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1.
PLoS Pathog ; 18(12): e1011024, 2022 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36538568

RESUMO

Mitosomes are highly reduced forms of mitochondria which have lost two of the 'defining' features of the canonical organelle, the mitochondrial genome, and the capacity to generate energy in the form of ATP. Mitosomes are found in anaerobic protists and obligate parasites and, in most of the studied organisms, have a conserved function in the biosynthesis of iron-sulfur clusters (ISC) that are indispensable cofactors of many essential proteins. The genomes of some mitosome-bearing human pathogenic Microsporidia encode homologues of an alternative oxidase (AOX). This mitochondrial terminal respiratory oxidase is absent from the human host, and hence is a potential target for the development of new antimicrobial agents. Here we present experimental evidence for the mitosomal localization of AOX in the microsporidian Trachipleistophora hominis and demonstrate that it has an important role during the parasite's life cycle progression. Using a recently published methodology for synchronising T. hominis infection of mammalian cell lines, we demonstrated specific inhibition of T. hominis early meront growth and replication by an AOX inhibitor colletochlorin B. Treatment of T. hominis-infected host cells with the drug also inhibited re-infection by newly formed dispersive spores. Addition of the drug during the later stages of the parasite life cycle, when our methods suggest that AOX is not actively produced and T. hominis mitosomes are mainly active in Fe/S cluster biosynthesis, had no inhibitory effects on the parasites. Control experiments with the AOX-deficient microsporidian species Encephalitozoon cuniculi, further demonstrated the specificity of inhibition by the drug. Using the same methodology, we demonstrate effects of two clinically used anti-microsporidian drugs albendazole and fumagillin on the cell biology and life cycle progression of T. hominis infecting mammalian host cells. In summary, our results reveal that T. hominis mitosomes have an active role to play in the progression of the parasite life cycle as well as an important role in the biosynthesis of essential Fe/S clusters. Our work also demonstrates that T. hominis is a useful model for testing the efficacy of therapeutic agents and for studying the physiology and cell biology of microsporidian parasites growing inside infected mammalian cells.


Assuntos
Proteínas Fúngicas , Oxirredutases , Animais , Humanos , Proteínas Fúngicas/metabolismo , Oxirredutases/genética , Estágios do Ciclo de Vida , Mamíferos
2.
Syst Biol ; 72(3): 723-737, 2023 Jun 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35713492

RESUMO

Common molecular phylogenetic characteristics such as long branches and compositional heterogeneity can be problematic for phylogenetic reconstruction when using amino acid data. Recoding alignments to reduced alphabets before phylogenetic analysis has often been used both to explore and potentially decrease the effect of such problems. We tested the effectiveness of this strategy on topological accuracy using simulated data on four-taxon trees. We simulated alignments in phylogenetically challenging ways to test the phylogenetic accuracy of analyses using various recoding strategies together with commonly used homogeneous models. We tested three recoding methods based on amino acid exchangeability, and another recoding method based on lowering the compositional heterogeneity among alignment sequences as measured by the Chi-squared statistic. Our simulation results show that on trees with long branches where sequences approach saturation, accuracy was not greatly affected by exchangeability-based recodings, but Chi-squared-based recoding decreased accuracy. We then simulated sequences with different kinds of compositional heterogeneity over the tree. Recoding often increased accuracy on such alignments. Exchangeability-based recoding was rarely worse than not recoding, and often considerably better. Recoding based on lowering the Chi-squared value improved accuracy in some cases but not in others, suggesting that low compositional heterogeneity by itself is not sufficient to increase accuracy in the analysis of these alignments. We also simulated alignments using site-specific amino acid profiles, making sequences that had compositional heterogeneity over alignment sites. Exchangeability-based recoding coupled with site-homogeneous models had poor accuracy for these data sets but Chi-squared-based recoding on these alignments increased accuracy. We then simulated data sets that were compositionally both site- and tree-heterogeneous, like many real data sets. The effect on the accuracy of recoding such doubly problematic data sets varied widely, depending on the type of compositional tree heterogeneity and on the recoding scheme. Interestingly, analysis of unrecoded compositionally heterogeneous alignments with the NDCH or CAT models was generally more accurate than homogeneous analysis, whether recoded or not. Overall, our results suggest that making trees for recoded amino acid data sets can be useful, but they need to be interpreted cautiously as part of a more comprehensive analysis. The use of better-fitting models like NDCH and CAT, which directly account for the patterns in the data, may offer a more promising long-term solution for analyzing empirical data. [Compositional heterogeneity; models of evolution; phylogenetic methods; recoding amino acid data sets.].


Assuntos
Aminoácidos , Filogenia , Simulação por Computador
3.
Mol Biol Evol ; 37(2): 524-539, 2020 02 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31647561

RESUMO

Hydrogenosomes are H2-producing mitochondrial homologs found in some anaerobic microbial eukaryotes that provide a rare intracellular niche for H2-utilizing endosymbiotic archaea. Among ciliates, anaerobic and aerobic lineages are interspersed, demonstrating that the switch to an anaerobic lifestyle with hydrogenosomes has occurred repeatedly and independently. To investigate the molecular details of this transition, we generated genomic and transcriptomic data sets from anaerobic ciliates representing three distinct lineages. Our data demonstrate that hydrogenosomes have evolved from ancestral mitochondria in each case and reveal different degrees of independent mitochondrial genome and proteome reductive evolution, including the first example of complete mitochondrial genome loss in ciliates. Intriguingly, the FeFe-hydrogenase used for generating H2 has a unique domain structure among eukaryotes and appears to have been present, potentially through a single lateral gene transfer from an unknown donor, in the common aerobic ancestor of all three lineages. The early acquisition and retention of FeFe-hydrogenase helps to explain the facility whereby mitochondrial function can be so radically modified within this diverse and ecologically important group of microbial eukaryotes.


Assuntos
Cilióforos/classificação , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica/métodos , Mitocôndrias/genética , Análise de Sequência de DNA/métodos , Aerobiose , Anaerobiose , Cilióforos/fisiologia , Evolução Molecular , Transferência Genética Horizontal , Genoma Mitocondrial , Hidrogênio/metabolismo , Filogenia , Análise de Sequência de RNA
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(23): E4602-E4611, 2017 06 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28533395

RESUMO

A root for the archaeal tree is essential for reconstructing the metabolism and ecology of early cells and for testing hypotheses that propose that the eukaryotic nuclear lineage originated from within the Archaea; however, published studies based on outgroup rooting disagree regarding the position of the archaeal root. Here we constructed a consensus unrooted archaeal topology using protein concatenation and a multigene supertree method based on 3,242 single gene trees, and then rooted this tree using a recently developed model of genome evolution. This model uses evidence from gene duplications, horizontal transfers, and gene losses contained in 31,236 archaeal gene families to identify the most likely root for the tree. Our analyses support the monophyly of DPANN (Diapherotrites, Parvarchaeota, Aenigmarchaeota, Nanoarchaeota, Nanohaloarchaea), a recently discovered cosmopolitan and genetically diverse lineage, and, in contrast to previous work, place the tree root between DPANN and all other Archaea. The sister group to DPANN comprises the Euryarchaeota and the TACK Archaea, including Lokiarchaeum, which our analyses suggest are monophyletic sister lineages. Metabolic reconstructions on the rooted tree suggest that early Archaea were anaerobes that may have had the ability to reduce CO2 to acetate via the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway. In contrast to proposals suggesting that genome reduction has been the predominant mode of archaeal evolution, our analyses infer a relatively small-genomed archaeal ancestor that subsequently increased in complexity via gene duplication and horizontal gene transfer.


Assuntos
Archaea/genética , Evolução Molecular , Genoma Arqueal , Modelos Genéticos , Algoritmos , Archaea/classificação , Archaea/metabolismo , Eucariotos/classificação , Eucariotos/genética , Duplicação Gênica , Transferência Genética Horizontal , Redes e Vias Metabólicas/genética , Família Multigênica , Filogenia , Temperatura
5.
Mol Biol Evol ; 35(4): 984-1002, 2018 04 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29149300

RESUMO

Most phylogenetic models assume that the evolutionary process is stationary and reversible. In addition to being biologically improbable, these assumptions also impair inference by generating models under which the likelihood does not depend on the position of the root. Consequently, the root of the tree cannot be inferred as part of the analysis. Yet identifying the root position is a key component of phylogenetic inference because it provides a point of reference for polarizing ancestor-descendant relationships and therefore interpreting the tree. In this paper, we investigate the effect of relaxing the unrealistic reversibility assumption and allowing the position of the root to be another unknown. We propose two hierarchical models that are centered on a reversible model but perturbed to allow nonreversibility. The models differ in the degree of structure imposed on the perturbations. The analysis is performed in the Bayesian framework using Markov chain Monte Carlo methods for which software is provided. We illustrate the performance of the two nonreversible models in analyses of simulated data using two types of topological priors. We then apply the models to a real biological data set, the radiation of polyploid yeasts, for which there is robust biological opinion about the root position. Finally, we apply the models to a second biological alignment for which the rooted tree is controversial: the ribosomal tree of life. We compare the two nonreversible models and conclude that both are useful in inferring the position of the root from real biological data.


Assuntos
Modelos Genéticos , Filogenia , Teorema de Bayes , Cadeias de Markov , Método de Monte Carlo , Ribossomos , Saccharomyces cerevisiae
6.
Nature ; 504(7479): 231-6, 2013 Dec 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24336283

RESUMO

The discovery of the Archaea and the proposal of the three-domains 'universal' tree, based on ribosomal RNA and core genes mainly involved in protein translation, catalysed new ideas for cellular evolution and eukaryotic origins. However, accumulating evidence suggests that the three-domains tree may be incorrect: evolutionary trees made using newer methods place eukaryotic core genes within the Archaea, supporting hypotheses in which an archaeon participated in eukaryotic origins by founding the host lineage for the mitochondrial endosymbiont. These results provide support for only two primary domains of life--Archaea and Bacteria--because eukaryotes arose through partnership between them.


Assuntos
Archaea/classificação , Eucariotos/classificação , Modelos Biológicos , Filogenia , Archaea/citologia , Archaea/genética , Bactérias/classificação , Bactérias/genética , Membrana Celular/metabolismo , Eucariotos/citologia , Eucariotos/genética , Mitocôndrias/genética , RNA Ribossômico/genética , Simbiose
7.
Cell Mol Life Sci ; 75(5): 921-938, 2018 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29058016

RESUMO

Amino acid transporters are essential components of prokaryote and eukaryote cells, possess distinct physiological functions, and differ markedly in substrate specificity. Amino acid transporters can be both drug targets and drug transporters (bioavailability, targeting) with many monogenic disorders resulting from dysfunctional membrane transport. The largest collection of amino acid transporters (including the mammalian SLC6, SLC7, SLC32, SLC36, and SLC38 families), across all kingdoms of life, is within the Amino acid-Polyamine-organoCation (APC) superfamily. The LeuT-fold is a paradigm structure for APC superfamily amino acid transporters and carriers of sugars, neurotransmitters, electrolytes, osmolytes, vitamins, micronutrients, signalling molecules, and organic and fatty acids. Each transporter is specific for a unique sub-set of solutes, specificity being determined by how well a substrate fits into each binding pocket. However, the molecular basis of substrate selectivity remains, by and large, elusive. Using an integrated computational and experimental approach, we demonstrate that a single position within the LeuT-fold can play a crucial role in determining substrate specificity in mammalian and arthropod amino acid transporters within the APC superfamily. Systematic mutation of the amino acid residue occupying the equivalent position to LeuT V104 titrates binding pocket space resulting in dramatic changes in substrate selectivity in exemplar APC amino acid transporters including PAT2 (SLC36A2) and SNAT5 (SLC38A5). Our work demonstrates how a single residue/site within an archetypal structural motif can alter substrate affinity and selectivity within this important superfamily of diverse membrane transporters.


Assuntos
Sistemas de Transporte de Aminoácidos/química , Sistemas de Transporte de Aminoácidos/genética , Sistemas de Transporte de Aminoácidos/metabolismo , Aminoácidos/metabolismo , Domínios e Motivos de Interação entre Proteínas , Animais , Transporte Biológico , Domínio Catalítico/genética , Humanos , Modelos Moleculares , Família Multigênica , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Filogenia , Domínios e Motivos de Interação entre Proteínas/genética , Especificidade por Substrato/genética
8.
PLoS Pathog ; 12(11): e1005870, 2016 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27855212

RESUMO

Microsporidia are strict obligate intracellular parasites that infect a wide range of eukaryotes including humans and economically important fish and insects. Surviving and flourishing inside another eukaryotic cell is a very specialised lifestyle that requires evolutionary innovation. Genome sequence analyses show that microsporidia have lost most of the genes needed for making primary metabolites, such as amino acids and nucleotides, and also that they have only a limited capacity for making adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Since microsporidia cannot grow and replicate without the enormous amounts of energy and nucleotide building blocks needed for protein, DNA, and RNA biosynthesis, they must have evolved ways of stealing these substrates from the infected host cell. Providing they can do this, genome analyses suggest that microsporidia have the enzyme repertoire needed to use and regenerate the imported nucleotides efficiently. Recent functional studies suggest that a critical innovation for adapting to intracellular life was the acquisition by lateral gene transfer of nucleotide transport (NTT) proteins that are now present in multiple copies in all microsporidian genomes. These proteins are expressed on the parasite surface and allow microsporidia to steal ATP and other purine nucleotides for energy and biosynthesis from their host. However, it remains unclear how other essential metabolites, such as pyrimidine nucleotides, are acquired. Transcriptomic and experimental studies suggest that microsporidia might manipulate host cell metabolism and cell biological processes to promote nucleotide synthesis and to maximise the potential for ATP and nucleotide import. In this review, we summarise recent genomic and functional data relating to how microsporidia exploit their hosts for energy and building blocks needed for growth and nucleic acid metabolism and we identify some remaining outstanding questions.


Assuntos
Interações Hospedeiro-Parasita/fisiologia , Microsporídios/metabolismo , Nucleotídeos/metabolismo , Animais , Humanos
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(30): 9370-5, 2015 07 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26170282

RESUMO

The Thaumarchaeota is an abundant and ubiquitous phylum of archaea that plays a major role in the global nitrogen cycle. Previous analyses of the ammonia monooxygenase gene amoA suggest that pH is an important driver of niche specialization in these organisms. Although the ecological distribution and ecophysiology of extant Thaumarchaeota have been studied extensively, the evolutionary rise of these prokaryotes to ecological dominance in many habitats remains poorly understood. To characterize processes leading to their diversification, we investigated coevolutionary relationships between amoA, a conserved marker gene for Thaumarchaeota, and soil characteristics, by using deep sequencing and comprehensive environmental data in Bayesian comparative phylogenetics. These analyses reveal a large and rapid increase in diversification rates during early thaumarchaeotal evolution; this finding was verified by independent analyses of 16S rRNA. Our findings suggest that the entire Thaumarchaeota diversification regime was strikingly coupled to pH adaptation but less clearly correlated with several other tested environmental factors. Interestingly, the early radiation event coincided with a period of pH adaptation that enabled the terrestrial Thaumarchaeota ancestor to initially move from neutral to more acidic and alkaline conditions. In contrast to classic evolutionary models, whereby niches become rapidly filled after adaptive radiation, global diversification rates have remained stably high in Thaumarchaeota during the past 400-700 million years, suggesting an ongoing high rate of niche formation or switching for these microbes. Our study highlights the enduring importance of environmental adaptation during thaumarchaeotal evolution and, to our knowledge, is the first to link evolutionary diversification to environmental adaptation in a prokaryotic phylum.


Assuntos
Archaea/fisiologia , Evolução Biológica , Oxirredutases/genética , Solo/química , Amônia/química , Archaea/enzimologia , Archaea/genética , Teorema de Bayes , Análise por Conglomerados , Evolução Molecular , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Conformação Molecular , Nitrogênio/química , Oxirredutases/metabolismo , Oxigênio/química , Filogenia , RNA Ribossômico 16S/metabolismo , Proteínas Recombinantes/química
10.
Mol Biol Evol ; 33(8): 2002-15, 2016 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27189558

RESUMO

The Microsporidia are a major group of intracellular fungi and important parasites of animals including insects, fish, and immunocompromised humans. Microsporidian genomes have undergone extreme reductive evolution but there are major differences in genome size and structure within the group: some are prokaryote-like in size and organisation (<3 Mb of gene-dense sequence) while others have more typically eukaryotic genome architectures. To gain fine-scale, population-level insight into the evolutionary dynamics of these tiny eukaryotic genomes, we performed the broadest microsporidian population genomic study to date, sequencing geographically isolated strains of Spraguea, a marine microsporidian infecting goosefish worldwide. Our analysis revealed that population structure across the Atlantic Ocean is associated with a conserved difference in ploidy, with American and Canadian isolates sharing an ancestral whole genome duplication that was followed by widespread pseudogenisation and sorting-out of paralogue pairs. While past analyses have suggested de novo gene formation of microsporidian-specific genes, we found evidence for the origin of new genes from noncoding sequence since the divergence of these populations. Some of these genes experience selective constraint, suggesting the evolution of new functions and local host adaptation. Combining our data with published microsporidian genomes, we show that nucleotide composition across the phylum is shaped by a mutational bias favoring A and T nucleotides, which is opposed by an evolutionary force favoring an increase in genomic GC content. This study reveals ongoing dramatic reorganization of genome structure and the evolution of new gene functions in modern microsporidians despite extensive genomic streamlining in their common ancestor.


Assuntos
Microsporídios/genética , Evolução Biológica , Biologia Computacional , Evolução Molecular , Duplicação Gênica , Variação Genética , Genoma Fúngico , Genômica/métodos , Metagenômica , Filogenia , Filogeografia
11.
Proc Biol Sci ; 283(1830)2016 05 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27170716

RESUMO

The remodelling of organelle function is increasingly appreciated as a central driver of eukaryotic biodiversity and evolution. Kinetoplastids including Trypanosoma and Leishmania have evolved specialized peroxisomes, called glycosomes. Glycosomes uniquely contain a glycolytic pathway as well as other enzymes, which underpin the physiological flexibility of these major human pathogens. The sister group of kinetoplastids are the diplonemids, which are among the most abundant eukaryotes in marine plankton. Here we demonstrate the compartmentalization of gluconeogenesis, or glycolysis in reverse, in the peroxisomes of the free-living marine diplonemid, Diplonema papillatum Our results suggest that peroxisome modification was already under way in the common ancestor of kinetoplastids and diplonemids, and raise the possibility that the central importance of gluconeogenesis to carbon metabolism in the heterotrophic free-living ancestor may have been an important selective driver. Our data indicate that peroxisome modification is not confined to the kinetoplastid lineage, but has also been a factor in the success of their free-living euglenozoan relatives.


Assuntos
Euglenozoários/citologia , Euglenozoários/metabolismo , Peroxissomos/metabolismo , Trypanosoma cruzi/citologia , Aminoácidos/metabolismo , Carbono/metabolismo , Enzimas/metabolismo , Euglenozoários/genética , Gluconeogênese , Microcorpos , Via de Pentose Fosfato , Filogenia , Transdução de Sinais , Trypanosoma cruzi/metabolismo
12.
PLoS Pathog ; 10(12): e1004547, 2014 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25474405

RESUMO

Microsporidia are obligate intracellular parasites of most animal groups including humans, but despite their significant economic and medical importance there are major gaps in our understanding of how they exploit infected host cells. We have investigated the evolution, cellular locations and substrate specificities of a family of nucleotide transport (NTT) proteins from Trachipleistophora hominis, a microsporidian isolated from an HIV/AIDS patient. Transport proteins are critical to microsporidian success because they compensate for the dramatic loss of metabolic pathways that is a hallmark of the group. Our data demonstrate that the use of plasma membrane-located nucleotide transport proteins (NTT) is a key strategy adopted by microsporidians to exploit host cells. Acquisition of an ancestral transporter gene at the base of the microsporidian radiation was followed by lineage-specific events of gene duplication, which in the case of T. hominis has generated four paralogous NTT transporters. All four T. hominis NTT proteins are located predominantly to the plasma membrane of replicating intracellular cells where they can mediate transport at the host-parasite interface. In contrast to published data for Encephalitozoon cuniculi, we found no evidence for the location for any of the T. hominis NTT transporters to its minimal mitochondria (mitosomes), consistent with lineage-specific differences in transporter and mitosome evolution. All of the T. hominis NTTs transported radiolabelled purine nucleotides (ATP, ADP, GTP and GDP) when expressed in Escherichia coli, but did not transport radiolabelled pyrimidine nucleotides. Genome analysis suggests that imported purine nucleotides could be used by T. hominis to make all of the critical purine-based building-blocks for DNA and RNA biosynthesis during parasite intracellular replication, as well as providing essential energy for parasite cellular metabolism and protein synthesis.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Transporte/metabolismo , Proteínas Fúngicas/metabolismo , Microsporídios/metabolismo , Nucleotídeos de Purina/metabolismo , Síndrome da Imunodeficiência Adquirida/microbiologia , Transporte Biológico Ativo/fisiologia , Proteínas de Transporte/genética , DNA Fúngico/biossíntese , DNA Fúngico/genética , Proteínas Fúngicas/genética , Humanos , Microsporídios/genética , Microsporídios/isolamento & purificação , RNA Fúngico/biossíntese , RNA Fúngico/genética
14.
BMC Genomics ; 16: 983, 2015 Nov 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26589282

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Trachipleistophora hominis was isolated from an HIV/AIDS patient and is a member of a highly successful group of obligate intracellular parasites. METHODS: Here we have investigated the evolution of the parasite and the interplay between host and parasite gene expression using transcriptomics of T. hominis-infected rabbit kidney cells. RESULTS: T. hominis has about 30% more genes than small-genome microsporidians. Highly expressed genes include those involved in growth, replication, defence against oxidative stress, and a large fraction of uncharacterised genes. Chaperones are also highly expressed and may buffer the deleterious effects of the large number of non-synonymous mutations observed in essential T. hominis genes. Host expression suggests a general cellular shutdown upon infection, but ATP, amino sugar and nucleotide sugar production appear enhanced, potentially providing the parasite with substrates it cannot make itself. Expression divergence of duplicated genes, including transporters used to acquire host metabolites, demonstrates ongoing functional diversification during microsporidian evolution. We identified overlapping transcription at more than 100 loci in the sparse T. hominis genome, demonstrating that this feature is not caused by genome compaction. The detection of additional transposons of insect origin strongly suggests that the natural host for T. hominis is an insect. CONCLUSIONS: Our results reveal that the evolution of contemporary microsporidian genomes is highly dynamic and innovative. Moreover, highly expressed T. hominis genes of unknown function include a cohort that are shared among all microsporidians, indicating that some strongly conserved features of the biology of these enormously successful parasites remain uncharacterised.


Assuntos
Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno/genética , Microsporídios/genética , Transcriptoma , Alelos , Animais , Linhagem Celular , Células Cultivadas , Biologia Computacional/métodos , Elementos de DNA Transponíveis , Diploide , Evolução Molecular , Regulação Fúngica da Expressão Gênica , Frequência do Gene , Transferência Genética Horizontal , Genes Fúngicos , Genoma Fúngico , Insetos/genética , Insetos/microbiologia , Estágios do Ciclo de Vida/genética , Microsporídios/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Microsporídios/metabolismo , Família Multigênica , Filogenia , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , Splicing de RNA , Coelhos , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Transcrição Gênica
15.
Mol Biol Evol ; 31(7): 1697-709, 2014 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24795089

RESUMO

Archaeplastida (=Kingdom Plantae) are primary plastid-bearing organisms that evolved via the endosymbiotic association of a heterotrophic eukaryote host cell and a cyanobacterial endosymbiont approximately 1,400 Ma. Here, we present analyses of cyanobacterial and plastid genomes that show strongly conflicting phylogenies based on 75 plastid (or nuclear plastid-targeted) protein-coding genes and their direct translations to proteins. The conflict between genes and proteins is largely robust to the use of sophisticated data- and tree-heterogeneous composition models. However, by using nucleotide ambiguity codes to eliminate synonymous substitutions due to codon-degeneracy, we identify a composition bias, and dependent codon-usage bias, resulting from synonymous substitutions at all third codon positions and first codon positions of leucine and arginine, as the main cause for the conflicting phylogenetic signals. We argue that the protein-coding gene data analyses are likely misleading due to artifacts induced by convergent composition biases at first codon positions of leucine and arginine and at all third codon positions. Our analyses corroborate previous studies based on gene sequence analysis that suggest Cyanobacteria evolved by the early paraphyletic splitting of Gloeobacter and a specific Synechococcus strain (JA33Ab), with all other remaining cyanobacterial groups, including both unicellular and filamentous species, forming the sister-group to the Archaeplastida lineage. In addition, our analyses using better-fitting models suggest (but without statistically strong support) an early divergence of Glaucophyta within Archaeplastida, with the Rhodophyta (red algae), and Viridiplantae (green algae and land plants) forming a separate lineage.


Assuntos
Cianobactérias/classificação , Cianobactérias/genética , Plastídeos/genética , Aminoácidos/genética , Viés , Códon/genética , Evolução Molecular , Genoma Bacteriano , Genomas de Plastídeos , Filogenia
16.
Stat Appl Genet Mol Biol ; 13(5): 589-609, 2014 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25153609

RESUMO

In molecular phylogenetics, standard models of sequence evolution generally assume that sequence composition remains constant over evolutionary time. However, this assumption is violated in many datasets which show substantial heterogeneity in sequence composition across taxa. We propose a model which allows compositional heterogeneity across branches, and formulate the model in a Bayesian framework. Specifically, the root and each branch of the tree is associated with its own composition vector whilst a global matrix of exchangeability parameters applies everywhere on the tree. We encourage borrowing of strength between branches by developing two possible priors for the composition vectors: one in which information can be exchanged equally amongst all branches of the tree and another in which more information is exchanged between neighbouring branches than between distant branches. We also propose a Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) algorithm for posterior inference which uses data augmentation of substitutional histories to yield a simple complete data likelihood function that factorises over branches and allows Gibbs updates for most parameters. Standard phylogenetic models are not informative about the root position. Therefore a significant advantage of the proposed model is that it allows inference about rooted trees. The position of the root is fundamental to the biological interpretation of trees, both for polarising trait evolution and for establishing the order of divergence among lineages. Furthermore, unlike some other related models from the literature, inference in the model we propose can be carried out through a simple MCMC scheme which does not require problematic dimension-changing moves. We investigate the performance of the model and priors in analyses of two alignments for which there is strong biological opinion about the tree topology and root position.


Assuntos
Teorema de Bayes , Filogenia , Cadeias de Markov , Método de Monte Carlo
17.
PLoS Pathog ; 8(10): e1002979, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23133373

RESUMO

The dynamics of reductive genome evolution for eukaryotes living inside other eukaryotic cells are poorly understood compared to well-studied model systems involving obligate intracellular bacteria. Here we present 8.5 Mb of sequence from the genome of the microsporidian Trachipleistophora hominis, isolated from an HIV/AIDS patient, which is an outgroup to the smaller compacted-genome species that primarily inform ideas of evolutionary mode for these enormously successful obligate intracellular parasites. Our data provide detailed information on the gene content, genome architecture and intergenic regions of a larger microsporidian genome, while comparative analyses allowed us to infer genomic features and metabolism of the common ancestor of the species investigated. Gene length reduction and massive loss of metabolic capacity in the common ancestor was accompanied by the evolution of novel microsporidian-specific protein families, whose conservation among microsporidians, against a background of reductive evolution, suggests they may have important functions in their parasitic lifestyle. The ancestor had already lost many metabolic pathways but retained glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway to provide cytosolic ATP and reduced coenzymes, and it had a minimal mitochondrion (mitosome) making Fe-S clusters but not ATP. It possessed bacterial-like nucleotide transport proteins as a key innovation for stealing host-generated ATP, the machinery for RNAi, key elements of the early secretory pathway, canonical eukaryotic as well as microsporidian-specific regulatory elements, a diversity of repetitive and transposable elements, and relatively low average gene density. Microsporidian genome evolution thus appears to have proceeded in at least two major steps: an ancestral remodelling of the proteome upon transition to intracellular parasitism that involved reduction but also selective expansion, followed by a secondary compaction of genome architecture in some, but not all, lineages.


Assuntos
Metabolismo Energético/genética , Genoma Fúngico , Microsporídios/genética , Proteoma/genética , Síndrome da Imunodeficiência Adquirida/microbiologia , Evolução Biológica , Evolução Molecular , Humanos , Microsporídios/isolamento & purificação , Mitocôndrias , Filogenia , Proteômica , Interferência de RNA , RNA Interferente Pequeno , Análise de Sequência de DNA
18.
Nature ; 452(7187): 624-8, 2008 Apr 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18311129

RESUMO

Microsporidia are highly specialized obligate intracellular parasites of other eukaryotes (including humans) that show extreme reduction at the molecular, cellular and biochemical level. Although microsporidia have long been considered as early branching eukaryotes that lack mitochondria, they have recently been shown to contain a tiny mitochondrial remnant called a mitosome. The function of the mitosome is unknown, because microsporidians lack the genes for canonical mitochondrial functions, such as aerobic respiration and haem biosynthesis. However, microsporidial genomes encode several components of the mitochondrial iron-sulphur (Fe-S) cluster assembly machinery. Here we provide experimental insights into the metabolic function and localization of these proteins. We cloned, functionally characterized and localized homologues of several central mitochondrial Fe-S cluster assembly components for the microsporidians Encephalitozoon cuniculi and Trachipleistophora hominis. Several microsporidial proteins can functionally replace their yeast counterparts in Fe-S protein biogenesis. In E. cuniculi, the iron (frataxin) and sulphur (cysteine desulphurase, Nfs1) donors and the scaffold protein (Isu1) co-localize with mitochondrial Hsp70 to the mitosome, consistent with it being the functional site for Fe-S cluster biosynthesis. In T. hominis, mitochondrial Hsp70 and the essential sulphur donor (Nfs1) are still in the mitosome, but surprisingly the main pools of Isu1 and frataxin are cytosolic, creating a conundrum of how these key components of Fe-S cluster biosynthesis coordinate their function. Together, our studies identify the essential biosynthetic process of Fe-S protein assembly as a key function of microsporidian mitosomes.


Assuntos
Proteínas Fúngicas/metabolismo , Proteínas Ferro-Enxofre/biossíntese , Microsporídios/metabolismo , Animais , Linhagem Celular , Clonagem Molecular , Proteínas Fúngicas/genética , Proteínas de Choque Térmico HSP70/genética , Proteínas de Choque Térmico HSP70/metabolismo , Proteínas de Ligação ao Ferro/genética , Proteínas de Ligação ao Ferro/metabolismo , Proteínas Ferro-Enxofre/genética , Proteínas Ferro-Enxofre/metabolismo , Microsporídios/citologia , Microsporídios/genética , Mitocôndrias/metabolismo , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Transporte Proteico , Coelhos , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/citologia , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Frataxina
19.
Nature ; 453(7194): 553-6, 2008 May 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18449191

RESUMO

Mitochondria use transport proteins of the eukaryotic mitochondrial carrier family (MCF) to mediate the exchange of diverse substrates, including ATP, with the host cell cytosol. According to classical endosymbiosis theory, insertion of a host-nuclear-encoded MCF transporter into the protomitochondrion was the key step that allowed the host cell to harvest ATP from the enslaved endosymbiont. Notably the genome of the microsporidian Encephalitozoon cuniculi has lost all of its genes for MCF proteins. This raises the question of how the recently discovered microsporidian remnant mitochondrion, called a mitosome, acquires ATP to support protein import and other predicted ATP-dependent activities. The E. cuniculi genome does contain four genes for an unrelated type of nucleotide transporter used by plastids and bacterial intracellular parasites, such as Rickettsia and Chlamydia, to import ATP from the cytosol of their eukaryotic host cells. The inference is that E. cuniculi also uses these proteins to steal ATP from its eukaryotic host to sustain its lifestyle as an obligate intracellular parasite. Here we show that, consistent with this hypothesis, all four E. cuniculi transporters can transport ATP, and three of them are expressed on the surface of the parasite when it is living inside host cells. The fourth transporter co-locates with mitochondrial Hsp70 to the E. cuniculi mitosome. Thus, uniquely among eukaryotes, the traditional relationship between mitochondrion and host has been subverted in E. cuniculi, by reductive evolution and analogous gene replacement. Instead of the mitosome providing the parasite cytosol with ATP, the parasite cytosol now seems to provide ATP for the organelle.


Assuntos
Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Encephalitozoon cuniculi/citologia , Encephalitozoon cuniculi/metabolismo , Mitocôndrias/metabolismo , Animais , Transporte Biológico , Proteínas de Transporte/genética , Proteínas de Transporte/imunologia , Proteínas de Transporte/metabolismo , Linhagem Celular , Encephalitozoon cuniculi/genética , Escherichia coli/genética , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Proteínas Fúngicas/genética , Proteínas Fúngicas/imunologia , Proteínas Fúngicas/metabolismo , Genoma Fúngico/genética , Genoma Mitocondrial/genética , Mitocôndrias/genética , Modelos Biológicos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Coelhos , Ratos , Simbiose
20.
Bioessays ; 33(11): 810-7, 2011 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21858844

RESUMO

Planctomycetes, Verrucomicrobia and Chlamydia are prokaryotic phyla, sometimes grouped together as the PVC superphylum of eubacteria. Some PVC species possess interesting attributes, in particular, internal membranes that superficially resemble eukaryotic endomembranes. Some biologists now claim that PVC bacteria are nucleus-bearing prokaryotes and are considered evolutionary intermediates in the transition from prokaryote to eukaryote. PVC prokaryotes do not possess a nucleus and are not intermediates in the prokaryote-to-eukaryote transition. Here we summarise the evidence that shows why all of the PVC traits that are currently cited as evidence for aspiring eukaryoticity are either analogous (the result of convergent evolution), not homologous, to eukaryotic traits; or else they are the result of horizontal gene transfers.


Assuntos
Chlamydia/citologia , Eucariotos/citologia , Planctomycetales/citologia , Verrucomicrobia/citologia , Proteínas de Bactérias/genética , Proteínas de Bactérias/fisiologia , Evolução Biológica , Núcleo Celular/fisiologia , Chlamydia/classificação , Chlamydia/genética , Chlamydia/fisiologia , Retículo Endoplasmático/fisiologia , Eucariotos/classificação , Eucariotos/genética , Eucariotos/fisiologia , Transferência Genética Horizontal , Mitocôndrias/genética , Mitocôndrias/fisiologia , Membrana Nuclear/fisiologia , Filogenia , Planctomycetales/classificação , Planctomycetales/genética , Planctomycetales/fisiologia , Verrucomicrobia/classificação , Verrucomicrobia/genética , Verrucomicrobia/fisiologia
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