The identification and characterization of microsatellites in the compact genome of the japanese pufferfish, Fugu rubripes: perspectives in functional and comparative genomic analyses

1998 ◽  
Vol 278 (4) ◽  
pp. 843-854 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yvonne J.K. Edwards ◽  
Greg Elgar ◽  
Melody S. Clark ◽  
Martin J. Bishop
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jia Liu ◽  
Wensi Zhang ◽  
Fang Yuan ◽  
Yongxin Pan ◽  
Wei Lin

<p>Magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) biomineralize intracellular magnetic nanocrystals and can use the geomagnetic field to navigate towards specific microenvironments in water columns and sediments. MTB are a model system to study the mechanisms of microbial magnetoreception and biomineralization. The majority of MTB identified so far are from environments with pH values near neutral and at the normal range of temperature. MTB from extreme environments, such as hot springs, has not been observed and described until recently. However, our knowledge on extremophilic MTB is still very limited. Here we report the identification and characterization of various MTB in Tengchong hot springs, China, with a temperature range of 41.3-69.5 °C and a pH range of 7.1-8.6. Although MTB are diverse in cell morphology, they all form bullet-shaped magnetite magnetosomes organized into either one chain or multiple bundles of chains. Through genome-resolved metagenomics, we have reconstructed five genome bins of hot spring MTB that are all affiliated within the <em>Nitrspirae</em> phylum. Genomic analyses and metabolic reconstructions are now in progress. These results will help to better understand the extremophilic MTB and may shed new lights on the origin and evolution of microbial magnetoreception and biomineralization.</p>


2022 ◽  
Vol 119 (2) ◽  
pp. e2114909119
Author(s):  
Jing Tian ◽  
Daniel R. Utter ◽  
Lujia Cen ◽  
Pu-Ting Dong ◽  
Wenyuan Shi ◽  
...  

Saccharibacteria are a group of widespread and genetically diverse ultrasmall bacteria with highly reduced genomes that belong to the Candidate Phyla Radiation. Comparative genomic analyses suggest convergent evolution of key functions enabling the adaptation of environmental Saccharibacteria to mammalian microbiomes. Currently, our understanding of this environment-to-mammal niche transition within Saccharibacteria and their obligate episymbiotic association with host bacteria is limited. Here, we identified a complete arginine deiminase system (ADS), found in further genome streamlined mammal-associated Saccharibacteria but missing in their environmental counterparts, suggesting acquisition during environment-to-mammal niche transition. Using TM7x, the first cultured Saccharibacteria strain from the human oral microbiome and its host bacterium Actinomyces odontolyticus, we experimentally tested the function and impact of the ADS. We demonstrated that by catabolizing arginine and generating adenosine triphosphate, the ADS allows metabolically restrained TM7x to maintain higher viability and infectivity when disassociated from the host bacterium. Furthermore, the ADS protects TM7x and its host bacterium from acid stress, a condition frequently encountered within the human oral cavity due to bacterial metabolism of dietary carbohydrates. Intriguingly, with a restricted host range, TM7x forms obligate associations with Actinomyces spp. lacking the ADS but not those carrying the ADS, suggesting the acquired ADS may also contribute to partner selection for cooperative episymbiosis within a mammalian microbiome. These data present experimental characterization of a mutualistic interaction between TM7x and their host bacteria, and illustrate the benefits of acquiring a novel pathway in the transition of Saccharibacteria to mammalian microbiomes.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Justin D Lormand ◽  
Soo-Kyoung Kim ◽  
George A Walters-Marrah ◽  
Bryce A Brownfield ◽  
J Christopher Fromme ◽  
...  

RNA degradation is fundamental for cellular homeostasis. The process is carried out by various classes of endolytic and exolytic enzymes that together degrade an RNA polymer to mono-ribonucleotides. Within the exoribonucleases, nano-RNases play a unique role as they act on the smallest breakdown products and hence catalyze the final steps in the process. We recently showed that oligoribonuclease (Orn) acts as a dedicated diribonucleotidase, defining the ultimate step in RNA degradation that is crucial for cellular fitness (Kim et al., 2019). Whether such a specific activity exists in organisms that lack Orn-type exoribonucleases remained unclear. Through quantitative structure-function analyses, we show here that NrnC-type RNases share this narrow substrate length preference with Orn. Although NrnC and Orn employ similar structural features that distinguish these two classes of dinucleotidases from other exonucleases, the key determinants for dinucleotidase activity are realized through distinct structural scaffolds. The structures, together with comparative genomic analyses of the phylogeny of DEDD-type exoribonucleases, indicate convergent evolution as the mechanism of how dinucleotidase activity emerged repeatedly in various organisms. The evolutionary pressure to maintain dinucleotidase activity further underlines the important role these analogous proteins play for cell growth.


Author(s):  
Mehtap Bayır ◽  
Gökhan Arslan

In this study, bioinformatics analysis of fugu (Fugu rubripes) catalase (cat) gene was performed. Molecular biology science is developing rapidly in parallel with the increasing importance of bioinformatics, thanks to the developed techniques in recent years. In this bioinformatics-based study wich enables the effective identification and characterization of genes in living organisms using online genome databases and statistics and storage, organization and sharing of the ever-increasing genetic data we designed the conserved gene synteny and gene structure and detected the identiy-similarity ratios between fugu and the other telosts and tetrapods. NCBI-GeneBank, EMBL, ENSEML and UNIPROT databases have been used for all these bioinformatics studies. Bioedit and Mega programs were used to perform the analysis and evaluate the data obtained from all these databases. In silico analysis such as the identification and characterization of fugu cat gene, exons-introns organization, phylogenetic tree and gene synteny were completed in this study and presented with tables and figures.


Open Biology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 200359
Author(s):  
Núria Ros-Rocher ◽  
Alberto Pérez-Posada ◽  
Michelle M. Leger ◽  
Iñaki Ruiz-Trillo

How animals evolved from a single-celled ancestor, transitioning from a unicellular lifestyle to a coordinated multicellular entity, remains a fascinating question. Key events in this transition involved the emergence of processes related to cell adhesion, cell–cell communication and gene regulation. To understand how these capacities evolved, we need to reconstruct the features of both the last common multicellular ancestor of animals and the last unicellular ancestor of animals. In this review, we summarize recent advances in the characterization of these ancestors, inferred by comparative genomic analyses between the earliest branching animals and those radiating later, and between animals and their closest unicellular relatives. We also provide an updated hypothesis regarding the transition to animal multicellularity, which was likely gradual and involved the use of gene regulatory mechanisms in the emergence of early developmental and morphogenetic plans. Finally, we discuss some new avenues of research that will complement these studies in the coming years.


2021 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
SelvaRaju KishanRaj ◽  
Samuggam Sumitha ◽  
Thean-Hock Tang ◽  
Marimuthu Citartan ◽  
Suresh V. Chinni

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