Literature DB >> 16870683

Signatures of ecological resource availability in the animal and plant proteomes.

James J Elser1, William F Fagan, Sankar Subramanian, Sudhir Kumar.   

Abstract

Although substantial and ecologically significant differences in elemental composition are well documented for whole organisms, little is known about whether such differences extend to lower levels of biological organization, such as the elemental composition of major molecules. In a proteome-scale investigation of 9 plant genomes and 9 animal genomes, we find that the nitrogen (N) content of plant proteins is lower than that in animal proteins. Furthermore, protein N content declines with the intensity of gene expression for plants, whereas the N content of animal proteins shows no consistent pattern with expression. Additional analyses indicate that the differences in N content between plant and animal proteomes and in plant proteins as a function of gene expression cannot be attributed to protein size, GC content, gene function, or amino acid properties. These patterns suggest that ecophysiological selection has operated to conserve N in plants via decreased reliance on N-rich amino acids. This inference was supported by an analysis of conserved and variable sites indicating that the N content of plant amino acids coded by variable sites is similar to that of the sites conserved between plant and animal genomes and shows no association with expression level. In contrast, in animals, the N content of amino acids coded by variable sites is significantly higher than that for conserved sites, suggesting relaxation of selective constraints for N usage in the animal lineage. This constitutes the first evidence for an influence of environmental resource availability on proteomes of multicellular organisms.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16870683     DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msl068

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Evol        ISSN: 0737-4038            Impact factor:   16.240


  21 in total

1.  Protein carbon content evolves in response to carbon availability and may influence the fate of duplicated genes.

Authors:  Jason G Bragg; Andreas Wagner
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2007-04-22       Impact factor: 5.349

Review 2.  Stoichiogenomics: the evolutionary ecology of macromolecular elemental composition.

Authors:  James J Elser; Claudia Acquisti; Sudhir Kumar
Journal:  Trends Ecol Evol       Date:  2010-11-18       Impact factor: 17.712

3.  Low contents of carbon and nitrogen in highly abundant proteins: evidence of selection for the economy of atomic composition.

Authors:  Ning Li; Jie Lv; Deng-Ke Niu
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2009-02-10       Impact factor: 2.395

4.  Sulfate-driven elemental sparing is regulated at the transcriptional and posttranscriptional levels in a filamentous cyanobacterium.

Authors:  Andrian Gutu; Richard M Alvey; Sami Bashour; Daniel Zingg; David M Kehoe
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2011-01-14       Impact factor: 3.490

Review 5.  Global biodiversity, stoichiometry and ecosystem function responses to human-induced C-N-P imbalances.

Authors:  Jofre Carnicer; Jordi Sardans; Constantí Stefanescu; Andreu Ubach; Mireia Bartrons; Dolores Asensio; Josep Peñuelas
Journal:  J Plant Physiol       Date:  2014-09-16       Impact factor: 3.549

6.  Identification and characterization of proteins involved in rice urea and arginine catabolism.

Authors:  Feng-Qiu Cao; Andrea K Werner; Kathleen Dahncke; Tina Romeis; Lai-Hua Liu; Claus-Peter Witte
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2010-07-14       Impact factor: 8.340

7.  Economical evolution: microbes reduce the synthetic cost of extracellular proteins.

Authors:  Daniel R Smith; Matthew R Chapman
Journal:  MBio       Date:  2010-08-24       Impact factor: 7.867

8.  Signatures of nitrogen limitation in the elemental composition of the proteins involved in the metabolic apparatus.

Authors:  Claudia Acquisti; Sudhir Kumar; James J Elser
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2009-04-15       Impact factor: 5.349

9.  Ecological nitrogen limitation shapes the DNA composition of plant genomes.

Authors:  Claudia Acquisti; James J Elser; Sudhir Kumar
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2009-03-02       Impact factor: 16.240

10.  Are algal genes in nonphotosynthetic protists evidence of historical plastid endosymbioses?

Authors:  John W Stiller; Jinling Huang; Qin Ding; Jing Tian; Carol Goodwillie
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2009-10-20       Impact factor: 3.969

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