myo‐inositol (MI) is a key sugar alcohol component of various metabolites, e.g. phosphatidylinositol‐based phospholipids that are abundant in animal and plant cells. The seven‐step pathway of MI degradation was previously characterized in various soil bacteria including Bacillus subtilis. Through a combination of bioinformatics and experimental techniques we identified a novel variant of the MI catabolic pathway in the marine hyperthermophilic bacterium Thermotoga maritima. By using in vitro biochemical assays with purified recombinant proteins we characterized four inositol catabolic enzymes encoded in the TM0412–TM0416 chromosomal gene cluster. The novel catabolic pathway in T. maritima starts as the conventional route using the myo‐inositol dehydrogenase IolG followed by three novel reactions. The first 2‐keto‐myo‐inositol intermediate is oxidized by another, previously unknown NAD‐dependent dehydrogenase TM0412 (named IolM), and a yet unidentified product of this reaction is further hydrolysed by TM0413 (IolN) to form 5‐keto‐l ‐gluconate. The fourth step involves epimerization of 5‐keto‐l ‐gluconate to d ‐tagaturonate by TM0416 (IolO). T. maritima is unable to grow on myo‐inositol as a single carbon source. The determined in vitro specificity of the InoEFGK (TM0418–TM0421) transporter to myo‐inositol‐phosphate suggests that the novel pathway in Thermotoga utilizes a phosphorylated derivative of inositol. 相似文献
Mutation bias is one of the forces that may constrain the variation at
microsatellite loci. Here, we study the dynamics of population statistics
and the genetic distance between two populations under multiple stepwise
mutations with linear bias and random drift. Expressions are derived for
these statistics as functions of time, as well as at mutation-drift
equilibrium. Applying these expressions to published data on humans and
chimpanzees, the regression coefficient of mutation bias on allele size was
estimated to be at least between - 0.0064 and -0.013. The assumption of
mutational bias produces larger estimates of divergence times than are
obtained in its absence; in particular, the time of split between African
and non-African human populations is estimated to be between 183,000 and
222,000 years, assuming one-step mutations and no selection. With multistep
mutations, the divergence time is estimated to be lower.
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Section Arachis is the largest of nine sections in the genus Arachis and includes domesticated peanut, A. hypogaea L. Most species are diploids (x=10) with two tetraploids and a few aneuploids. Three genome types have been recognized in this section (A, B and D), but
the genomes are not well characterized and relationships of several newly described species are uncertain. To clarify genomic
relationships in section Arachis, cytogenetic information and molecular data from amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) and the trnT-F plastid region were used to provide an additional insight into genome composition and species relationships. Cytogenetic
information supports earlier observations on genome types of A. cruziana, A. herzogii, A. kempff-mercadoi and A. kuhlmannii but was inconclusive about the genome composition of A. benensis, A. hoehnei, A. ipaensis, A. palustris, A. praecox and A. williamsii. An AFLP dendrogram resolved species into four major clusters and showed A. hypogaea grouping closely with A. ipaensis and A. williamsii. Sequence data of the trnT-F region provided genome-specific information and showed for the first time that the B and D genomes are more closely related
to each other than to the A genome. Integration of information from cytogenetics and biparentally and maternally inherited
genomic regions show promise in understanding genome types and relationships in Arachis. 相似文献
Roots of wheat seedlings (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Weibulls Starke) were cooled (+1°C) for 24 h while the shoots were kept at 25°C. The treatment induced an increased water deficit in the leaves. Fresh weight, dry weight, and the uptake and distribution of potassium and calcium were measured before and after cooling. Growth, measured both as fresh weight and dry weight increase, was reduced during the cold treatment. Afterwards (at 20°C), growth recovered to nearly pre-stress rates. Analysis of the potassium fluxes in and out of the roots by 86Rb techniques showed that influx, and to a lesser extent efflux, were inhibited at low temperature. The result was a net potassium uptake rate of one-third that of unstressed plants. After the cooling period the potassium influx increased to the rate of control plants. The potassium efflux increased to one and one-half times the rate of unstressed wheat so that net uptake was negative. The increase in potassium efflux was explained by a higher permeability of the root cell membranes after cooling. The net uptake of calcium was reduced to one-third by root cooling. Contrary to potassium uptake, calcium uptake increased under post-stress conditions, partly due to a low efflux rate. During root cooling there was a redistribution of dry matter from the leaves down towards the lower part of the shoot. Afterwards the original distribution of dry matter was reestablished. The net flow of potassium and calcium followed a similar pattern as dry matter, suggesting a growth-regulated flow. 相似文献
Taxonomy lies at the heart of species conservation, yet many large New Zealand orthopterans remain undescribed. Among New Zealand’s anostostomatid wētā, Hemiandrus (ground wētā) is the most speciose genus but also the most poorly characterised and thus most in need of taxonomic and ecological work. Here we redescribe H. maculifrons and describe two new species of ground wētā previously encompassed by the specific name Hemiandrus maculifrons: Hemiandrus luna sp. nov. and H. brucei sp. nov. We also describe a morphologically similar and related species, Hemiandrus nox sp. nov.