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Molecular Phylogenetic Characterization of Streptomyces Protease Inhibitor Family
Authors:Seiichi Taguchi  Shuichi Kojima  Mahito Terabe  Yoshinori Kumazawa  Hiroshi Kohriyama  Masayuki Suzuki  Kin-ichiro Miura  Haruo Momose
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biological Science and Technology, Science University of Tokyo, 2641 Yamazaki, Noda-shi, Chiba 278, Japan, JP;(2) Institute for Biomolecular Science, Gakushuin University, Mejiro, Tokyo 171, Japan, JP;(3) Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Nagoya University, Furo-cho, Chikusa-ku, Nagoya 464-01, Japan, JP
Abstract:We previously found that proteinaceous protease inhibitors homologous to Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) are widely produced by various Streptomyces species, and we designated them ``SSI-like proteins' (Taguchi S, Kikuchi H, Suzuki M, Kojima S, Terabe M, Miura K, Nakase T, Momose H [1993] Appl Environ Microbiol 59:4338–4341). In this study, SSI-like proteins from five strains of the genus Streptoverticillium were purified and sequenced, and molecular phylogenetic trees were constructed on the basis of the determined amino acid sequences together with those determined previously for Streptomyces species. The phylogenetic trees showed that SSI-like proteins from Streptoverticillium species are phylogenetically included in Streptomyces SSI-like proteins but form a monophyletic group as a distinct lineage within the Streptomyces proteins. This provides an alternative phylogenetic framework to the previous one based on partial small ribosomal RNA sequences, and it may indicate that the phylogenetic affiliation of the genus Streptoverticillium should be revised. The phylogenetic trees also suggested that SSI-like proteins possessing arginine or methionine at the P1 site, the major reactive center site toward target proteases, arose multiple times on independent lineages from ancestral proteins possessing lysine at the P1 site. Most of the codon changes at the P1 site inferred to have occurred during the evolution of SSI-like proteins are consistent with those inferred from the extremely high G + C content of Streptomyces genomes. The inferred minimum number of amino acid replacements at the P1 site was nearly equal to the average number for all the variable sites. It thus appears that positive Darwinian selection, which has been postulated to account for accelerated rates of amino acid replacement at the major reaction center site of mammalian protease inhibitors, may not have dictated the evolution of the bacterial SSI-like proteins. Received: 23 August 1996 / Accepted: 20 November 1996
Keywords:: Protease inhibitor —   Amino acid sequence alignment —  Streptomyces—  Streptoverticillium—   Molecular phylogeny —   Reactive center site —   Amino acid replacement —   Codon change —   G + C content —   Positive Darwinian selection
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