maximum likelihood tree revealed that, after the separation from archaebacteria, the three eukaryotic RNA polymerases diverged from an ancestral precursor in the eukaryotic lineage. This result is contrasted with the published result showing multiple origins for the three eukaryotic polymerases. It was shown that eukaryotic RNA polymerase I evolved much more rapidly than RNA polymerases II and III: The N-terminal half of RNA polymerase I shows an extraordinarily high evolutionary rate, possibly due to relaxed functional constraints. In contrast the evolutionary rate of archaebacterial RNA polymerase is remarkably limited. In addition, including the second largest subunit of the RNA polymerase, a detailed analysis for the branching pattern of the three major groups of archaebacteria was carried out by the maximum likelihood method. It was shown that the three major groups of archaebacteria are likely to form a single cluster; that is, archaebacteria are likely to be monophyletic as originally proposed by Woese and his colleagues.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Available sequences that correspond to the E. coli ribosomal proteins L11, L1, L10, and L12 from eubacteria, archaebacteria, and eukaryotes have been aligned. The alignments were analyzed qualitatively for shared structural features and for conservation of deletions or insertions. The alignments were further subjected to quantitative phylogenetic analysis, and the amino acid identity between selected pairs of sequences was calculated. In general, eubacteria, archaebacteria, and eukaryotes each form coherent and well-resolved nonoverlapping phylogenetic domains. The degree of diversity of the four proteins between the three groups is not uniform. For L11, the eubacterial and archaebacterial proteins are very similar whereas the eukaryotic L11 is clearly less similar. In contrast, in the case of the L12 proteins and to a lesser extent the L10 proteins, the archaebacterial and eukaryotic proteins are similar whereas the eubacterial proteins are different. The eukaryotic L1 equivalent protein has yet to be identified. If the root of the universal tree is near or within the eubacterial domain, our ribosomal protein-based phylogenies indicate that archaebacteria are monophyletic. The eukaryotic lineage appears to originate either near or within the archaebacterial domain. Correspondence to: P. Dennis  相似文献   

6.
Eukaryotes are traditionally considered to be one of the three natural divisions of the tree of life and the sister group of the Archaebacteria. However, eukaryotic genomes are replete with genes of eubacterial ancestry, and more than 20 mutually incompatible hypotheses have been proposed to account for eukaryote origins. Here we test the predictions of these hypotheses using a novel supertree-based phylogenetic signal-stripping method, and recover supertrees of life based on phylogenies for up to 5,741 single gene families distributed across 185 genomes. Using our signal-stripping method, we show that there are three distinct phylogenetic signals in eukaryotic genomes. In order of strength, these link eukaryotes with the Cyanobacteria, the Proteobacteria, and the Thermoplasmatales, an archaebacterial (euryarchaeotes) group. These signals correspond to distinct symbiotic partners involved in eukaryote evolution: plastids, mitochondria, and the elusive host lineage. According to our whole-genome data, eukaryotes are hardly the sister group of the Archaebacteria, because up to 83% of eukaryotic genes with a prokaryotic homolog have eubacterial, not archaebacterial, origins. The results reject all but two of the current hypotheses for the origin of eukaryotes: those assuming a sulfur-dependent or hydrogen-dependent syntrophy for the origin of mitochondria.  相似文献   

7.
Eubacterial and eukaryotic translation initiation systems have very little in common, and therefore the evolutionary events that gave rise to these two disparate systems are difficult to ascertain. One common feature is the presence of initiation, elongation, and release factors belonging to a large GTPase superfamily. One of these initiation factors, the γ subunit of initiation factor 2 (eIF-2γ), is found only in eukaryotes and archaebacteria. We have sequenced eIF-2γ gene fragments from representative diplomonads, parabasalia, and microsporidia and used these new sequences together with new archaebacterial homologues to examine the phylogenetic position of eIF-2γ within the GTPase superfamily. The archaebacterial and eukaryotic eIF-2γ proteins are found to be very closely related, and are in turn related to SELB, the selenocysteine-specific elongation factor from eubacteria. The overall topology of the GTPase tree further suggests that the eIF-2γ/SELB group may represent an ancient subfamily of GTPases that diverged prior to the last common ancestor of extant life. Received: 2 January 1998 / Accepted: 1 June 1998  相似文献   

8.
As variance from standard phospholipids of eubacteria and eukaryotes, archaebacterial diether phospholipids contain branched alcohol chains (phytanol) linked to glycerol exclusively with ether bonds. Giant vesicles (GVs) constituted of different species of archaebacterial diether phospholipids and glycolipids (archaeosomes) were prepared by electroformation and observed under a phase contrast and/or fluorescence microscope. Archaebacterial lipids and different mixtures of archaebacterial and standard lipids formed GVs which were analysed for size, yield and ability to adhere to each other due to the mediating effects of certain plasma proteins. GVs constituted of different proportions of archaeal or standard phosphatidylcholine were compared. In nonarchaebacterial GVs (in form of multilamellar lipid vesicles, MLVs) the main transition was detected at Tm = 34. 2°C with an enthalpy of ΔH = 0.68 kcal/mol, whereas in archaebacterial GVs (MLVs) we did not observe the main phase transition in the range between 10 and 70°C. GVs constituted of archaebacterial lipids were subject to attractive interaction mediated by beta 2 glycoprotein I and by heparin. The adhesion constant of beta 2 glycoprotein I – mediated adhesion determined from adhesion angle between adhered GVs was in the range of 10−8 J/m2. In the course of protein mediated adhesion, lateral segregation of the membrane components and presence of thin tubular membranous structures were observed. The ability of archaebacterial diether lipids to combine with standard lipids in bilayers and their compatibility with adhesion-mediating molecules offer further evidence that archaebacterial lipids are appropriate for the design of drug carriers.  相似文献   

9.
The 70-kDa heat-shock protein (HSP70) constitutes the most conserved protein present in all organisms that is known to date. Based on global alignment of HSP70 sequences from organisms representing all three domains, numerous sequence signatures that are specific for prokaryotic and eukaryotic homologs have been identified. HSP70s from the two archaebacterial species examined (viz., Halobacterium marismortui and Methanosarcina mazei) have been found to contain all eubacterial but no eukaryotic signature sequences. Based on several novel features of the HSP70 family of proteins (viz., presence of tandem repeats of a 9-amino-acid [a.a.] polypeptide sequence and structural similarity between the first and second quadrants of HSP70, homology of the N-terminal half of HSP70 to the bacterial MreB protein, presence of a conserved insert of 23–27 a.a. in all HSP70s except those from archaebacteria and gram-positive eubacteria) a model for the evolution of HSP70 gene from an early stage is proposed. The HSP70 homologs from archaebacteria and gram-positive bacteria lacking the insert in the N-terminal quadrants are indicated to be the ancestral form of the protein. Detailed phylogenetic analyses of HSP70 sequence data (viz., by bootstrap analyses, maximum parsimony, and maximum likelihood methods) provide evidence that archaebacteria are not monophyletic and show a close evolutionary linkage with the gram-positive eubacteria. These results do not support the traditional archaebacterial tree, where a close relationship between archaebacterial and eukaryotic homologs is observed. To explain the phylogenies based on HSP70 and other gene sequences, a model for the origin of eukaryotic cells involving fusion between archaebacteria and gram-negative eubacteria is proposed. Correspondence to: R. S. Gupta  相似文献   

10.
Forty different antibiotics with diverse kingdom and functional specificities were used to measure the functional characteristics of the archaebacterial translation apparatus. The resulting inhibitory curves, which are characteristic of the cell-free system analyzed, were transformed into quantitative values that were used to cluster the different archaebacteria analyzed. This cluster resembles the phylogenetic tree generated by 16S rRNA sequence comparisons. These results strongly suggest that functional analysis of an appropriate evolutionary clock, such as the ribosome, is of intrinsic phylogenetic value. More importantly, they indicate that the study of the nexus between genotypic and phenotypic (functional) information may shed considerable light on the evolution of the protein synthetic machinery.  相似文献   

11.
The sequence of the genes encoding the four largest subunits of the RNA polymerase of the archaebacterium Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum was determined and putative translation signals were identified. The genes are more strongly homologous to eukaryotic than to eubacterial RNA polymerase genes. Analysis of the polypeptide sequences revealed colinearity of two pairs of adjacent archaebacterial genes encoding the B" and B' or A and C genes, respectively, with two eubacterial and two eukaryotic genes each encoding the two largest RNA polymerase subunits. This difference in sequence organization is discussed in terms of gene fusion in the course of evolution. The degree of conservation is much higher between the archaebacterial and the eukaryotic polypeptides than between the archaebacterial and the eubacterial enzyme. Putative functional domains were identified in two of the subunits of the archaebacterial enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
13.
It has been shown by electron microscopy that the selective removal of the stalk from 50S ribosomal subunits of two representative archaebacteria, namely Methanococcus vaniellii and Sulfolobus solfataricus, is accompanied by loss of the archaebacterial L10 and L12 proteins. The stalk was reformed if archaebacterial core particles were reconstituted with their corresponding split proteins. Next, structurally intact chimeric 50S subunits have been reconstituted in vitro by addition of Escherichia coli ribosomal proteins L10 and L7/L12 to 50S core particles from M vaniellii or S solfataricus, respectively. In the reverse experiment, using core particles from E coli and split proteins from M vaniellii, stalk-bearing 50S particles were also obtained. Analysis of the reconstituted 50S subunits by immunoblotting revealed that E coli L10 was incorporated into archaebacterial core particles in both presence or absence of E coli L7/L12. In contrast, incorporation of E coli L7/L12 into archaebacterial cores was only possible in the presence of E coli L10. Our results suggest that in archaebacteria - as in E coli - the stalk is formed by archaebacterial L12 proteins that bind to the ribosome via L10. The structural equivalence of eubacterial and archaebacterial L10 and L12 proteins has thus for the first time been established. The chimeric reconstitution experiments provide evidence that the domain of protein L10 that interacts with the ribosomal particle is highly conserved between eubacteria and archaebacteria.  相似文献   

14.
Immunological cross-reactivity among three types of H(+)-ATPases, that is, three archaebacterial ATPases, the F1-ATPase from thermophilic bacterium PS3 (TF1) and the vacuolar membrane ATPase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, was examined by means of immunoblot analyses. The three archaebacterial ATPases were very similar in immunological cross-reactivity, suggesting that they belong to the same family of ATPases. Cross-reaction was also observed between the ATPase from Sulfolobus acidocaldarius, one of the three archaebacteria, and TF1. S. cerevisiae vacuolar ATPase reacted with the antibodies prepared against each of the three archaebacterial ATPases, but did not react with the antibody against TF1. Electron microscopic examination revealed that the oligomeric structure of Sulfolobus ATPase was very similar to that of F1-ATPase. These results, taken together, suggest that the archaebacterial ATPases share close structural similarities with the vacuolar ATPases, and, to a lesser degree, with the F0F1-ATPases.  相似文献   

15.
Purified ribosomal subunits from the extremely thermoacidophilic archaebacterium Sulfolobus solfataricus are able to recognize ribosomal subunits from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae forming hybrid monosomes that can be revealed by sucrose gradient analysis and are active in peptide bond formation. Both reciprocal combinations (archaebacterial 30 S + eukaryotic 60 S and archaebacterial 50 S + eukaryotic 40 S) are functional. In contrast, no hybrid couples are formed between subunits of yeast and Escherichia coli ribosomes. These results indicate that ribosomes of at least one archaebacterial species share specific structural features with those of the lower eukaryote S. cerevisiae.  相似文献   

16.
A strategy has been developed for archaebacterial lipid analysis which provides three times the information to describe archaebacterial isolates and is compatible with simultaneous eubacterial/eukaryotic lipid analysis of environmental samples. Eubacterial and micro-eukaryotic biomass, community structure, and nutritional status have been routinely defined in environmental samples by lipid analysis. Lipid profiles are also useful in eubacterial identification and taxonomy. Polar lipid or whole cell ester-linked fatty acids are generally analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy. Archaebacteria are characterized by their ether-linked membrane lipids. There is, however, less diversity in the side chains of archaebacterial membrane lipids as compared the eubacterial ester-linked membrane lipids. The information content of the archaebacterial lipid profile was increased by separately analyzing the polar lipid, glycolipid, and lipid-extracted residue fractions. Identification and quantification were performed by supercritical fluid chromatography. Results are presented for three species of methanogens and four thermoacidophile isolates, and compared with a literature review.  相似文献   

17.
The 23 S RNA genes representative of each of the main archaebacterial subkingdoms, Desulfurococcus mobilis an extreme thermophile, Halococcus morrhuae an extreme halophile and Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum a thermophilic methanogen, were cloned and sequenced. The inferred RNA sequences were aligned with all the available 23 S-like RNAs of other archaebacteria, eubacteria/chloroplasts and the cytoplasm of eukaryotes. Universal secondary structural models containing six major structural domains were refined, and extended, using the sequence comparison approach. Much of the present structure was confirmed but six new helices were added, including one that also exists in the eukaryotic 5.8 S RNA, and extensions were made to several existing helices. The data throw doubt on whether the 5' and 3' ends of the 23 S RNA interact, since no stable helix can form in either the extreme thermophile or the methanogen RNA. A few secondary structural features, specific to the archaebacterial RNAs were identified; two of these were supported by a comparison of the archaebacterial RNA sequences, and experimentally, using chemical and ribonuclease probes. Seven tertiary structural interactions, common to all 23 S-like RNAs, were predicted within unpaired regions of the secondary structural model on the basis of co-variation of nucleotide pairs; two lie in the region of the 23 S RNA corresponding to 5.8 S RNA but they are not conserved in the latter. The flanking sequences of each of the RNAs could base-pair to form long RNA processing stems. They were not conserved in sequence but each exhibited a secondary structural feature that is common to all the archaebacterial stems for both 16 S and 23 S RNAs and constitutes a processing site. Kingdom-specific nucleotides have been identified that are associated with antibiotic binding sites at functional centres in 23 S-like RNAs: in the peptidyl transferase centre (erythromycin-domain V) the archaebacterial RNAs classify with the eukaryotic RNAs; at the elongation factor-dependent GTPase centre (thiostrepton-domain II) they fall with the eubacteria, and at the putative amino acyl tRNA site (alpha-sarcin-domain VI) they resemble eukaryotes. Two of the proposed tertiary interactions offer a structural explanation for how functional coupling of domains II and V occurs at the peptidyl transferase centre. Phylogenetic trees were constructed for the archaebacterial kingdom, and for the other two kingdoms, on the basis of the aligned 23 S-like RNA sequences.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
19.
The dye 10-N-nonyl acridine orange (NAO) is used to label cardiolipin domains in mitochondria and bacteria. The present work represents the first study on the binding of NAO with archaebacterial lipid membranes. By combining absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy with fluorescence microscopy studies, we investigated the interaction of the dye with (a) authentic standards of archaebacterial cardiolipins, phospholipids and sulfoglycolipids; (b) isolated membranes; (c) living cells of a square-shaped extremely halophilic archaeon. Absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy data indicate that the interaction of NAO with archaebacterial cardiolipin analogues is similar to that occurring with diacidic phospholipids and sulfoglycolipids, suggesting as molecular determinants for NAO binding to archaebacterial lipids the presence of two acidic residues or a combination of acidic and carbohydrate residues. In agreement with absorption spectroscopy data, fluorescence data indicate that NAO fluorescence in archaeal membranes cannot be exclusively attributed to bisphosphatidylglycerol and, therefore, different from mitochondria and bacteria, the dye cannot be used as a cardiolipin specific probe in archaeal microorganisms.  相似文献   

20.
A reproducible high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) method for the separation of diethers and tetraethers isolated from archaebacterial phospholipids is reported. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy was used for structural confirmation of these signature lipids. A mixture of tetraethers from a thermoacidophilic archaebacteria was resolved into three major components by the normal phase separation. These components were differentiated by Fourier self-deconvolution of infrared spectra. The application of the HPLC technique to environmental samples may provide an accurate assessment of archaebacterial biomass in various microbial communities.  相似文献   

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