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4,959
result(s) for
"Gene order"
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Gene order and chromosome dynamics coordinate spatiotemporal gene expression during the bacterial growth cycle
by
Sobetzko, Patrick
,
Muskhelishvili, Georgi
,
Travers, Andrew
in
Biological Sciences
,
Cell cycle
,
Chromosomes
2012
In Escherichia coli crosstalk between DNA supercoiling, nucleoid-associated proteins and major RNA polymerase σ initiation factors regulates growth phase-dependent gene transcription. We show that the highly conserved spatial ordering of relevant genes along the chromosomal replichores largely corresponds both to their temporal expression patterns during growth and to an inferred gradient of DNA superhelical density from the origin to the terminus. Genes implicated in similar functions are related mainly in trans across the chromosomal replichores, whereas DNA-binding transcriptional regulators interact predominantly with targets in cis along the replichores. We also demonstrate that macrodomains (the individual structural partitions of the chromosome) are regulated differently. We infer that spatial and temporal variation of DNA superhelicity during the growth cycle coordinates oxygen and nutrient availability with global chromosome structure, thus providing a mechanistic insight into how the organization of a complete bacterial chromosome encodes a spatiotemporal program integrating DNA replication and global gene expression.
Journal Article
Extensive intraspecific gene order and gene structural variations in upland cotton cultivars
2019
Multiple cotton genomes (diploid and tetraploid) have been assembled. However, genomic variations between cultivars of allotetraploid upland cotton (
Gossypium hirsutum
L.), the most widely planted cotton species in the world, remain unexplored. Here, we use single-molecule long read and Hi-C sequencing technologies to assemble genomes of the two upland cotton cultivars TM-1 and zhongmiansuo24 (ZM24). Comparisons among TM-1 and ZM24 assemblies and the genomes of the diploid ancestors reveal a large amount of genetic variations. Among them, the top three longest structural variations are located on chromosome A08 of the tetraploid upland cotton, which account for ~30% total length of this chromosome. Haplotype analyses of the mapping population derived from these two cultivars and the germplasm panel show suppressed recombination rates in this region. This study provides additional genomic resources for the community, and the identified genetic variations, especially the reduced meiotic recombination on chromosome A08, will help future breeding.
While multiple cotton genomes are available, genome wide variation comparison between allotetraploid upland cotton cultivars remain unexplored. Here, the authors assemble two upland cotton cultivars and reveal large scale structural variations on chromosome A08.
Journal Article
Evolution of genes and genomes on the Drosophila phylogeny
2007
Comparative analysis of multiple genomes in a phylogenetic framework dramatically improves the precision and sensitivity of evolutionary inference, producing more robust results than single-genome analyses can provide. The genomes of 12 Drosophila species, ten of which are presented here for the first time (sechellia, simulans, yakuba, erecta, ananassae, persimilis, willistoni, mojavensis, virilis and grimshawi), illustrate how rates and patterns of sequence divergence across taxa can illuminate evolutionary processes on a genomic scale. These genome sequences augment the formidable genetic tools that have made Drosophila melanogaster a pre-eminent model for animal genetics, and will further catalyse fundamental research on mechanisms of development, cell biology, genetics, disease, neurobiology, behaviour, physiology and evolution. Despite remarkable similarities among these Drosophila species, we identified many putatively non-neutral changes in protein-coding genes, non-coding RNA genes, and cis-regulatory regions. These may prove to underlie differences in the ecology and behaviour of these diverse species.
Journal Article
Unlocking the Barley Genome by Chromosomal and Comparative Genomics
by
Scholz, Uwe
,
Morris, Jenny A.
,
Matsumoto, Takashi
in
Agricultural sciences
,
Barley
,
Brachypodium distachyon
2011
We used a novel approach that incorporated chromosome sorting, next-generation sequencing, array hybridization, and systematic exploitation of conserved synteny with model grasses to assign ~86% of the estimated ~32,000 barley [Hordeum vulgare) genes to individual chromosome arms. Using a series of bioinformatically constructed genome zippers that integrate gene indices of rice (Oryza sativa), sorghum [Sorghum bicolor), and Brachypodium distachyon in a conserved synteny model, we were able to assemble 21,766 barley genes in a putative linear order. We show that the barley (H) genome displays a mosaic of structural similarity to hexaploid bread wheat (Triticum aestivum) A, B, and D subgenomes and that orthologous genes in different grasses exhibit signatures of positive selection in different lineages. We present an ordered, information-rich scaffold of the barley genome that provides a valuable and robust framework for the development of novel strategies in cereal breeding.
Journal Article
The complete mitochondrial genome of parasitic nematode Camallanus cotti: extreme discontinuity in the rate of mitogenomic architecture evolution within the Chromadorea class
by
Chen, Rong
,
Zou, Hong
,
Zhang, Dong
in
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Architecture
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2017
Background
Complete mitochondrial genomes are much better suited for the taxonomic identification and phylogenetic studies of nematodes than morphology or traditionally-used molecular markers, but they remain unavailable for the entire Camallanidae family (Chromadorea). As the only published mitogenome in the Camallanina suborder (Dracunculoidea superfamily) exhibited a unique gene order, the other objective of this research was to study the evolution of mitochondrial architecture in the Spirurida order. Thus, we sequenced the complete mitogenome of the
Camallanus cotti
fish parasite and conducted structural and phylogenomic comparative analyses with all available Spirurida mitogenomes.
Results
The mitogenome is exceptionally large (17,901 bp) among the Chromadorea and, with 46 (pseudo-) genes, exhibits a unique architecture among nematodes. Six protein-coding genes (PCGs) and six tRNAs are duplicated. An additional (seventh) tRNA (Trp) was probably duplicated by the remolding of tRNA-Ser2 (missing). Two pairs of these duplicated PCGs might be functional; three were incomplete and one contained stop codons. Apart from Ala and Asp, all other duplicated tRNAs are conserved and probably functional. Only 19 unique tRNAs were found. Phylogenomic analysis included Gnathostomatidae (Spirurina) in the Camallanina suborder.
Conclusions
Within the Nematoda, comparable PCG duplications were observed only in the enoplean Mermithidae family, but those result from mitochondrial recombination, whereas characteristics of the studied mitogenome suggest that likely rearrangement mechanisms are either a series of duplications, transpositions and random loss events, or duplication, fragmentation and subsequent reassembly of the mitogenome. We put forward a hypothesis that the evolution of mitogenomic architecture is extremely discontinuous, and that once a long period of stasis in gene order and content has been punctuated by a rearrangement event, such a destabilised mitogenome is much more likely to undergo subsequent rearrangement events, resulting in an exponentially accelerated evolutionary rate of mitogenomic rearrangements. Implications of this model are particularly important for the application of gene order similarity as an additive source of phylogenetic information. Chromadorean nematodes, and particularly Camallanina clade (with
C. cotti
as an example of extremely accelerated rate of rearrangements), might be a good model to further study this discontinuity in the dynamics of mitogenomic evolution.
Journal Article
Mitogenomes Reveal Alternative Initiation Codons and Lineage-Specific Gene Order Conservation in Echinoderms
by
Quek, Zheng Bin Randolph
,
Chang, Jia Jin Marc
,
Ip, Yin Cheong Aden
in
Analysis
,
Annotations
,
Asteroids
2021
The mitochondrial genetic code is much more varied than the standard genetic code. The invertebrate mitochondrial code, for instance, comprises six initiation codons, including five alternative start codons. However, only two initiation codons are known in the echinoderm and flatworm mitochondrial code, the canonical ATG and alternative GTG. Here, we analyzed 23 Asteroidea mitogenomes, including ten newly sequenced species and unambiguously identified at least two other start codons, ATT and ATC, both of which also initiate translation of mitochondrial genes in other invertebrates. These findings underscore the diversity of the genetic code and expand upon the suite of initiation codons among echinoderms to avoid erroneous annotations. Our analyses have also uncovered the remarkable conservation of gene order among asteroids, echinoids, and holothuroids, with only an interchange between two gene positions in asteroids over ∼500 Ma of echinoderm evolution.
Journal Article
The complete mitochondrial genome of medicinal fungus Taiwanofungus camphoratus reveals gene rearrangements and intron dynamics of Polyporales
2020
Taiwanofungus camphoratus
is a highly valued medicinal mushroom that is endemic to Taiwan, China. In the present study, the mitogenome of
T. camphoratus
was assembled and compared with other published
Polyporales
mitogenomes. The
T. camphoratus
mitogenome was composed of circular DNA molecules, with a total size of 114,922 bp. Genome collinearity analysis revealed large-scale gene rearrangements between the mitogenomes of
Polyporales
, and
T. camphoratus
contained a unique gene order. The number and classes of introns were highly variable in 12
Polyporales
species we examined, which proved that numerous intron loss or gain events occurred in the evolution of
Polyporales
. The Ka/Ks values for most core protein coding genes in
Polyporales
species were less than 1, indicating that these genes were subject to purifying selection. However, the
rps3
gene was found under positive or relaxed selection between some
Polyporales
species. Phylogenetic analysis based on the combined mitochondrial gene set obtained a well-supported topology, and
T. camphoratus
was identified as a sister species to
Laetiporus sulphureus
. This study served as the first report on the mitogenome in the
Taiwanofungus
genus, which will provide a basis for understanding the phylogeny and evolution of this important fungus.
Journal Article
Determining Gene Order Patterns in the Suillus and Boletales through Comparative Analysis of Their Mitogenomes
by
Wang, Yaping
,
Xu, Guangyin
,
Gao, Zexin
in
Basidiomycota - classification
,
Basidiomycota - genetics
,
Cytochrome
2024
Suillus is one of the most important genera of ectomycorrhizal fungi. As a model for studying host specificity, its molecular fragments and nuclear genome have been analyzed. However, its mitochondrial genome has not yet been reported. In this study, we assembled five mitogenomes of Suillus and analyzed and compared their basic characteristics. Owing to the large number of introns as well as intergenic regions, the mitogenomic lengths of species of Suillus were greater than those of other species of Boletales. We identified two main patterns of gene order arrangement in the members of the order Boletales. The Ka/Ks values of 15 protein-coding genes were <1 for the mitochondrial genes of 39 Boletales species, indicating their conserved evolution. Phylogenetic trees, reconstructed using the mitogenomes, indicated that the genus Suillus was monophyletic. Phylogenetic results based on the internal transcribed spacer region and mitogenome were used to confirm the distribution of Suillus placidus in China. The results showed that the mitogenome was superior in distinguishing species compared with a single molecular fragment. This is the first study to investigate the mitogenome of Suillus, enriching the mitogenome information and providing basic data for the phylogeny, resource conservation, and genetic diversity of this genus.
Journal Article
Patterns of diverse gene functions in genomic neighborhoods predict gene function and phenotype
2019
Genes with similar roles in the cell cluster on chromosomes, thus benefiting from coordinated regulation. This allows gene function to be inferred by transferring annotations from genomic neighbors, following the guilt-by-association principle. We performed a systematic search for co-occurrence of >1000 gene functions in genomic neighborhoods across 1669 prokaryotic, 49 fungal and 80 metazoan genomes, revealing prevalent patterns that cannot be explained by clustering of functionally similar genes. It is a very common occurrence that pairs of dissimilar gene functions – corresponding to semantically distant Gene Ontology terms – are significantly co-located on chromosomes. These neighborhood associations are often as conserved across genomes as the known associations between similar functions, suggesting selective benefits from clustering of certain diverse functions, which may conceivably play complementary roles in the cell. We propose a simple encoding of chromosomal gene order, the neighborhood function profiles (NFP), which draws on diverse gene clustering patterns to predict gene function and phenotype. NFPs yield a 26–46% increase in predictive power over state-of-the-art approaches that propagate function across neighborhoods, thus providing hundreds of novel, high-confidence gene function inferences per genome. Furthermore, we demonstrate that copy number-neutral structural variation that shapes gene function distribution across chromosomes can predict phenotype of individuals from their genome sequence.
Journal Article
ORFeome cloning and global analysis of protein localization in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe
by
Arai, Ritsuko
,
Kobayashi, Yumiko
,
Hamamoto, Makiko
in
Agriculture
,
Antifungal Agents - pharmacology
,
Bioinformatics
2006
Cloning of the entire set of an organism's protein-coding open reading frames (ORFs), or 'ORFeome', is a means of connecting the genome to downstream 'omics' applications. Here we report a proteome-scale study of the fission yeast
Schizosaccharomyces pombe
based on cloning of the ORFeome. Taking advantage of a recombination-based cloning system, we obtained 4,910 ORFs in a form that is readily usable in various analyses. First, we evaluated ORF prediction in the fission yeast genome project by expressing each ORF tagged at the 3′ terminus. Next, we determined the localization of 4,431 proteins, corresponding to ∼90% of the fission yeast proteome, by tagging each ORF with the yellow fluorescent protein. Furthermore, using leptomycin B, an inhibitor of the nuclear export protein Crm1, we identified 285 proteins whose localization is regulated by Crm1.
Journal Article