| Literature DB >> 26156036 |
Zackary J Jay1, William P Inskeep2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intron sequences are common in 16S rRNA genes of specific thermophilic lineages of Archaea, specifically the Thermoproteales (phylum Crenarchaeota). Environmental sequencing (16S rRNA gene and metagenome) from geothermal habitats in Yellowstone National Park (YNP) has expanded the available datasets for investigating 16S rRNA gene introns. The objectives of this study were to characterize and curate archaeal 16S rRNA gene introns from high-temperature habitats, evaluate the conservation and distribution of archaeal 16S rRNA introns in geothermal systems, and determine which "universal" archaeal 16S rRNA gene primers are impacted by the presence of intron sequences.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26156036 PMCID: PMC4496867 DOI: 10.1186/s13062-015-0065-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Direct ISSN: 1745-6150 Impact factor: 4.540
Fig. 1Position of introns identified in 16S rRNA genes within the Archaea. Vertical arrows indicate loci with positions underlined (E. coli 16S rRNA numbering). Horizontal arrows indicate “universal” archaeal primers interrupted by the presence of intron sequences (arrows not to scale)
Intron insertion loci identified in archaeal 16S rRNA genes
| Representative Taxa | Locusa | #CDSb,c | #HP2 | #PRUb,c | Interrupted “universal” primer(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 374 | 5 (5,0) | 10 | - | Kb366F |
|
| 548 | 2 (0,2) | 13 | - | -none- |
|
| 722 | - | - | 2 | -none- |
|
| 781 | 14 (2,4) | - | 28 | Ab779F |
| Desulfurococcales | 803 | - | - | 3 | Ab789F, Arc806R |
|
| 901 | - | 8 | - | Ab909R |
|
| 908 | 4 (1,3) | - | 6 | Ab909R, Ab906F, 926wF, U926R, Ab927R |
|
| 919 | 6 (2,3) | - | 27 (1,0) | Ab906F, 926wF, U926R, Ab927R, A934R |
|
| 978 | - | 9 | - | -none- |
|
| 1093 | 15 (4,11) | 7 | 9 (2,1) | -none- |
|
| 1205 | 2 (0,2) | 17 | - | -none- |
|
| 1213 | 18 (4,14) | - | 2 | -none- |
|
| 1391 | 15 (7,2) | - | 5 | UA1406R, N1406R, U1406R |
aIntron insertion location in 16S rRNA gene (E. coli numbering, nucleotide position directly before insertion), b CDS Homing endonuclease Coding Sequence, HP small (<50 nt) RNA hairpin-forming introns, PRU Partial, Remnant, or Uncharacterized introns, cNumbers in parenthesis refer to the number of LAGLI-DADG motifs (1 or 2, respectively), dSpecifies an uncharacterized phyla within the Desulfurococcales and Thermoproteales, respectively
Fig. 2Phylogenetic tree of 16S rRNA genes that contain intron sequences. Intron sequences were not included in the alignments. The tree was constructed with Neighbor-Joining methods and bootstrap values were determined by resampling 1000 trees
Fig. 3The location (E. coli numbering) of intron sequences (identified in the current study) within the transcribed secondary structure of the 16S rRNA gene. Variable regions (V1 - V9) are shown for reference
Fig. 4Predicted secondary structures of 16S rRNA gene introns. a Predicted secondary structure of the Pyrobaculum yellowstonensis strain WP30 16S rRNA gene intron at locus 1391, illustrating the highly-structured nature of transcribed intron sequences. Numbers denote nucleotide position along the intron sequence. b-e Predicted secondary structures based on consensus sequences (weblogo) of four different 16S rRNA gene introns. Lower and upper case nucleotides denote 16S rRNA gene sequence and intron sequence, respectively. Arrows indicate hypothesized excision locations (EL) within the bulge-helix-bulge motif
Fig. 5Phylogenetic analysis of intron sequences (homing endonuclease encoding) at loci 1213 (a) and 1392 (b). Unrooted trees were constructed with Neighbor-Joining methods and bootstrap values were determined by resampling 1000 trees