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Mukhtar T,
( 1999 ) Evolutionary relationships among photosynthetic prokaryotes (Heliobacterium chlorum, Chloroflexus aurantiacus, cyanobacteria, Chlorobium tepidum and proteobacteria): implications regarding the origin of photosynthesis. PMID : 10361294 : DOI : 10.1046/j.1365-2958.1999.01417.x Abstract >>
The presence of shared conserved insertions or deletions in proteins (referred to as signature sequences) provides a powerful means to deduce the evolutionary relationships among prokaryotic organisms. This approach was used in the present work to deduce the branching orders of various eubacterial taxa consisting of photosynthetic organisms. For this purpose, portions of the Hsp60 and Hsp70 genes, covering known signature sequence regions, were PCR-amplified and sequenced from Heliobacterium chlorum, Chloroflexus aurantiacus and Chlorobium tepidum. This information was integrated with sequence data for several other proteins from numerous species to deduce the branching orders of different photosynthetic taxa. Based on signature sequences that are present in different proteins, it is possible to infer that the various eubacterial phyla evolved from a common ancestor in the following order: low G+C Gram-positive (H. chlorum) --> high G+C Gram-positive --> Deinococcus-Thermus --> green non-sulphur bacteria (Cf. aurantiacus) --> cyanobacteria --> spirochaetes --> Chlamydia-Cytophaga-Aquifex-flavobacteria-green sulphur bacteria (Cb. tepidum) --> proteobacteria (alpha, delta and epsilon) and --> proteobacteria (beta and gamma). The members of the Heliobacteriaceae family that contain a Fe-S type of reaction centre (RC-1) and represent the sole photosynthetic phylum from the Gram-positive or monoderm group of prokaryotes are indicated to be the most ancestral of the photosynthetic lineages. Among the Gram-negative bacteria or diderm prokaryotes, green non-sulphur bacteria such as Cf. aurantiacus, which contains a pheophytin-quinone type of reaction centre (RC-2), are indicated to have evolved very early. Thus, the organisms containing either RC-1 or RC-2 existed before the evolution of cyanobacteria, which contain both these reaction centres to carry out oxygenic photosynthesis. The eubacterial divisions consisting of green sulphur bacteria and proteobacteria are indicated to have diverged after cyanobacteria. Some implications of these results concerning the origin of photosynthesis and the earliest prokaryotic fossils are discussed.
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Griffiths E,
Gupta RS,
( 2004 ) Distinctive protein signatures provide molecular markers and evidence for the monophyletic nature of the deinococcus-thermus phylum. PMID : 15126471 : DOI : 10.1128/jb.186.10.3097-3107.2004 PMC : PMC400596 Abstract >>
The Deinococcus-Thermus group of species is currently recognized as a distinct phylum solely on the basis of their branching in 16S rRNA trees. No unique biochemical or molecular characteristics that can distinguish this group from all other bacteria are known at present. In this work, we describe eight conserved indels (viz., inserts or deletions) in seven widely distributed proteins that are distinctive characteristics of the Deinococcus-Thermus phylum but are not found in any other group of bacteria. The identified signatures include a 7-amino-acid (aa) insert in threonyl-tRNA synthetase, 1- and 3-aa inserts in the RNA polymerase beta' subunit, a 5-aa deletion in signal recognition particle (Ffh/SR54), a 2-aa insert in major sigma factor 70 (sigma70), a 2-aa insert in seryl-tRNA synthetase (SerRS), a 1-aa insert in ribosomal protein L1, and a 2-aa insert in UvrA homologs. By using PCR primers for conserved regions, fragments of these genes were amplified from a number of Deinococcus-Thermus species, and all such fragments (except SerRS in Deinococcus proteolyticus) were found to contain the indicated signatures. The presence of these signatures in various species from all three known genera within this phylum, viz., Deinococcus, Thermus, and Meiothermus, provide evidence that they are likely distinctive characteristics of the entire phylum which were introduced in a common ancestor of this group. The signature in SerRS, which is absent in D. proteolyticus, was likely introduced after the branching of this species. Phylogenetic studies as well as the nature of the inserts in some of these proteins (viz., sigma70 and SerRS) also support a sister group relationship between the Thermus and the Meiothermus genera. The identified signatures provide strong evidence for the monophyletic nature of the Deinococcus-Thermus phylum. These molecular markers should prove very useful in the identification of new species related to this group.
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( 1998 ) Protein phylogenies and signature sequences: A reappraisal of evolutionary relationships among archaebacteria, eubacteria, and eukaryotes. PMID : 9841678 : PMC : PMC98952 Abstract >>
The presence of shared conserved insertion or deletions (indels) in protein sequences is a special type of signature sequence that shows considerable promise for phylogenetic inference. An alternative model of microbial evolution based on the use of indels of conserved proteins and the morphological features of prokaryotic organisms is proposed. In this model, extant archaebacteria and gram-positive bacteria, which have a simple, single-layered cell wall structure, are termed monoderm prokaryotes. They are believed to be descended from the most primitive organisms. Evidence from indels supports the view that the archaebacteria probably evolved from gram-positive bacteria, and I suggest that this evolution occurred in response to antibiotic selection pressures. Evidence is presented that diderm prokaryotes (i.e., gram-negative bacteria), which have a bilayered cell wall, are derived from monoderm prokaryotes. Signature sequences in different proteins provide a means to define a number of different taxa within prokaryotes (namely, low G+C and high G+C gram-positive, Deinococcus-Thermus, cyanobacteria, chlamydia-cytophaga related, and two different groups of Proteobacteria) and to indicate how they evolved from a common ancestor. Based on phylogenetic information from indels in different protein sequences, it is hypothesized that all eukaryotes, including amitochondriate and aplastidic organisms, received major gene contributions from both an archaebacterium and a gram-negative eubacterium. In this model, the ancestral eukaryotic cell is a chimera that resulted from a unique fusion event between the two separate groups of prokaryotes followed by integration of their genomes.
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