Highlight: Bacteria Shed DNA as They Adapt to Hot Temperatures

نویسنده

  • Danielle Venton
چکیده

Prokaryotic genomes are no-nonsense items: small, compact, with very little DNA between their genes compared with eukaryotes. Whether this is adaptive has, for decades, been a mystery. Genomic researchers have proposed that natural selection may favor small genomes—weeding out superfluous material—through a process called “genomic streamlining.” Streamlining makes inherent sense because a small genome should aid metabolic efficiency, because genome size is correlated with cell size. Many researchers believe cells divide and replicate faster if they remain small. As logical as genomic streamlining might be, few examples have so far been found. Instead, a bevy of articles from the last 10 years show that three separate lines of evidence argue against widespread streamlining in prokaryotes. Genetic drift, a purely random process, has been suggested as the driving force behind small prokaryotic genomes. “There exists a kind of cognitive dissonance between the common wisdom among many biologists—that bacterial genomes are streamlined,” says Andreas Wagner, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Zurich, “and rather solid proof from molecular data that most genomes are not.” That may be set to change, at least for one bacterial group. In a recent article by Sabath et al. (2013) in Genome Biology Evolution article, the authors report that the heat-loving bacteria have extremely trim genomes and that the same three lines of evidence (mentioned earlier) argue in favor of streamlining among thermophiles. Finding such evidence came as a great surprise. “Given that some of the best researchers out there had looked into this problem,” says Wagner, “I was surprised that the same kinds of evidence that argues against streamlining in general argues for it for thermophiles.” The finding was actually a secondary question—a piece of scientific serendipity. The team began the research as a look at the association between bacterial genome size and growth temperature (previously unreported). Only later on, says Sabath, did the team decide to test the streamlining hypothesis. To start, they found that all species living at temperatures above 60 C have genomes smaller than 4 million base pairs (4 Mb), and species living at temperatures below 45 C have genomes larger than 6 Mb. The hotter the habitat, the smaller the genome. To find out whether this reduction is caused by genetic drift or streamlining, they asked three questions. First, evolution should weed out noncoding regions of DNA faster than coding regions. Second, generation time (or cell division rate) should correlate with genome size. Last, the smaller genomes should have a slower protein evolution rate (evidence of stronger selective pressure). Comparing the percentage of a genome’s intergenic DNA with genome size revealed that, across bacteria, genomes of smaller thermophiles also contain a smaller percentage of their DNA in noncoding regions. No such correlation was seen in nonthermophiles. Similarly, thermophiles living at higher temperatures divide significantly faster. Past work looking at general bacteria, however, has found no correlation between genome size and reproduction time. For the last line of evidence, the team compared 40 gene pairs evolved from a common ancestor gene in independent, but closely related, taxa. The more quickly the genes evolve, according to current biological thinking, the weaker the selective constraints on those proteins. They found no significant correlation between evolution rate and temperature, in either bacterial group. (Interestingly, proteins in thermophilic bacteria were generally shorter than their orthologs in nonthermophilic bacteria, probably because loops which can destabilize structure get lost in the proteins of thermophiles.) Neither did they find a correlation comparing rate and genome size. With a larger sample size, the authors suspect a negative association might be detected with thermophiles. “Although our analysis did not show an equivalent significant decrease in dN/dS ratios [a measure of evolution rate] . . . it shows that selective constraints are not weaker in thermophiles (as they are in obligate parasites and endosymbionts),” write the authors. “Thus, genome size reduction is unlikely to be the result of drift.” GBE

برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

منابع مشابه

Isolation and Characterization of Hyperthermophilic Nanobacteria from a Hot Spring in Ardabil, Iran

ABSTRACT        Background and Objective: Nanobacteria are nanometer-scale particles with different shapes, which have been a subject of debate in modern microbiology. They belong to a proposed class of living organisms, specifically cell-walled microorganisms with a size much smaller than the generally accepted lower limit for life. Since some microorganisms are ...

متن کامل

Physicochemical Study of the Interaction of some Water Soluble Porphyrins with Calf Thymus DNA

In order to shed more light on the effect of peripheral groups of porphyrin core intophysicochemical properties and DNA binding behavior of porphyrins, we have chosen toinvestigate solution properties and calf thymus DNA binding behavior of meso-tetrakis (4-Nbenzyl-pyridyl) porphyrin (TBZPyP) and its Mn (III), Co (III), Ni (II) and Cu (II) complexesderivatives have been studied in thermodynamic...

متن کامل

Isolation of Thermus Strains from Hot Composts (60 to 808C)

High numbers (10 to 10 cells per g [dry weight]) of heterotrophic, gram-negative, rod-shaped, non-sporeforming, aerobic, thermophilic bacteria related to the genus Thermus were isolated from thermogenic composts at temperatures between 65 and 82&C. These bacteria were present in different types of wastes (garden and kitchen wastes and sewage sludge) and in all the industrial composting systems ...

متن کامل

Anaerobic Thermophiles

The term "extremophile" was introduced to describe any organism capable of living and growing under extreme conditions. With the further development of studies on microbial ecology and taxonomy, a variety of "extreme" environments have been found and an increasing number of extremophiles are being described. Extremophiles have also been investigated as far as regarding the search for life on ot...

متن کامل

A group II intron-type open reading frame from the thermophile Bacillus (Geobacillus) stearothermophilus encodes a heat-stable reverse transcriptase.

The production of a stable cDNA copy of an unstable RNA molecule by reverse transcription is a widely used and essential technology for many important applications, such as the construction of gene libraries, production of DNA probes, and analysis of gene expression by reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR). However, the synthesis of full-length cDNAs is frequently inefficient, because the RT commo...

متن کامل

ذخیره در منابع من


  با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید

برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

عنوان ژورنال:

دوره 5  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2013