Category: Papers by CGEB labs

Lateral gene transfer and gene duplication played a key role in the evolution of Mastigamoeba balamuthi hydrogenosomes.

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Lateral gene transfer and gene duplication played a key role in the evolution of Mastigamoeba balamuthi hydrogenosomes.

Mol Biol Evol. 2015 Jan 7;

Authors: Nývltová E, Stairs CW, Hrdý I, Rídl J, Mach J, Pačes J, Roger AJ, Tachezy J

Abstract
Lateral gene transfer (LGT) is an important mechanism of evolution for protists adapting to oxygen-poor environments. Specifically, modifications of energy metabolism in anaerobic forms of mitochondria (e.g., hydrogenosomes) are likely to have been associated with gene transfer from prokaryotes. An interesting question is whether the products of transferred genes were directly targeted into the ancestral organelle or initially operated in the cytosol and subsequently acquired organelle-targeting sequences. Here, we identified key enzymes of hydrogenosomal metabolism in the free-living anaerobic amoebozoan Mastigamoeba balamuthi and analyzed their cellular localizations, enzymatic activities and evolutionary histories. Additionally, we characterized (i) several canonical mitochondrial components including respiratory complex II and the glycine cleavage system, (ii) enzymes associated with anaerobic energy metabolism, including an unusual D-lactate dehydrogenase and acetyl CoA synthase, and (iii) a sulfate activation pathway. Intriguingly, components of anaerobic energy metabolism are present in at least two gene copies. For each component, one copy possesses an N-terminal targeting sequence (MTS), whereas the other lacks an MTS, yielding parallel cytosolic and hydrogenosomal extended glycolysis pathways. Experimentally, we confirmed that the organelle targeting of several proteins is fully dependent on the MTS. Phylogenetic analysis of all extended glycolysis components suggested that these components were acquired by LGT. We propose that the transformation from an ancestral organelle to a hydrogenosome in the M. balamuthi lineage involved the lateral acquisition of genes encoding extended glycolysis enzymes that initially operated in the cytosol and that established a parallel hydrogenosomal pathway after gene duplication and MTS acquisition.

PMID: 25573905 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

STAMP: statistical analysis of taxonomic and functional profiles.

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STAMP: statistical analysis of taxonomic and functional profiles.
Bioinformatics. 2014 Nov 1;30(21):3123-4
Authors: Parks DH, Tyson GW, Hugenholtz P, Beiko RG
Abstract
UNLABELLED: ST…

Microbial shifts in the aging mouse gut.

Microbial shifts in the aging mouse gut.

Microbiome. 2014;2(1):50

Authors: Langille MG, Meehan CJ, Koenig JE, Dhanani AS, Rose RA, Howlett SE, Beiko RG

Abstract
BACKGROUND: The changes that occur in the microbiome of aging individuals are unclear, especially in light of the imperfect correlation of frailty with age. Studies in older human subjects have reported subtle effects, but these results may be confounded by other variables that often change with age such as diet and place of residence. To test these associations in a more controlled model system, we examined the relationship between age, frailty, and the gut microbiome of female C57BL/6 J mice.
RESULTS: The frailty index, which is based on the evaluation of 31 clinical signs of deterioration in mice, showed a near-perfect correlation with age. We observed a statistically significant relationship between age and the taxonomic composition of the corresponding microbiome. Consistent with previous human studies, the Rikenellaceae family, which includes the Alistipes genus, was the most significantly overrepresented taxon within middle-aged and older mice. The functional profile of the mouse gut microbiome also varied with host age and frailty. Bacterial-encoded functions that were underrepresented in older mice included cobalamin (B12) and biotin (B7) biosynthesis, and bacterial SOS genes associated with DNA repair. Conversely, creatine degradation, associated with muscle wasting, was overrepresented within the gut microbiomes of the older mice, as were bacterial-encoded β-glucuronidases, which can influence drug-induced epithelial cell toxicity. Older mice also showed an overabundance of monosaccharide utilization genes relative to di-, oligo-, and polysaccharide utilization genes, which may have a substantial impact on gut homeostasis.
CONCLUSION: We have identified taxonomic and functional patterns that correlate with age and frailty in the mouse microbiome. Differences in functions related to host nutrition and drug pharmacology vary in an age-dependent manner, suggesting that the availability and timing of essential functions may differ significantly with age and frailty. Future work with larger cohorts of mice will aim to separate the effects of age and frailty, and other factors.

PMID: 25520805 [PubMed]

Analysis of EST data of the marine protist Oxyrrhis marina, an emerging model for alveolate biology and evolution.

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Analysis of EST data of the marine protist Oxyrrhis marina, an emerging model for alveolate biology and evolution.
BMC Genomics. 2014;15:122
Authors: Lee R, Lai H, Malik SB, Saldarriaga JF, Keelin…

Widespread occurrence of organelle genome-encoded 5S rRNAs including permuted molecules.

Widespread occurrence of organelle genome-encoded 5S rRNAs including permuted molecules.
Nucleic Acids Res. 2014 Nov 27;
Authors: Valach M, Burger G, Gray MW, Lang BF
Abstract
5S Ribosomal RNA (5S r…

BiomeNet: A Bayesian Model for Inference of Metabolic Divergence among Microbial Communities.

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BiomeNet: A Bayesian Model for Inference of Metabolic Divergence among Microbial Communities.
PLoS Comput Biol. 2014 Nov;10(11):e1003918
Authors: Shafiei M, Dunn KA, Chipman H, Gu H, Bielawski JP

Inferring Meaningful Communities from Topology-Constrained Correlation Networks.

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Inferring Meaningful Communities from Topology-Constrained Correlation Networks.
PLoS One. 2014;9(11):e113438
Authors: Hleap JS, Blouin C
Abstract
Community structure detection is a…

Tests for two trees using likelihood methods.

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Tests for two trees using likelihood methods.
Mol Biol Evol. 2014 Apr;31(4):1029-39
Authors: Susko E
Abstract
This article considers two similar likelihood-based test statistics for…

An amino acid substitution-selection model adjusts residue fitness to improve phylogenetic estimation.

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An amino acid substitution-selection model adjusts residue fitness to improve phylogenetic estimation.

Mol Biol Evol. 2014 Apr;31(4):779-92

Authors: Wang HC, Susko E, Roger AJ

Abstract
Standard protein phylogenetic models use fixed rate matrices of amino acid interchange derived from analyses of large databases. Differences between the stationary amino acid frequencies of these rate matrices from those of a data set of interest are typically adjusted for by matrix multiplication that converts the empirical rate matrix to an exchangeability matrix which is then postmultiplied by the amino acid frequencies in the alignment. The result is a time-reversible rate matrix with stationary amino acid frequencies equal to the data set frequencies. On the basis of population genetics principles, we develop an amino acid substitution-selection model that parameterizes the fitness of an amino acid as the logarithm of the ratio of the frequency of the amino acid to the frequency of the same amino acid under no selection. The model gives rise to a different sequence of matrix multiplications to convert an empirical rate matrix to one that has stationary amino acid frequencies equal to the data set frequencies. We incorporated the substitution-selection model with an improved amino acid class frequency mixture (cF) model to partially take into account site-specific amino acid frequencies in the phylogenetic models. We show that 1) the selection models fit data significantly better than corresponding models without selection for most of the 21 test data sets; 2) both cF and cF selection models favored the phylogenetic trees that were inferred under current sophisticated models and methods for three difficult phylogenetic problems (the positions of microsporidia and breviates in eukaryote phylogeny and the position of the root of the angiosperm tree); and 3) for data simulated under site-specific residue frequencies, the cF selection models estimated trees closer to the generating trees than a standard Г model or cF without selection. We also explored several ways of estimating amino acid frequencies under neutral evolution that are required for these selection models. By better modeling the amino acid substitution process, the cF selection models will be valuable for phylogenetic inference and evolutionary studies.

PMID: 24441033 [PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

The pre-endosymbiont hypothesis: a new perspective on the origin and evolution of mitochondria.

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The pre-endosymbiont hypothesis: a new perspective on the origin and evolution of mitochondria.

Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol. 2014 Mar;6(3)

Authors: Gray MW

Abstract
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is unquestionably the remnant of an α-proteobacterial genome, yet only ~10%-20% of mitochondrial proteins are demonstrably α-proteobacterial in origin (the “α-proteobacterial component,” or APC). The evolutionary ancestry of the non-α-proteobacterial component (NPC) is obscure and not adequately accounted for in current models of mitochondrial origin. I propose that in the host cell that accommodated an α-proteobacterial endosymbiont, much of the NPC was already present, in the form of a membrane-bound metabolic organelle (the premitochondrion) that compartmentalized many of the non-energy-generating functions of the contemporary mitochondrion. I suggest that this organelle also possessed a protein import system and various ion and small-molecule transporters. In such a scenario, an α-proteobacterial endosymbiont could have been converted relatively directly and rapidly into an energy-generating organelle that incorporated the extant metabolic functions of the premitochondrion. This model (the “pre-endosymbiont hypothesis”) effectively represents a synthesis of previous, contending mitochondrial origin hypotheses, with the bulk of the mitochondrial proteome (much of the NPC) having an endogenous origin and the minority component (the APC) having a xenogenous origin.

PMID: 24591518 [PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]