| Literature DB >> 25326317 |
Gao-Peng Li, Liang Jiang, Jia-Zuan Ni, Qiong Liu, Yan Zhang1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Selenium (Se) and sulfur (S) are closely related elements that exhibit similar chemical properties. Some genes related to S metabolism are also involved in Se utilization in many organisms. However, the evolutionary relationship between the two utilization traits is unclear.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25326317 PMCID: PMC4210487 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-15-908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Overview of distribution of SelD proteins and Se utilization traits in archaea. The tree is based on 16S rRNA sequences, which was simplified to only show major branches. The numbers of organisms that contain SelD and known Se utilization traits are shown. Distribution of organisms containing SelD-like family is highlighted in red.
Figure 2Multiple sequence alignments of SelD and SelD-like proteins. The alignments show the N terminal regions that contain the active site in representative SelD and SelD-like proteins. Conserved residues are highlighted. Sec (U) and the corresponding Cys (C) residues are shown in red and blue, respectively. The conserved Cys residue corresponding to the catalytic Sec/Cys in the active site of SelD could not be detected in other families of the ATP-binding superfamily that contains SelD.
Figure 3Phylogenetic analysis of the ATP-binding superfamily that contains SelD and other families. The tree is built based on representative sequences of each family. Bootstrapping values are included. The measurement of distance for the branch length is indicated.
Figure 4Genomic context of SelD-like gene in representative genomes. Functionally related genes in the genomes of Sulfolobus islandicus HVE10/4, Pyrobaculum arsenaticum DSM 13514 and Vulcanisaeta distributa DSM 14429 are color coded. Coding direction is also indicated. HP represents hypothetical proteins.
genes that are present exclusively in all SelD-like-containing thermoproteales
| GI number | Gene annotation | Conserved domains (COG/Pfam/Others) | Occurrence in sulfolobales | Occurrence in other archaea and bacteria |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 145591425 | Hypothetical protein Pars_1207 | COG2210, peroxiredoxin family protein | + (all) | + (many archaea and bacteria) |
| 145591427 | SirA family protein | pfam01206, SirA-like protein | + (all) | + (many archaea and bacteria) |
| 145591451 | Adenylylsulfate reductase subunit beta | TIGR02060, adenosine phosphosulphate reductase, beta subunit; | - | + (some archaea and many bacteria) |
| 145591452 | Adenylylsulfate reductase subunit alpha | TIGR02061, adenosine phosphosulphate reductase, alpha subunit | - | + (some archaea and many bacteria) |
| 145590950 | Antibiotic resistance (efflux) protein | pfam07690, major facilitator superfamily | + (all) | + (many archaea and bacteria) |
Figure 5A predicted model for the involvement of SelD-like protein in the S metabolism in thermoproteales. Known S-related genes are shown in black, whereas SelD-like and acylphosphatase-like proteins are highlighted in red and blue, respectively.