7 research outputs found

    Computational Genome and Pathway Analysis of Halophilic Archaea

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    Halophilic archaea inhabit hypersaline environments and share common physiological features such as acidic protein machineries in order to adapt to high internal salt concentrations as well as electron transport chains for oxidative respiration. Surprisingly, nutritional demands were found to differ considerably amongst haloarchaeal species, though, and in this project several complete genomes of halophilic archaea were analysed to predict their metabolic capabilities. Comparative analysis of gene equipments showed that haloarchaea adopted several strategies to utilize abundant cell material available in brines such as the acquisition of catabolic enzymes, secretion of hydrolytic enzymes, and elimination of biosynthesis gene clusters. For example, metabolic genes of the well-studied Halobacterium salinarum were found to be consistent with the known degradation of glycerol and amino acids. Further, the complex requirement of H. salinarum for various amino acids and vitamins in comparison with other halophiles was explained by the lack of several genes and gene clusters, e.g. for the biosynthesis of methionine, lysine, and thiamine. Nitrogen metabolism varied also among halophilic archaea, and the haloalkaliphile Natronomonas pharaonis was predicted to apply several modes of N-assimilation to cope with severe ammonium deficiencies in its highly alkaline habitat. This species was experimentally shown to possess a functional respiratory chain, but comparative analysis with several archaea suggests a yet unknown complex III analogue in N. pharaonis. Respiratory chains of halophilic and other respiratory archaea were found to share similar genes for pre-quinone electron transfer steps but show great diversity in post-quinone electron transfer steps indicating adaptation to changing environmental conditions in extreme habitats. Finally, secretomes of halophilic and non-halophilic archaea were predicted proposing that haloarchaea secretion proteins are predominantly exported via the twin-arginine pathway and commonly exhibit a lipobox motif for N-terminal lipid anchoring. In N. pharaonis, lipoboxcontaining proteins were most frequent suggesting that lipid anchoring might prevent protein extraction under alkaline conditions. By contrast, non-halophilic archaea seem to prefer the general secretion pathway for protein translocation and to retain only few secretion proteins by N-terminal lipid anchors. Membrane attachment was preferentially observed for interacting components of ABC transporters and respiratory chains and might further occur via postulated C-terminal anchors in archaea. Within this project, the complete genome of the newly sequenced N. pharaonis was analysed with focus on curation of automatically generated data in order to retrieve reliable gene prediction and protein function assignment results as a basis for additional studies. Through the development of a post-processing routine and expert validation as well as by integration of proteomics data, a highly reliable gene set was created for N. pharaonis which was subsequently used to assess various microbial gene finders. This showed that all automatic gene tools predicted a rather correct gene set for the GC-rich N. pharaonis genome but produced insufficient results in respect to their start codon assignments. Available proteomics results for N. pharaonis and H. salinarum were further analysed for posttranslational modifications, and N-terminal peptides of haloarchaeal proteins were found to be commonly processed by N-terminal methionine cleavage and to some extent further modified by N-acetylation. For general function assignment of predicted N. pharaonis proteins and for enzyme assignment in H. salinarum, similarity-based searches, genecontext methods such as neighbourhood analysis but also manual curation were applied in order to reduce the number of hypothetical proteins and to avoid cross-species transfer of misassigned functions. This permitted to reliably reconstruct the metabolism of H. salinarum and N. pharaonis. Generated metabolic data were stored in a newly developed metabolic database that also integrates experimental data retrieved from the literature. The pathway data can be assessed as coloured KEGG maps and were combined with data resulting from transcriptomics and proteomics techniques. In future, expert-curated reaction entries of the created metabolic database will be a valuable source for the design of metabolic experiments and will deliver a reliable input for metabolic models of halophilic archaea

    The genome of the square archaeon Haloquadratum walsbyi : life at the limits of water activity

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    BACKGROUND: The square halophilic archaeon Haloquadratum walsbyi dominates NaCl-saturated and MgCl(2 )enriched aquatic ecosystems, which imposes a serious desiccation stress, caused by the extremely low water activity. The genome sequence was analyzed and physiological and physical experiments were carried out in order to reveal how H. walsbyi has specialized into its narrow and hostile ecological niche and found ways to cope with the desiccation stress. RESULTS: A rich repertoire of proteins involved in phosphate metabolism, phototrophic growth and extracellular protective polymers, including the largest archaeal protein (9159 amino acids), a homolog to eukaryotic mucins, are amongst the most outstanding features. A relatively low GC content (47.9%), 15–20% less than in other halophilic archaea, and one of the lowest coding densities (76.5%) known for prokaryotes might be an indication for the specialization in its unique environment CONCLUSION: Although no direct genetic indication was found that can explain how this peculiar organism retains its square shape, the genome revealed several unique adaptive traits that allow this organism to thrive in its specific and extreme niche

    Metabolism of halophilic archaea

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    In spite of their common hypersaline environment, halophilic archaea are surprisingly different in their nutritional demands and metabolic pathways. The metabolic diversity of halophilic archaea was investigated at the genomic level through systematic metabolic reconstruction and comparative analysis of four completely sequenced species: Halobacterium salinarum, Haloarcula marismortui, Haloquadratum walsbyi, and the haloalkaliphile Natronomonas pharaonis. The comparative study reveals different sets of enzyme genes amongst halophilic archaea, e.g. in glycerol degradation, pentose metabolism, and folate synthesis. The carefully assessed metabolic data represent a reliable resource for future system biology approaches as it also links to current experimental data on (halo)archaea from the literature

    Living with two extremes: Conclusions from the genome sequence of Natronomonas pharaonis

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    Natronomonas pharaonis is an extremely haloalkaliphilic archaeon that was isolated from salt-saturated lakes of pH 11. We sequenced its 2.6-Mb GC-rich chromosome and two plasmids (131 and 23 kb). Genome analysis suggests that it is adapted to cope with severe ammonia and heavy metal deficiencies that arise at high pH values. A high degree of nutritional self-sufficiency was predicted and confirmed by growth in a minimal medium containing leucine but no other amino acids or vitamins. Genes for a complex III analog of the respiratory chain could not be identified in the N. pharaonis genome, but respiration and oxidative phosphorylation were experimentally proven. These studies identified protons as coupling ion between respiratory chain and ATP synthase, in contrast to other alkaliphiles using sodium instead. Secretome analysis predicts many extracellular proteins with alkaline-resistant lipid anchors, which are predominantly exported through the twin-arginine pathway. In addition, a variety of glycosylated cell surface proteins probably form a protective complex cell envelope. N. pharaonis is fully equipped with archaeal signal transduction and motility genes. Several receptors/transducers signaling to the flagellar motor display novel domain architectures. Clusters of signal transduction genes are rearranged in haloarchaeal genomes, whereas those involved in information processing or energy metabolism show a highly conserved gene order

    The genome of the square archaeon Haloquadratum walsbyi: life at the limits of water activity

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    Background: The square halophilic archaeon Haloquadratum walsbyi dominates NaCl- saturated and MgCl2 enriched aquatic ecosystems, which imposes a serious desiccation stress, caused by the extremely low water activity. The genome sequence was analyzed and physiological and physical experiments were carried out in order to reveal how H. walsbyi has specialized into its narrow and hostile ecological niche and found ways to cope with the desiccation stress. Results: A rich repertoire of proteins involved in phosphate metabolism, phototrophic growth and extracellular protective polymers, including the largest archaeal protein ( 9159 amino acids), a homolog to eukaryotic mucins, are amongst the most outstanding features. A relatively low GC content (47.9%), 15-20% less than in other halophilic archaea, and one of the lowest coding densities (76.5%) known for prokaryotes might be an indication for the specialization in its unique environment Conclusion: Although no direct genetic indication was found that can explain how this peculiar organism retains its square shape, the genome revealed several unique adaptive traits that allow this organism to thrive in its specific and extreme niche

    Large-scale identification of N-terminal peptides in the halophilic archaea Halobacterium salinarum and Natronomonas pharaonis

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    Characterization of protein N-terminal peptides supports the quality assessment of data derived from genomic sequences ( e.g., the correct assignment of start codons) and hints to in vivo N-terminal modifications such as N-terminal acetylation and removal of the initiator methionine. The current work represents the first large-scale identification of N-terminal peptides from prokaryotes, of the two halophilic euryarchaeota Halobacterium salinarum and Natronomonas pharaonis. Two methods were used that specifically allow the characterization of protein N-terminal peptides: combined fractional diagonal chromatography ( COFRADIC) and strong cation exchange chromatography (SCX), both known to enrich for N-terminally blocked peptides. In addition to these specific methods, N-terminal peptide identifications were extracted from our previous genome-wide proteomic data. Combining all data, 606 N-terminal peptides from Hbt. salinarum and 328 from Nmn. pharaonis were reliably identified. These results constitute the largest available dataset holding identified and characterized protein N-termini for prokaryotes (archaea and bacteria). They allowed the validation/improvement of start codon assignments as automatic gene finders tend to misassign start codons for GC-rich genomes. In addition, the dataset allowed unravelling N-terminal protein maturation in archaea, showing that 60% of the proteins undergo methionine cleavage and that-in contrast to current knowledges-N-alpha-acetylation is common in the archaeal domain of life with 13-18% of the proteins being N alpha-acetylated. The protein sets described in this paper are available by FTP and might be used as reference sets to test the performance of new gene finders
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