| Literature DB >> 19212443 |
Imke Schmitt1, H Thorsten Lumbsch.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Polyketides are natural products with a wide range of biological functions and pharmaceutical applications. Discovery and utilization of polyketides can be facilitated by understanding the evolutionary processes that gave rise to the biosynthetic machinery and the natural product potential of extant organisms. Gene duplication and subfunctionalization, as well as horizontal gene transfer are proposed mechanisms in the evolution of biosynthetic gene clusters. To explain the amount of homology in some polyketide synthases in unrelated organisms such as bacteria and fungi, interkingdom horizontal gene transfer has been evoked as the most likely evolutionary scenario. However, the origin of the genes and the direction of the transfer remained elusive. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19212443 PMCID: PMC2636887 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0004437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Comparison between orsellinic acid (1) and 6-methylsalicylic acid (6-MSA) (2), and the architecture of the corresponding polyketide synthase genes.
Keto synthase (KS), acyl transferase (AT), keto reductase (KR), dehydratase (DH), and acyl carrier protein (ACP) are indicated as boxes. While orsellinic acid has only been characterized in bacteria, 6-MSA synthases with identical architecture have been found in bacteria and ascomycete fungi.
Lichenized fungi used in this study. New sequences are indicated in bold.
| Organism | Source | # of PKS found using LC3/LC5c primers | GB accession and clone number |
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| Germany, 24 Jan. 2002, | 1 |
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| Argentina, | 1 |
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| Canada, | 1 |
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| Germany, | 1 |
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| Culture 0217M (AKITA) | 2 |
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| Canada, 20 Aug. 2003, | 1 |
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| Sweden, | 1 |
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| Antarctica, | 1 |
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| Antarctica, | 2 |
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| Culture 1118M (AKITA) | 2 |
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| EF192112 (1720f) | |||
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| Sweden, | 1 |
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| Australia, | 1 |
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| Spain, | 1 |
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| Germany, | 1 |
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| Czech Republic, | 2 |
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| Culture 1121M (AKITA) | 1 |
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| Scotland, | 1 |
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| Japan, | 1 | EF192113 (1625f) |
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| Japan, | 2 |
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| Australia, | 1 |
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| Australia, | 1 |
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| Culture 1086M (AKITA) | 1 | EF192114 (1722f) |
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| Peru, | 1 | EF192115 (1732f) |
Figure 2Phylogeny of fungal and bacterial type I PKS genes based on an amino acid alignment of the KS domain (165 sequences).
This is a cartoon summary of a 50% majority rule consensus tree of 120,000 trees from a Bayesian analysis. Major clades are collapsed and shown as triangles. Numbers at tips indicate numbers of sequences in the group. Bold branches have significant support (posterior probabilities >94). We reconstructed ancestral character state at nodes 1–5.
Figure 3Phylogeny of fungal 6-MSAS-type PKS genes and their bacterial relatives.
All PKS belong to the class type I. This is a 50% rule consensus tree from a Bayesian analysis based on a nucleotide alignment of the KS region. Bold branches indicate significant node support (posterior probabilities >94). Pie charts depict likelihood of the ancestor at this node being a fungal PKS (black), bacterial PKS (gray), or a fatty acid synthase (FAS) (white). Asterisks (*) indicate significant probabilities, as shown in Table 2. (L) denotes a lichen-forming ascomycete. Gene designations of characterized genes are indicated in bold print, GenBank accession numbers are given.
Ancestral character state reconstructions performed in a combined Bayesian/ML framework.
| Node | alignment 1: ingroup+fungal reducing clade | alignment 2: ingroup+FAS | alignment 3: ingroup+fungal reducing+FAS |
| 1 | 0 = 1.00* | 0 = 1.00* | 0 = 0.99* |
| 1 = 0.00* | 1 = 0.00* | 1 = 0.00* | |
| 2 = 0.00* | 2 = 0.01* | ||
| 2 | 0 = 0.20 | 0 = 0.00* | 0 = 0.05 |
| 1 = 0.80 | 1 = 0.97* | 1 = 0.88 | |
| 2 = 0.03* | 2 = 0.07 | ||
| 3 | 0 = 0.00* | 0 = 0.00* | 0 = 0.00* |
| 1 = 1.00* | 1 = 0.97* | 1 = 0.98* | |
| 2 = 0.03* | 2 = 0.02* | ||
| 4 | 0 = 0.00* | 0 = 0.00* | 0 = 0.00* |
| 1 = 1.00* | 1 = 0.97* | 1 = 0.98* | |
| 2 = 0.03* | 2 = 0.02* | ||
| 5 | 0 = 0.00* | 0 = 0.00* | 0 = 0.00* |
| 1 = 1.00* | 1 = 0.96* | 1 = 0.97* | |
| 2 = 0.04* | 2 = 0.03* |
Characters are coded 0 = fungal PKS, 1 = bacterial PKS, 2 = fatty acid synthase (FAS). Numbers are average probabilities as calculated across all 492 trees in the MCMC sample. Asterisks (*) indicate significant probabilities. Three data sets (alignments 1–3) were analyzed to test possible effects of outgroup selection.