| Literature DB >> 21080938 |
Nicolas Gagnière1, Didier Jollivet, Isabelle Boutet, Yann Brélivet, Didier Busso, Corinne Da Silva, Françoise Gaill, Dominique Higuet, Stéphane Hourdez, Bernard Knoops, François Lallier, Emmanuelle Leize-Wagner, Jean Mary, Dino Moras, Emmanuel Perrodou, Jean-François Rees, Béatrice Segurens, Bruce Shillito, Arnaud Tanguy, Jean-Claude Thierry, Jean Weissenbach, Patrick Wincker, Franck Zal, Olivier Poch, Odile Lecompte.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Alvinella pompejana is a representative of Annelids, a key phylum for evo-devo studies that is still poorly studied at the sequence level. A. pompejana inhabits deep-sea hydrothermal vents and is currently known as one of the most thermotolerant Eukaryotes in marine environments, withstanding the largest known chemical and thermal ranges (from 5 to 105°C). This tube-dwelling worm forms dense colonies on the surface of hydrothermal chimneys and can withstand long periods of hypo/anoxia and long phases of exposure to hydrogen sulphides. A. pompejana specifically inhabits chimney walls of hydrothermal vents on the East Pacific Rise. To survive, Alvinella has developed numerous adaptations at the physiological and molecular levels, such as an increase in the thermostability of proteins and protein complexes. It represents an outstanding model organism for studying adaptation to harsh physicochemical conditions and for isolating stable macromolecules resistant to high temperatures.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21080938 PMCID: PMC3018142 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-11-634
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Summary of A. pompejan a cDNA libraries and assemblies
| CloneMiner | Oligo-capping | Global assembly | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whole animal | Pygidium | Ventral tissue | Gills | ||
| 20,549 | 36,648 | 16,411 | 26,569 | 100,177 | |
| 19,739 (96%) | 25,419 (69%) | 12,871 (78%) | 18,105 (68%) | 76,134 (76%) | |
| 3' poly(A) (%) | 1,599 (8%) | 3,156 (12%) | 5,465 (43%) | 1,467 (8%) | 11,687 (15%) |
| Mean length (bp) | 633 | 610 | 720 | 776 | 674 |
| 5,425 | 8,682 | 2,831 | 3,760 | 15,858 | |
| Contigs | 1,365 | 2,327 | 917 | 1,193 | 4,993 |
| Singletons | 4,060 | 6,355 | 1,914 | 2,567 | 10,865 |
| Contig mean length (bp) | 993 | 951 | 852 | 931 | 1,017 |
Overview of the annotation results.
| Level 1 annotations | Number of proteins (%) |
|---|---|
| Proteins with homologs | 7,353 (100%) |
| Pfam-A domains | 4,767 (65%) |
| Gene Ontology | 5,949 (81%) |
| GO Biological Process | 5,072 (69%) |
| GO Cellular Component | 4,530 (62%) |
| GO Molecular function | 5,601 (76%) |
| Text mining definition | 4,611 (63%) |
| Enzyme classification | 1,243 (17%) |
| EC level 4 (X.X.X.X) | 1,180 (16%) |
| Annotated proteins | 6,252 (85%) |
| KEGG pathways | 345 |
| Mapped pathways | 202 |
| Coverage > 50% | 82 |
| STRING subnetworks | 385 |
| Mapped subnetworks | 264 |
| Coverage > 50% | 63 |
Figure 1Screenshots of the Alvinella website illustrating some of the visualisation tools.
Highly expressed genes in A. pompejana libraries
| Access | Fonction | Reads* |
|---|---|---|
| TERA04282 | Cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (EC 1.9.3.1) | 7845 |
| TERA02741 | Hypothetical protein | 2029 |
| TERA02189 | Hypothetical protein | 917 |
| TERA02142 | Hypothetical protein | 879 |
| TERA03177 | Actin | 533 |
| TERA00344 | Extracellular globin (Haemoglobin A2 chain precursor) | 524 |
| TERA02067 | Hypothetical protein | 424 |
| TERA00650 | Hypothetical protein | 422 |
| TERA03305 | Intracellular haemoglobin | 386 |
| TERA00833 | Extracellular haemoglobin (Haemoglobin B2 chain precursor) | 370 |
| TERA00205 | Extracellular haemoglobin linker L1 | 349 |
| TERA03100 | Cytochrome c oxidase subunit 5A (EC 1.9.3.1) | 344 |
| TERA00354 | Cytochrome b | 338 |
| TERA04769 | Hypothetical protein | 335 |
| TERA00845 | Extracellular haemoglobin (Haemoglobin B1 chain precursor) | 322 |
| TERA02090 | Hypothetical protein | 304 |
| TERA01907 | Small heat shock protein (sHSP) | 295 |
| TERA02261 | Myosin essential light chain | 285 |
| TERA01929 | Hypothetical protein | 275 |
| TERA00421 | Extracellular haemoglobin linker L3 | 267 |
| TERA03231 | Glutathione peroxidase | 264 |
| TERA01189 | Hypothetical protein | 263 |
| TERA02903 | Hypothetical protein | 258 |
| TERA01828 | Tropomyosin | 232 |
| TERA00984 | Hypothetical protein | 230 |
| TERA02160 | Elongation factor 1-alpha | 218 |
| TERA01465 | Peptidoglycan recognition protein | 200 |
*The last column indicates the number of reads in the global assembly.
Figure 2The 30 most frequent PFAM-A domains identified in . The Y-axis indicates the total number of reads encoding proteins with this domain. We used a logarithmic scale for representation constraints. Bars are coloured according to functional role categories: respiration, oxidative stress and/or detoxification in blue, protein-protein or protein-DNA/RNA interactions in green, structural proteins in red, anti-bacterial defence in orange and others in grey.
Figure 3Bayesian phylogeny of Metazoa. The analysis was performed on a concatenation of 76 ribosomal protein family alignments, with Saccharomyces cerevisiae as the outgroup. The scale bar indicates the expected number of amino acid substitutions per aligned position. All nodes were resolved in 100% of the sampled topologies from the Bayesian analysis, except the node indicated by a square (support value of 96%).
Mean percent identities between orthologous protein sequences of Metazoa.
| Ap | Hs | Dm | Ce | Sj | Nv | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100,0 | ||||||
| 65,9 | 100,0 | |||||
| 62,7 | 61,7 | 100,0 | ||||
| 56,3 | 55,3 | 55,1 | 100,0 | |||
| 57,7 | 56,0 | 54,8 | 51,0 | 100,0 | ||
| 65,1 | 64,5 | 60,8 | 54,9 | 55,3 | 100,0 |