60 research outputs found

    Exploration of microbial diversity and evolution through cultivation independent phylogenomics

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    Our understanding of microbial evolution is largely dependent on available genomic data of diverse organisms. Yet, genome-sequencing efforts have mostly ignored the diverse uncultivable majority in favor of cultivable and sociologically relevant organisms. In this thesis, I have applied and developed cultivation independent methods to explore microbial diversity and obtain genomic data in an unbiased manner. The obtained genomes were then used to study the evolution of mitochondria, Rickettsiales and Haloarchaea. Metagenomic binning of oceanic samples recovered draft genomes for thirteen novel Alphaproteobacteria-related lineages. Phylogenomics analyses utilizing the improved taxon sample suggested that mitochondria are not related to Rickettsiales but rather evolved from a proteobacterial lineage closely related to all sampled alphaproteobacteria. Single-cell genomics and metagenomics of lake and oceanic samples, respectively, identified previously unobserved Rickettsiales-related lineages. They branched early relative to characterized Rickettsiales and encoded flagellar genes, a feature once thought absent in this order. Flagella are most likely an ancestral feature, and were independently lost during Rickettsiales diversification. In addition, preliminary analyses suggest that ATP/ADP translocase, the marker for energy parasitism, was acquired after the acquisition of type IV secretion systems during the emergence of the Rickettsiales. Further exploration of the oceanic samples yielded the first draft genomes of Marine Group IV archaea, the closest known relatives of the Haloarchaea. The halophilic and generally aerobic Haloarchaea are thought to have evolved from an anaerobic methanogenic ancestor. The MG-IV genomes allowed us to study this enigmatic evolutionary transition. Preliminary ancestral reconstruction analyses suggest a gradual loss of methanogenesis and adaptation to an aerobic lifestyle, respectively. The thesis further presents a new amplicon sequencing method that captures near full-length 16S and 23S rRNA genes of environmental prokaryotes. The method exploits PacBio's long read technology and the frequent proximity of these genes in prokaryotic genomes. Compared to traditional partial 16S amplicon sequencing, our method classifies environmental lineages that are distantly related to reference taxa more confidently. In conclusion, this thesis provides new insights into the origins of mitochondria, Rickettsiales and Haloarchaea and illustrates the power of cultivation independent methods with respect to the study of microbial evolution

    From archaeon to eukaryote : The evolutionary dark ages of the eukaryotic cell

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    The evolutionary origin of the eukaryotic cell represents an enigmatic, yet largely incomplete, puzzle. Several mutually incompatible scenarios have been proposed to explain how the eukaryotic domain of life could have emerged. To date, convincing evidence for these scenarios in the form of intermediate stages of the proposed eukaryogenesis trajectories is lacking, presenting the emergence of the complex features of the eukaryotic cell as an evolutionary deus ex machina. However, recent advances in the field of phylogenomics have started to lend support for a model that places a cellular fusion event at the basis of the origin of eukaryotes (symbiogenesis), involving the merger of an as yet unknown archaeal lineage that most probably belongs to the recently proposed 'TACK superphylum' (comprising Thaumarchaeota, Aigarchaeota, Crenarchaeota and Korarchaeota) with an alphaproteobacterium (the protomitochondrion). Interestingly, an increasing number of so-called ESPs (eukaryotic signature proteins) is being discovered in recently sequenced archaeal genomes, indicating that the archaeal ancestor of the eukaryotic cell might have been more eukaryotic in nature than presumed previously, and might, for example, have comprised primitive phagocytotic capabilities. In the present paper, we review the evolutionary transition from archaeon to eukaryote, and propose a new model for the emergence of the eukaryotic cell, the 'PhAT (phagocytosing archaeon theory)', which explains the emergence of the cellular and genomic features of eukaryotes in the light of a transiently complex phagocytosing archaeon.</p

    Draft Genome Sequence of "Candidatus Moanabacter tarae," Representing a Novel Marine Verrucomicrobial Lineage

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    The Tara Oceans Consortium has published various metagenomes of marine environmental samples. Here, we report a contig of 2.6 Mbp from the assembly of a sample collected near the Marquesas Islands in the Pacific Ocean, covering a nearly complete novel verrucomicrobial genome. We propose the name “Candidatus Moanabacter tarae” for the corresponding bacterium

    Comparative and Phylogenomic Evidence that the Alphaproteobacterium HIMB59 is not a Member of the Oceanic SAR11 Clade

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    SAR11 is a globally abundant group of Alphaproteobacteria in the oceans that is taxonomically not well defined. It has been suggested SAR11 should be classified into the novel order Pelagibacterales. Features such as conservation of gene content and synteny have been taken as evidence that also the divergent member HIMB59 should be included in the order. However, this proposition is controversial since phylogenetic analyses have questioned the monophyly of this grouping. Here, we performed phylogenetic analyses and reinvestigated the genomic similarity of SAR11 and HIMB59. Our phylogenetic analysis confirmed that HIMB59 is not a sister group to the other SAR11 strains. By placing the comparison in the context of the evolution of the Alphaproteobacteria, we found that none of the measures of genomic similarity supports a clustering of HIMB59 and SAR11 to the exclusion of other Alphaproteobacteria. First, pairwise sequence similarity measures for the SAR11 and HIMB59 genomes were within the range observed for unrelated pairs of Alphaproteobacteria. Second, pairwise comparisons of gene contents revealed a higher similarity of SAR11 to several other alphaproteobacterial genomes than to HIMB59. Third, the SAR11 genomes are not more similar in gene order to the HIMB59 genome than what they are to several other alphaproteobacterial genomes. Finally, in contrast to earlier reports, we observed no sequence similarity between the hypervariable region HVR2 in the SAR11 genomes and the region located at the corresponding position in the HIMB59 genome. Based on these observations, we conclude that the alphaproteobacterium HIMB59 is not monophyletic with the SAR11 strains and that genome streamlining has evolved multiple times independently in Alphaproteobacteria adapted to the upper surface waters of the oceans

    Draft Genome Sequence of "Candidatus Moanabacter tarae," Representing a Novel Marine Verrucomicrobial Lineage

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    The Tara Oceans Consortium has published various metagenomes of marine environmental samples. Here, we report a contig of 2.6 Mbp from the assembly of a sample collected near the Marquesas Islands in the Pacific Ocean, covering a nearly complete novel verrucomicrobial genome. We propose the name "Candidates Moanabacter tarae" for the corresponding bacterium

    New Insights into Ligand-Receptor Pairing and Coevolution of Relaxin Family Peptides and Their Receptors in Teleosts

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    Relaxin-like peptides (RLN/INSL) play diverse roles in reproductive and neuroendocrine processes in placental mammals and are functionally associated with two distinct types of receptors (RXFP) for each respective function. The diversification of RLN/INSL and RXFP gene families in vertebrates was predominantly driven by whole genome duplications (2R and 3R). Teleosts preferentially retained duplicates of genes putatively involved in neuroendocrine regulation, harboring a total of 10-11 receptors and 6 ligand genes, while most mammals have equal numbers of ligands and receptors. To date, the ligand-receptor relationships of teleost Rln/Insl peptides and their receptors have largely remained unexplored. Here, we use selection analyses based on sequence data from 5 teleosts and qPCR expression data from zebrafish to explore possible ligand-receptor pairings in teleosts. We find support for the hypothesis that, with the exception of RLN, which has undergone strong positive selection in mammalian lineages, the ligand and receptor genes shared between mammals and teleosts appear to have similar pairings. On the other hand, the teleost-specific receptors show evidence of subfunctionalization. Overall, this study underscores the complexity of RLN/INSL and RXFP ligand-receptor interactions in teleosts and establishes theoretical background for further experimental work in nonmammals

    Deep mitochondrial origin outside the sampled alphaproteobacteria

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    Mitochondria are ATP-generating organelles, the endosymbiotic origin of which was a key event in the evolution of eukaryotic cells 1 . Despite strong phylogenetic evidence that mitochondria had an alphaproteobacterial ancestry 2, efforts to pinpoint their closest relatives among sampled alphaproteobacteria have generated conflicting results, complicating detailed inferences about the identity and nature of the mitochondrial ancestor. While most studies support the idea that mitochondria evolved from an ancestor related to Rickettsiales 3-9, an order that includes several host-Associated pathogenic and endosymbiotic lineages 10,11, others have suggested that mitochondria evolved from a free-living group 12-14 . Here we re-evaluate the phylogenetic placement of mitochondria. We used genome-resolved binning of oceanic metagenome datasets and increased the genomic sampling of Alphaproteobacteria with twelve divergent clades, and one clade representing a sister group to all Alphaproteobacteria. Subsequent phylogenomic analyses that specifically address long branch attraction and compositional bias artefacts suggest that mitochondria did not evolve from Rickettsiales or any other currently recognized alphaproteobacterial lineage. Rather, our analyses indicate that mitochondria evolved from a proteobacterial lineage that branched off before the divergence of all sampled alphaproteobacteria. In light of this new result, previous hypotheses on the nature of the mitochondrial ancestor 6,15,16 should be re-evaluated

    alphamito24.concat.NoOutgroups.untreated.aln

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    Concatenated supermatrix alignment of 24 genes conserved among alphaproteobacteria and mitochondrial genomes. Here, the outgroups MarineProteo1, Magnetococcales, Beta- and Gammaproteobacteria have been removed. See associated publication for technical details on how this alignment was prepared

    alphaproteobacteria_mitochondria_untreated.aln

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    Concatenated supermatrix alignment of 24 genes conserved among alphaproteobacteria and mitochondrial genomes. See associated publication for technical details on how this alignment was prepared

    PacificOcean_140m_contigs.fa

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    Complete assembly of the Tara Oceans metagenome (SRA accession: ERR599156). Metagenome was derived from Pacific Ocean sampled at 140m depth. See the associated publication for technical details
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