A Mesohaline Thraustochytrid Produces Extremely Halophilic Alpha-Amylases

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Usha Devi Muraleedharan ◽  
Samir Damare ◽  
Seshagiri Raghukumar
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1984 ◽  
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S Muthukrishnan ◽  
B S Gill ◽  
M Swegle ◽  
G R Chandra

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Tatsuo Horiuchi
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Kazuaki Igarashi ◽  
Hiroshi Hagihara ◽  
Susumu Ito

1991 ◽  
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N Uozumi ◽  
N Tsukagoshi ◽  
S Udaka

2006 ◽  
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Sophie Bozonnet ◽  
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Birgit C. Bønsager ◽  
Morten Munch Nielsen ◽  
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Atsushi Kobayashi ◽  
Atsushi Nishikawa ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
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Andrea Desiderato ◽  
Marcos Barbeitos ◽  
Clément Gilbert ◽  
Jean-Luc Da Lage

AbstractThe subfamily GH13_1 of alpha-amylases is typical of Fungi, but it is also found in some unicellular eukaryotes (e.g. Amoebozoa, choanoflagellates) and non-bilaterian Metazoa. Since a previous study in 2007, GH13_1 amylases were considered ancestral to the Unikonts, including animals, except Bilateria, such that it was thought to have been lost in the ancestor of this clade. The only alpha-amylases known to be present in Bilateria so far belong to the GH13_15 and 24 subfamilies (commonly called bilaterian alpha-amylases) and were likely acquired by horizontal transfer from a proteobacterium. The taxonomic scope of Eukaryota genomes in databases has been greatly increased ever since 2007. We have surveyed GH13_1 sequences in recent data from ca. 1600 bilaterian species, 60 non-bilaterian animals and also in unicellular eukaryotes. As expected, we found a number of those sequences in non-bilaterians: Anthozoa (Cnidaria) and in sponges, confirming the previous observations, but none in jellyfishes and in Ctenophora. Our main and unexpected finding is that such fungal (also called Dictyo-type) amylases were also consistently retrieved in several bilaterian phyla: hemichordates (deuterostomes), brachiopods and related phyla, some molluscs and some annelids (protostomes). We discuss evolutionary hypotheses possibly explaining the scattered distribution of GH13_1 across bilaterians, namely, the retention of the ancestral gene in those phyla only and/or horizontal transfers from non-bilaterian donors.


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