Literature DB >> 19953084

A systems biology tour de force for a near-minimal bacterium.

John I Glass, Clyde A Hutchison, Hamilton O Smith, J Craig Venter.   

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19953084      PMCID: PMC2824490          DOI: 10.1038/msb.2009.89

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Syst Biol        ISSN: 1744-4292            Impact factor:   11.429


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Ever since the 1930s, when a handful of physicists, chemists, and biologists banded together into the phage school led by Max Delbruck, there have been efforts to understand life at its simplest and most fundamental level. In the ensuing decades up to the present, we have achieved a complete understanding of the genetic and chemical structure of a number of viruses, and know in many cases the role of all of their genes. The same cannot be said for cells. The simplest cells are bacteria, but they generally contain thousands of genes. The desire to understand how cells work has long attracted biologists to work with simple, near-minimal cells because of the assumption that smaller organisms with fewer molecular parts will be less complex and easier to understand. Whole genome sequencing and decades of biochemical studies have shown that the simplest known cells that are capable of growth in laboratory media are the atypical bacteria called mycoplasmas. The interest in these tiny bacteria as model systems to study cellular function led to two of them, Mycoplasma genitalium and Mycoplasma pneumoniae, being among the first few bacteria of which the genomes were sequenced (Fraser ; Himmelreich ). As those genome sequences were published in the mid-1990s, molecular and systems biology techniques have advanced to the point that the DNA sequences can be leveraged to gain a much deeper understanding of the biology of these minimal cells. A trio of papers published in Science by seven research groups coordinated by Peer Bork, Anne-Claude Gavin, and Luis Serrano offer an unprecedentedly detailed analysis of the transcriptional regulation, proteome organization, and metabolic regulation of the minimal bacterium M. pneumoniae (Güell ; Kühner ; Yus ). The analysis of transcriptional regulation by Güell is based on a combination of spotted arrays, strand-specific tilling arrays, and transcript sequencing. Their in-depth analysis of M. pneumoniae transcription under various growth conditions precisely defines transcriptional units, promoters, and termination signals. Previously, a general lack of obvious standard −35 and −10 transcriptional promoter regions as well as hairpin termination signals led to the conjecture that mycoplasmas had evolved some cryptic set of promoters and terminators; however, this analysis showed that most of the operons had canonical or slightly altered standard sigma 70 promoter regions and RNA hairpin termination sites. As is the case in more conventional bacteria, many of the operons are partially transcribed under different conditions. They report more than 100 previously un-annotated transcripts, most of which were antisense to known genes. Analysis of bacterial small RNAs over the last few years shows a much larger role for these previously unrecognized transcripts in regulation of gene expression at many levels. In sum, the M. pneumoniae transcriptional regulation analysis shows an unexpected complexity that is similar to what is present in conventional bacteria such as Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis. The proteome organization study by Kühner goes far beyond the 2-D gel/mass spectrometry approaches used in previous large-scale studies of mycoplasma proteomes (Wasinger ; Ueberle ; Jaffe ). M. pneumoniae protein complexes were identified using tandem affinity purification and mass spectrometry (TAP-MS). This approach was used previously only for analysis of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which revealed homooligomeric and heteroligomeric protein assemblies and many ‘moonlighting' or multifunctional proteins associated with multiple cellular machines (Gavin ; Krogan ; Tarassov ). In the current analysis, the TAP-MS data are selectively complemented using sophisticated modeling and cryo-electron tomography analysis to provide insights into the structural anatomy of M. pneumoniae. More than 100 protein complexes were identified from 1058 high-confidence interactions between soluble proteins. This included almost 90% of the soluble proteins, which is a value similar to that reported for yeast. Many of the complexes were unexpected, such as a complex of five aminoacyl tRNA synthetases. The associations also led to new annotations for a number of M. pneumoniae genes. The simple observation from this study is that even in a minimal cell the proteome organization is similar to that in more complex organisms. In addition, the wealth of data generated radically improves our perspective on the number and content of molecular machines in a mycoplasma cytoplasm. The metabolism modeling paper by Yus is not unlike a growing number of microbial metabolic reconstruction studies appearing in the literature. Still, it is a vast improvement over previous analyses of mycoplasma metabolism because of its integration of the new understanding of M. pneumoniae metabolism borne from the accompanying transcription and proteome papers, and a rigorous experimental investigation of monitoring biomass indicators, metabolites, and 13C glucose utilization that gave insight into metabolic directionality, fluxes, and energetics. Importantly, the authors present the first defined medium for these bacteria. The formulation of that media was predicted by the M. pneumoniae metabolic model. These three papers should be read as chapters in a larger story rather than as stand-alone scientific studies. Although each report offers a set of vignettes about M. pneumoniae biology that will give readers a sense of one ‘ome' of this near-minimal organism, the power of these massive studies is realized only by integrating the views of the M. pneumoniae transcriptome, proteome, and metabolomes. For those seeking more detailed information, there is a massive set of supplementary online material that will catalyze the expansion of our understanding of the molecular machines that comprise this perhaps not so simple organism. In reading these papers, one must be careful to avoid not seeing the forest because of the trees. For instance, in the proteome paper the authors only characterized a few well-known protein complexes, such as the RNA polymerase and pyruvate dehydrogenase, rather than more deeply investigate some of the many novel complexes they reported. Many of the protein associations reported have not been observed in any other bacterial systems. This could compel some readers to dismiss the result in the absence of solid proof that these unexpected biological entities exist. We find it simply begs further analysis. Our team at the J. Craig Venter Institute uses mycoplasmas as platforms to learn the first principles in the design of cellular life (Lartigue , 2009; Gibson ). Towards that aim, we can ascribe no function to almost 100 of approximately 370 protein coding genes in M. genitalium that are apparently essential for life (Hutchison ; Glass ). These systems biology analyses of the closely related M. pneumoniae give us our first clues about most of those genes. Although we realize that some of the data offered in these three papers may be artifactual, we suspect the vast majority is not. For any given unknown protein or molecular machine, the knowledge of its transcriptional regulation and protein–protein associations can be the catalyst for further study of the role that this protein has in the cell, and for advancing one step closer to the long-sought understanding of cellular life at its simplest and most fundamental level.
  16 in total

1.  The proteome of the bacterium Mycoplasma pneumoniae: comparing predicted open reading frames to identified gene products.

Authors:  Barbara Ueberle; Rainer Frank; Richard Herrmann
Journal:  Proteomics       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 3.984

2.  Global transposon mutagenesis and a minimal Mycoplasma genome.

Authors:  C A Hutchison; S N Peterson; S R Gill; R T Cline; O White; C M Fraser; H O Smith; J C Venter
Journal:  Science       Date:  1999-12-10       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Proteome survey reveals modularity of the yeast cell machinery.

Authors:  Anne-Claude Gavin; Patrick Aloy; Paola Grandi; Roland Krause; Markus Boesche; Martina Marzioch; Christina Rau; Lars Juhl Jensen; Sonja Bastuck; Birgit Dümpelfeld; Angela Edelmann; Marie-Anne Heurtier; Verena Hoffman; Christian Hoefert; Karin Klein; Manuela Hudak; Anne-Marie Michon; Malgorzata Schelder; Markus Schirle; Marita Remor; Tatjana Rudi; Sean Hooper; Andreas Bauer; Tewis Bouwmeester; Georg Casari; Gerard Drewes; Gitte Neubauer; Jens M Rick; Bernhard Kuster; Peer Bork; Robert B Russell; Giulio Superti-Furga
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2006-01-22       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  Genome transplantation in bacteria: changing one species to another.

Authors:  Carole Lartigue; John I Glass; Nina Alperovich; Rembert Pieper; Prashanth P Parmar; Clyde A Hutchison; Hamilton O Smith; J Craig Venter
Journal:  Science       Date:  2007-06-28       Impact factor: 47.728

5.  Complete sequence analysis of the genome of the bacterium Mycoplasma pneumoniae.

Authors:  R Himmelreich; H Hilbert; H Plagens; E Pirkl; B C Li; R Herrmann
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  1996-11-15       Impact factor: 16.971

6.  The minimal gene complement of Mycoplasma genitalium.

Authors:  C M Fraser; J D Gocayne; O White; M D Adams; R A Clayton; R D Fleischmann; C J Bult; A R Kerlavage; G Sutton; J M Kelley; R D Fritchman; J F Weidman; K V Small; M Sandusky; J Fuhrmann; D Nguyen; T R Utterback; D M Saudek; C A Phillips; J M Merrick; J F Tomb; B A Dougherty; K F Bott; P C Hu; T S Lucier; S N Peterson; H O Smith; C A Hutchison; J C Venter
Journal:  Science       Date:  1995-10-20       Impact factor: 47.728

7.  The proteome of Mycoplasma genitalium. Chaps-soluble component.

Authors:  V C Wasinger; J D Pollack; I Humphery-Smith
Journal:  Eur J Biochem       Date:  2000-03

8.  Essential genes of a minimal bacterium.

Authors:  John I Glass; Nacyra Assad-Garcia; Nina Alperovich; Shibu Yooseph; Matthew R Lewis; Mahir Maruf; Clyde A Hutchison; Hamilton O Smith; J Craig Venter
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2006-01-03       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  The complete genome and proteome of Mycoplasma mobile.

Authors:  Jacob D Jaffe; Nicole Stange-Thomann; Cherylyn Smith; David DeCaprio; Sheila Fisher; Jonathan Butler; Sarah Calvo; Tim Elkins; Michael G FitzGerald; Nabil Hafez; Chinnappa D Kodira; John Major; Shunguang Wang; Jane Wilkinson; Robert Nicol; Chad Nusbaum; Bruce Birren; Howard C Berg; George M Church
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2004-08       Impact factor: 9.043

10.  Global landscape of protein complexes in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Authors:  Nevan J Krogan; Gerard Cagney; Haiyuan Yu; Gouqing Zhong; Xinghua Guo; Alexandr Ignatchenko; Joyce Li; Shuye Pu; Nira Datta; Aaron P Tikuisis; Thanuja Punna; José M Peregrín-Alvarez; Michael Shales; Xin Zhang; Michael Davey; Mark D Robinson; Alberto Paccanaro; James E Bray; Anthony Sheung; Bryan Beattie; Dawn P Richards; Veronica Canadien; Atanas Lalev; Frank Mena; Peter Wong; Andrei Starostine; Myra M Canete; James Vlasblom; Samuel Wu; Chris Orsi; Sean R Collins; Shamanta Chandran; Robin Haw; Jennifer J Rilstone; Kiran Gandi; Natalie J Thompson; Gabe Musso; Peter St Onge; Shaun Ghanny; Mandy H Y Lam; Gareth Butland; Amin M Altaf-Ul; Shigehiko Kanaya; Ali Shilatifard; Erin O'Shea; Jonathan S Weissman; C James Ingles; Timothy R Hughes; John Parkinson; Mark Gerstein; Shoshana J Wodak; Andrew Emili; Jack F Greenblatt
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2006-03-22       Impact factor: 49.962

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  7 in total

1.  Synthetic biology: Construction of a yeast chromosome.

Authors:  Daniel G Gibson; J Craig Venter
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2014-05-08       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  Iteration method for predicting essential proteins based on orthology and protein-protein interaction networks.

Authors:  Wei Peng; Jianxin Wang; Weiping Wang; Qing Liu; Fang-Xiang Wu; Yi Pan
Journal:  BMC Syst Biol       Date:  2012-07-18

3.  A global protein-lipid interactome map.

Authors:  Marc Brehme; Marc Vidal
Journal:  Mol Syst Biol       Date:  2010-11-30       Impact factor: 11.429

4.  Predicting essential proteins based on subcellular localization, orthology and PPI networks.

Authors:  Gaoshi Li; Min Li; Jianxin Wang; Jingli Wu; Fang-Xiang Wu; Yi Pan
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2016-08-31       Impact factor: 3.169

Review 5.  Variability of Bacterial Essential Genes Among Closely Related Bacteria: The Case of Escherichia coli.

Authors:  Enrique Martínez-Carranza; Hugo Barajas; Luis-David Alcaraz; Luis Servín-González; Gabriel-Yaxal Ponce-Soto; Gloria Soberón-Chávez
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2018-05-29       Impact factor: 5.640

6.  A systematic survey of centrality measures for protein-protein interaction networks.

Authors:  Minoo Ashtiani; Ali Salehzadeh-Yazdi; Zahra Razaghi-Moghadam; Holger Hennig; Olaf Wolkenhauer; Mehdi Mirzaie; Mohieddin Jafari
Journal:  BMC Syst Biol       Date:  2018-07-31

7.  Prediction of essential proteins based on gene expression programming.

Authors:  Jiancheng Zhong; Jianxin Wang; Wei Peng; Zhen Zhang; Yi Pan
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2013-10-01       Impact factor: 3.969

  7 in total

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