共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Hiroyuki Sawada Fumihiko Suzuki Izumi Matsuda Naruya Saitou 《Journal of molecular evolution》1999,49(5):627-644
Pseudomonas syringae are differentiated into approximately 50 pathovars with different plant pathogenicities and host specificities. To understand
its pathogenicity differentiation and the evolutionary mechanisms of pathogenicity-related genes, phylogenetic analyses were
conducted using 56 strains belonging to 19 pathovars. gyrB and rpoD were adopted as the index genes to determine the course of bacterial genome evolution, and hrpL and hrpS were selected as the representatives of the pathogenicity-related genes located on the genome (chromosome). Based on these
data, NJ, MP, and ML phylogenetic trees were constructed, and thus 3 trees for each gene and 12 gene trees in total were obtained,
all of which showed three distinct monophyletic groups: Groups 1, 2 and 3. The observation that the same set of OTUs constitute
each group in all four genes suggests that these genes had not experienced any intergroup horizontal gene transfer within
P. syringae but have been stable on and evolved along with the P. syringae genome. These four index genes were then compared with another pathogenicity-related gene, argK (the phaseolotoxin-resistant ornithine carbamoyltransferase gene, which exists within the argK–tox gene cluster). All 13 strains of pv. phaseolicola and pv. actinidiae used had been confirmed to produce phaseolotoxin and to have argK, whose sequences were completely identical, without a single synonymous substitution among the strains used (Sawada et al.
1997a). On the other hand, argK were not present on the genomes of the other 43 strains used other than pv. actinidiae and pv. phaseolicola. Thus, the productivity of phaseolotoxin and the possession of the argK gene were shown at only two points on the phylogenetic tree: Group 1 (pv. actinidiae) and Group 3 (pv. phaseolicola). A t test between these two pathovars for the synonymous distances of argK and the tandemly combined sequence of the four index genes showed a high significance, suggesting that the argK gene (or argK–tox gene cluster) experienced horizontal gene transfer and expanded its distribution over two pathovars after the pathovars had
separated, thus showing a base substitution pattern extremely different from that of the noncluster region of the genome.
Received: 18 January 1999 / Accepted: 25 May 1999 相似文献
2.
Horizontal transfer of genes coding for the photosynthetic reaction centers of purple bacteria 总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11
Kenji V. P. Nagashima Akira Hiraishi Keizo Shimada Katsumi Matsuura 《Journal of molecular evolution》1997,45(2):131-136
Phylogenetic trees were drawn and analyzed based on the nucleotide sequences of the 1.5-kb gene fragment coding for the L
and M subunits of the photochemical reaction center of various purple photosynthetic bacteria. These trees are mostly consistent
with phylogenetic trees based on 16S rRNA and soluble cytochrome c, but differ in some significant details. This inconsistency implies horizontal transfer of the genes that code for the photosynthetic
apparatus in purple bacteria. Possibilities of similar transfers of photosynthesis genes during the evolution of photosynthesis
are discussed especially for the establishment of oxygenic photosynthesis.
Received: 8 July 1996 / Accepted: 12 March 1997 相似文献
3.
David A. Fitzpatrick 《Journal of molecular evolution》2009,68(2):171-185
Phenazines are secondary metabolites with broad-spectrum antibiotic activity against bacteria, fungi, and eukaryotes. In pseudomonad
species, a conserved seven-gene phenazine operon (phzABCDEFG) is required for the conversion of chorismic acid to the broad-spectrum antibiotic phenazine-1-carboxylate. Previous
analyses of genes involved in phenazine production from nonpseudomonad species uncovered a high degree of sequence similarity
to pseudomonad homologues. The analyses undertaken in this study wished to eluciadate the evolutionary history of genes involved
in the production of phenazines. Furthermore, I wanted to determine if the phenazine operon has been transferred through horizontal
gene transfer. Analyses of GC content, codon usage patterns, frequency of 3:1 dinucleotides, sequence similarities, and phylogenetic
reconstructions were undertaken to map the evolutionary history of phenazine genes from multiple bacterial species. Patchy
phyletic distribution, high sequence similarities, and phylogenetic evidence infer that pseudomonad, Streptomyces cinnamonensis, Pantoea agglomerans,
Burkholderia cepacia, Pectobacterium atrosepticum, Brevibacterium linens, and Mycobacterium abscessus species all contain a phenazine operon which has most likely been transferred among these species through horizontal gene
transfer. The acquisition of an antibiotic-associated operon is significant, as it may increase the relative fitness of the
recipient species.
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. 相似文献
4.
The Peperomia polybotrya coxI gene intron is the only currently reported group I intron in a vascular plant mitochondrial genome and it likely originated
by horizontal transfer from a fungal donor. We provide a clearer picture of the horizontal transfer and a portrayal of the
evolution of the group I intron since it was gained by the Peperomia mitochondrial genome. The intron was transferred recently in terms of plant evolution, being restricted to the single genus
Peperomia among the order Piperales. Additional support is presented for the suggestion that a recombination/repair mechanism was used
by the intron for integration into the Peperomia mitochondrial genome, as a perfect 1:1 correspondence exists between the intron's presence in a species and the presence
of divergent nucleotide markers flanking the intron insertion site. Sequencing of coxI introns from additional Peperomia species revealed that several mutations have occurred in the intron since the horizontal transfer, but sequence alterations
have not caused frameshifts or created stop codons in the intronic open reading frame. In addition, two coxI pseudogenes in Peperomia cubensis were discovered that lack a large region of coxI exon 2 and contain a truncated version of the group I intron that likely cannot be spliced out.
Received: 29 May 1997 / Accepted: 1 November 1997 相似文献
5.
In translation, separate aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases attach the 20 different amino acids to their cognate tRNAs, with the
exception of glutamine. Eukaryotes and some bacteria employ a specific glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS) which other Bacteria,
the Archaea (archaebacteria), and organelles apparently lack. Instead, tRNAGln is initially acylated with glutamate by glutamyl-tRNA synthetase (GluRS), then the glutamate moiety is transamidated to glutamine.
Lamour et al. [(1994) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 91:8670–8674] suggested that an early duplication of the GluRS gene in eukaryotes
gave rise to the gene for GlnRS—a copy of which was subsequently transferred to proteobacteria. However, questions remain
about the occurrence of GlnRS genes among the Eucarya (eukaryotes) outside of the ``crown' taxa (animals, fungi, and plants),
the distribution of GlnRS genes in the Bacteria, and their evolutionary relationships to genes from the Archaea. Here, we
show that GlnRS occurs in the most deeply branching eukaryotes and that putative GluRS genes from the Archaea are more closely
related to GlnRS and GluRS genes of the Eucarya than to those of Bacteria. There is still no evidence for the existence of
GlnRS in the Archaea. We propose that the last common ancestor to contemporary cells, or cenancestor, used transamidation
to synthesize Gln-tRNAGln and that both the Bacteria and the Archaea retained this pathway, while eukaryotes developed a specific GlnRS gene through
the duplication of an existing GluRS gene. In the Bacteria, GlnRS genes have been identified in a total of 10 species from
three highly diverse taxonomic groups: Thermus/Deinococcus, Proteobacteria γ/β subdivision, and Bacteroides/Cytophaga/Flexibacter.
Although all bacterial GlnRS form a monophyletic group, the broad phyletic distribution of this tRNA synthetase suggests that
multiple gene transfers from eukaryotes to bacteria occurred shortly after the Archaea–eukaryote divergence. 相似文献
6.
SpHox8 is the paralog group 8 Hox gene of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. This identification follows from an analysis of the sequence of the complete open reading frame of a late-gastrula-stage
cDNA clone; from direct linkage to adjacent Hox genes in a fosmid contig; and from blot hybridizations carried out on pulse field gel electrophoretic separations. SpHox8 is a single-copy gene, and there is only one Hox gene cluster per genome in S. purpuratus.
Received: 7 November 1996 / Accepted: 4 December 1996 相似文献
7.
Graziano Pesole Luigi R. Ceci Carmela Gissi Cecilia Saccone Carla Quagliariello 《Journal of molecular evolution》1996,43(5):447-452
We have analyzed the nad3-rps12 locus for eight angiosperms in order to compare the utility of mitochondrial DNA and edited mRNA sequences in phylogenetic
reconstruction. The two coding regions, containing from 25 to 35 editing sites in the various plants, have been concatenated
in order to increase the significance of the analysis. Differing from the corresponding chloroplast sequences, unedited mitochondrial
DNA sequences seem to evolve under a quasi-neutral substitution process which undifferentiates the nucleotide substitution
rates for the three codon positions. By using complete gene sequences (all codon positions) we found that genomic sequences
provide a classical angiosperm phylogenetic tree with a clear-cut grouping of monocotyledons and dicotyledons with Magnoliidae
at the basal branch of the tree. Conversely, owing to their low nucleotide substitution rates, edited mRNA sequences were
found not to be suitable for studying phylogenetic relationships among angiosperms.
Received: 24 January 1996 / Accepted: 5 June 1996 相似文献
8.
The polyubiquitin gene, encoding tandemly repeated multiple ubiquitins, constitutes a uniquitin gene subfamily. It has been
demonstrated that polyubiquitin genes are subject to concerted evolution; namely, the individual ubiquitin coding units contained
within a polyubiquitin gene are more similar to one another than they are to the ubiquitin coding units in the orthologous
gene from other species. However there has been no comprehensive study on the concerted evolution of polyubiquitin genes in
a wide range of species, because the relationships (orthologous or paralogous) among multiple polyubiquitin genes from different
species have not been extensively analyzed yet. In this report, we present the results of analyzing the nucleotide sequence
of polyubiquitin genes of mammals, available in the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank nucleotide sequence databases, in which we found that
there are two groups of polyubiquitin genes in an orthologous relationship. Based on this result, we analyzed the concerted
evolution of the polyubiquitin gene in various species and compared the frequency of concerted evolutionary events interspecifically
by taking into consideration that the rate of synonymous substitution at the polyubiquitin gene locus may vary depending on
species. We found that the concerted evolutionary events in polyubiquitin genes have been more frequent in rats and Chinese
hamsters than those in humans, cows, and sheep. The guinea pig polyubiquitin gene was an intermediate example. The frequency
of concerted evolution in the mouse gene was unexpectedly low compared to that of other rodent genes.
Received: 18 January 2000 / Accepted: 26 April 2000 相似文献
9.
The D- and L-specific nicotine oxidases are flavoproteins involved in the oxidative degradation of nicotine by the Gram-positive
soil bacterium Arthrobacter nicotinovorans. Their structural genes are located on a 160-kbp plasmid together with those of other nicotine-degrading enzymes. They are
structurally unrelated at the DNA as well as at the protein level. Each of these oxidases possesses a high degree of substrate
specificity; their catalytic stereoselectivity is absolute, although they are able to bind both enantiomeric substrates with
a similar affinity. It appears that the existence of these enzymes is the result of convergent evolution. The amino acid sequence
of 6-hydroxy-l-nicotine oxidase (EC 1.5.3.6) as derived from the respective structural gene shows considerable structural similarity with
eukaryotic monoamine oxidases (EC 1.4.3.4) but not with monoamine oxidases from prokaryotic bacteria including those of the
genus Arthrobacter. These similarities are not confined to the nucleotide-binding sites. A 100-amino acid stretch at the N-terminal regions of
6-hydroxy-l-nicotine oxidase and human monoamine oxidases A possess a 35% homology. Overall, 27.0, 26.9, and 25.8% of the amino acid
positions of the monoamine oxidases of Aspergillus niger (N), humans (A), and rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri) are identical to those of 6-hydroxy-l-nicotine oxidase (Smith–Waterman algorithm). In addition, the G+C content of the latter enzyme is in the range of that of
eukaryotic monoamine oxidases and definitely lower than that of the A. nicotinovorans DNA and even that of the pAO1 DNA. The primary structure of 6-hydroxy-d-nicotine oxidase (EC 1.5.3.5) does not reveal its evolutionary history as easily. Significant similarities are found with
a mitomycin radical oxidase from Streptomyces lavendulae (23.3%) and a ``hypothetical protein' from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (26.0%). It is proposed that the plasmid-encoded gene of 6-hydroxy-l-nicotine oxidase evolved after horizontal transfer from an eukaryotic source.
Received: 6 March 1998 / Accepted: 15 July 1998 相似文献
10.
Syvanen M 《Journal of molecular evolution》2002,54(2):258-266
The deduced amino acid sequences from 1200 Haemophilus influenzae genes was compared to a data set that contained the orfs from yeast, two different Archaea and the Gram+ and Gram− bacteria,
Bacillus subtilis and Escherichia coli. The results of the comparison yielded a 26 orthologous gene set that had at least one representative from each of the four
groups. A four taxa phylogenetic relationship for these 26 genes was determined. The statistical significance of each minimal
tree was tested against the two alternative four taxa trees. The result was that four genes significantly supported the (Archaea,
Eukaryota) (Gram+, Gram−) topology, two genes supported the one where Gram− and Eukaryota form a clade, and one gene supported
the tree where Gram+ and Eukaryota define one clade. The remaining genes do not uniquely support any phylogeny, thereby collapsing
the two central nodes into a single node. These are referred to as star phylogenies.
I offer a new suggestion for the mechanism that gave rise to the star phylogenies. Namely, these are genes that are younger
than the underlying lineages that currently harbor them. This hypothesis is examined with two proteins that display the star
phylogeny; namely onithine transcarbamylase and tryptophan synthetase. It is shown, using the distance matrix rate test, that
the rate of evolution of these two proteins is comparable to a control gene when rates are determined by comparing closely
related species. This implies that the genes under comparison experience comparable functional constraint. However, when the
genes from remotely related species are compared, a plateau is encountered. Since we see no unusual levels of functional constraint
this plateau cannot be attributed to the divergence of the protein having reached saturation. The simplest explanation is
that the genes displaying the star phylogenies were introduced after Archaea, Eukaryota, and Bacteria had diverged from one
another. They presumably spread through life by horizontal gene transfer.
Received: 12 July 2001 / Accepted: 27 July 2001 相似文献
11.
P elements of two different subfamilies designated as M- and O-type are thought to have invaded host species in the Drosophila obscura group via horizontal transmission from external sources. Sequence comparisons with P elements isolated from other species suggested that the horizontal invasion by the O-type must have been a rather recent
event, whereas the M-type invasion should have occurred in the more distant past. To trace the phylogenetic history of O-type
elements, additional taxa were screened for the presence of O- and M-type elements using type-specific PCR primers. The phylogeny
deduced from the sequence data of a 927-bp section (14 taxa) indicate that O-type elements have undergone longer periods of
regular vertical transmission in the lineages of the saltans and willistoni groups of Drosophila. However, starting from a species of the D. willistoni group they were transmitted horizontally into other lineages. First the lineage of the D. affinis subgroup was infected, and finally, in a more recent wave of horizontal spread, species of three different genera were invaded
by O-type elements from the D. affinis lineage: Scaptomyza, Lordiphosa, and the sibling species D. bifasciata/D. imaii of the Drosophila obscura subgroup. The O-type elements isolated from these taxa are almost identical (sequence divergence <1%). In contrast, no such
striking similarities are observed among M-type elements. Nevertheless, the sequence phylogeny of M-type elements is also
not in accordance with the phylogeny of their host species, suggesting earlier horizontal transfer events. The results imply
that P elements cross species barriers more frequently than previously thought but require a particular genomic environment and
thus seem to be confined to a rather narrow spectrum of host species. Consequently, different P element types acquired by successive horizontal transmission events often coexist within the same genome.
Received: 15 May 2000 / Accepted: 19 July 2000 相似文献
12.
Until recently it was believed that most Bacteria form Gln-tRNAGLN by the amidation of Glu-tRNAGLN, only a few members of the γ subdivision of Proteobacteria being able to charge tRNAGLN directly. We undertook a phylogenetic study in an attempt to determine at what point the changeover to the direct system
may have occurred. To this end, we selected a number of representative Proteobacteria to see if we could find a division point.
We constructed degenerate primers and conducted PCR analysis to identify which Bacteria had Gln-tRNA synthetase, on the one
hand, and which had the amidotransferase system, on the other. At the same time, we surveyed data banks of completely sequenced
microbial genomes, as well as those for genomes in the process of being sequenced. These combined efforts revealed four Proteobacteria
in a phylogenetically intermediate position which have the genetic potential for both mechanisms. Perplexingly, however, three
distantly related bacteria were also found to have both enzymes.
Received: 12 January 1999 / Accepted: 19 July 1999 相似文献
13.
Hao Wu Hongzhu Qu Ning Wan Zhang Zhang Songnian Hu Jun Yu CAS 《基因组蛋白质组与生物信息学报(英文版)》2012,10(4):186-196
Although strand-biased gene distribution(SGD) was described some two decades ago,the underlying molecular mechanisms and their relationship remain elusive.Its facets include,but are not limited to,the degree of biases,the strand-preference of genes,and the influence of background nucleotide composition variations.Using a dataset composed of 364 non-redundant bacterial genomes,we sought to illustrate our current understanding of SGD.First,when we divided the collection of bacterial genomes into non-polC and polC groups according to their possession of DnaE isoforms that correlate closely with taxonomy,the SGD of the polC group stood out more significantly than that of the non-polC group.Second,when examining horizontal gene transfer,coupled with gene functional conservation(essentiality) and expressivity(level of expression),we realized that they all contributed to SGD.Third,we further demonstrated a weaker G-dominance on the leading strand of the non-polC group but strong purine dominance(both G and A) on the leading strand of the polC group.We propose that strand-biased nucleotide composition plays a decisive role for SGD since the polC-bearing genomes are not only AT-rich but also have pronounced purine-rich leading strands,and we believe that a special mutation spectrum that leads to a strong purine asymmetry and a strong strand-biased nucleotide composition coupled with functional selections for genes and their functions are both at work. 相似文献
14.
A phylogenetic analysis of the five major families of DNA polymerase is presented. Viral and plasmid sequences are included
in this compilation along with cellular enzymes. The classification by Ito and Braithwaite (Ito and Braithwaite 1991) of the
A, B, C, D, and X families has been extended to accommodate the ``Y family' of DNA polymerases that are related to the eukaryotic
RAD30 and the bacterial UmuC gene products. After analysis, our data suggest that no DNA polymerase family was universally
conserved among the three biological domains and no simple evolutionary scenario could explain that observation. Furthermore,
viruses and plasmids carry a remarkably diverse set of DNA polymerase genes, suggesting that lateral gene transfer is frequent
and includes non-orthologous gene displacements between cells and viruses. The relationships between viral and host genes
appear very complex. We propose that the gamma DNA polymerase of the mitochondrion replication apparatus is of phage origin
and that this gene replaced the one in the bacterial ancestor. Often there was no obvious relation between the viral and the
host DNA polymerase, but an interesting exception concerned the family B enzymes: in which ancient gene exchange can be detected
between the viruses and their hosts. Additional evidence for horizontal gene transfers between cells and viruses comes from
an analysis of the small damage-inducible DNA polymerases. Taken together, these findings suggest a complex evolutionary history
of the DNA replication apparatus that involved significant exchanges between viruses, plasmids, and their hosts. 相似文献
15.
16.
Javier García-Planells Nuria Paricio Jonathan B. Clark Rosa de Frutos Margaret G. Kidwell 《Journal of molecular evolution》1998,47(3):282-291
A phylogenetic analysis of P transposable elements in the Drosophila obscura species group is described. Multiple P sequences from each of 10 species were obtained using PCR primers that flank a conserved region of exon 2 of the transposase
gene. In general, the P element phylogeny is congruent with the species phylogeny, indicating that the dominant mode of transmission has been vertical,
from generation to generation. One manifestation of this is the distinction of P elements from the Old World obscura and subobscura subgroups from those of the New World affinis subgroup. However, the overall distribution of elements within the obscura species group is not congruent with the phylogenetic relationships of the species themselves. There are at least four distinct
subfamilies of P elements, which differ in sequence from each other by as much as 34%, and some individual species carry sequences belonging
to different subfamilies. P sequences from D. bifasciata are particularly interesting. These sequences belong to two subfamilies and both are distinct from all other P elements identified in this survey. Several mechanisms are postulated to be involved in determining phylogenetic relationships
among P elements in the obscura group. In addition to vertical transmission, these include retention of ancestral polymorphisms and horizontal transfer by
an unknown mating-independent mechanism. 相似文献
17.
Tominaga O Su ZH Kim CG Okamoto M Imura Y Osawa S 《Journal of molecular evolution》2000,50(6):541-549
Phylogenetic analyses based on the mitochondrial ND5 gene comparisons and the geohistory of the Japanese Islands suggest
that each Japanese species belonging to the subtribe Carabina has its own history for the establishment of its present habitat
in the Japanese Islands. It can be roughly classified into two categories: (1) species which were derived from the ancestry
that inhabited ancient Japan at the time of its split from the Eurasian Continent [ca. 15 million years ago (MYA)], followed
by diversification within the Japanese Islands; and (2) species which invaded Hokkaido from the Eurasian Continent through
land-bridges from Sakhalin and/or the Kuriles or from western Japan from the Korean Peninsula during the glacial era (<2 MYA).
Received: 28 September 1999 / Accepted: 25 February 2000 相似文献
18.
19.
20.
The role of lateral gene transfer (LGT) in prokaryotes has been shown to rapidly change the genome content, providing new
gene tools for environmental adaptation. Features related to pathogenesis and resistance to strong selective conditions have
been widely shown to be products of gene transfer between bacteria. The genomes of the γ-proteobacteria from the genus Xanthomonas, composed mainly of phytopathogens, have potential genomic islands that may represent imprints of such evolutionary processes.
In this work, the evolution of genes involved in the pathway responsible for arginine biosynthesis in Xanthomonadales was
investigated, and several lines of evidence point to the foreign origin of the arg genes clustered within a potential operon. Their presence inside a potential genomic island, bordered by a tRNA gene, the
unusual ranking of sequence similarity, and the atypical phylogenies indicate that the metabolic pathway for arginine biosynthesis
was acquired through LGT in the Xanthomonadales group. Moreover, although homologues were also found in Bacteroidetes (Flavobacteria
group), for many of the genes analyzed close homologues are detected in different life domains (Eukarya and Archaea), indicating
that the source of these arg genes may have been outside the Bacteria clade. The possibility of replacement of a complete primary metabolic pathway by
LGT events supports the selfish operon hypothesis and may occur only under very special environmental conditions. Such rare
events reveal part of the history of these interesting mosaic Xanthomonadales genomes, disclosing the importance of gene transfer
modifying primary metabolism pathways and extending the scenario for bacterial genome evolution. 相似文献