Literature DB >> 27819663

Two fundamentally different classes of microbial genes.

Yuri I Wolf1, Kira S Makarova1, Alexander E Lobkovsky1, Eugene V Koonin1.   

Abstract

The evolution of bacterial and archaeal genomes is highly dynamic and involves extensive horizontal gene transfer and gene loss1-4. Furthermore, many microbial species appear to have open pangenomes, where each newly sequenced genome contains more than 10% ORFans, that is, genes without detectable homologues in other species5,6. Here, we report a quantitative analysis of microbial genome evolution by fitting the parameters of a simple, steady-state evolutionary model to the comparative genomic data on the gene content and gene order similarity between archaeal genomes. The results reveal two sharply distinct classes of microbial genes, one of which is characterized by effectively instantaneous gene replacement, and the other consists of genes with finite, distributed replacement rates. These findings imply a conservative estimate of the size of the prokaryotic genomic universe, which appears to consist of at least a billion distinct genes. Furthermore, the same distribution of constraints is shown to govern the evolution of gene complement and gene order, without the need to invoke long-range conservation or the selfish operon concept7.

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27819663     DOI: 10.1038/nmicrobiol.2016.208

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Microbiol        ISSN: 2058-5276            Impact factor:   17.745


  18 in total

1.  Disentangling the effects of selection and loss bias on gene dynamics.

Authors:  Jaime Iranzo; José A Cuesta; Susanna Manrubia; Mikhail I Katsnelson; Eugene V Koonin
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2017-06-26       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Theory of prokaryotic genome evolution.

Authors:  Itamar Sela; Yuri I Wolf; Eugene V Koonin
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2016-10-04       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 3.  Microbial genome analysis: the COG approach.

Authors:  Michael Y Galperin; David M Kristensen; Kira S Makarova; Yuri I Wolf; Eugene V Koonin
Journal:  Brief Bioinform       Date:  2019-07-19       Impact factor: 11.622

Review 4.  The Landscape of Genetic Content in the Gut and Oral Human Microbiome.

Authors:  Braden T Tierney; Zhen Yang; Jacob M Luber; Marc Beaudin; Marsha C Wibowo; Christina Baek; Eleanor Mehlenbacher; Chirag J Patel; Aleksandar D Kostic
Journal:  Cell Host Microbe       Date:  2019-08-14       Impact factor: 21.023

5.  Towards the biogeography of prokaryotic genes.

Authors:  Luis Pedro Coelho; Renato Alves; Álvaro Rodríguez Del Río; Pernille Neve Myers; Carlos P Cantalapiedra; Joaquín Giner-Lamia; Thomas Sebastian Schmidt; Daniel R Mende; Askarbek Orakov; Ivica Letunic; Falk Hildebrand; Thea Van Rossum; Sofia K Forslund; Supriya Khedkar; Oleksandr M Maistrenko; Shaojun Pan; Longhao Jia; Pamela Ferretti; Shinichi Sunagawa; Xing-Ming Zhao; Henrik Bjørn Nielsen; Jaime Huerta-Cepas; Peer Bork
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2021-12-15       Impact factor: 69.504

6.  Charting the Complexity of the Marine Microbiome through Single-Cell Genomics.

Authors:  Maria G Pachiadaki; Julia M Brown; Joseph Brown; Oliver Bezuidt; Paul M Berube; Steven J Biller; Nicole J Poulton; Michael D Burkart; James J La Clair; Sallie W Chisholm; Ramunas Stepanauskas
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2019-12-12       Impact factor: 41.582

7.  Phylogenetic background and habitat drive the genetic diversification of Escherichia coli.

Authors:  Marie Touchon; Amandine Perrin; Jorge André Moura de Sousa; Belinda Vangchhia; Samantha Burn; Claire L O'Brien; Erick Denamur; David Gordon; Eduardo Pc Rocha
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2020-06-12       Impact factor: 5.917

Review 8.  Evolution of Microbial Genomics: Conceptual Shifts over a Quarter Century.

Authors:  Eugene V Koonin; Kira S Makarova; Yuri I Wolf
Journal:  Trends Microbiol       Date:  2021-02-01       Impact factor: 18.230

9.  Estimation of universal and taxon-specific parameters of prokaryotic genome evolution.

Authors:  Itamar Sela; Yuri I Wolf; Eugene V Koonin
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-04-13       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  The CRISPR Spacer Space Is Dominated by Sequences from Species-Specific Mobilomes.

Authors:  Sergey A Shmakov; Vassilii Sitnik; Kira S Makarova; Yuri I Wolf; Konstantin V Severinov; Eugene V Koonin
Journal:  mBio       Date:  2017-09-19       Impact factor: 7.867

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