| Literature DB >> 28187792 |
Abstract
Complementarity between nucleic acid molecules is central to biological information transfer processes. Apart from the basal processes of replication, transcription and translation, complementarity is also employed by multiple defense and regulatory systems. All cellular life forms possess defense systems against viruses and mobile genetic elements, and in most of them some of the defense mechanisms involve small guide RNAs or DNAs that recognize parasite genomes and trigger their inactivation. The nucleic acid-guided defense systems include prokaryotic Argonaute (pAgo)-centered innate immunity and CRISPR-Cas adaptive immunity as well as diverse branches of RNA interference (RNAi) in eukaryotes. The archaeal pAgo machinery is the direct ancestor of eukaryotic RNAi that, however, acquired additional components, such as Dicer, and enormously diversified through multiple duplications. In contrast, eukaryotes lack any heritage of the CRISPR-Cas systems, conceivably, due to the cellular toxicity of some Cas proteins that would get activated as a result of operon disruption in eukaryotes. The adaptive immunity function in eukaryotes is taken over partly by the PIWI RNA branch of RNAi and partly by protein-based immunity. In this review, I briefly discuss the interplay between homology and analogy in the evolution of RNA- and DNA-guided immunity, and attempt to formulate some general evolutionary principles for this ancient class of defense systems. REVIEWERS: This article was reviewed by Mikhail Gelfand and Bojan Zagrovic.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28187792 PMCID: PMC5303251 DOI: 10.1186/s13062-017-0177-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Direct ISSN: 1745-6150 Impact factor: 4.540
Fig. 1The evolutionary history of eukaryotic RNAi: assembly from diverse archaeal and bacterial ancestors. The “bacterial” and “archaeal” components of the RNAi protein machinery are assumed to have evolved from the proto-mitochondrial endosymbiont and its archaeal host, respectively. This scenario rests on the fact that RNase III is a protein that is nearly ubiquitous in bacteria but rare in archaea, and the (DNA-dependent) RNA polymerase that is thought to be the ancestor of the RNAi RdRp so far has been identified only in bacteriophages (not in archaeal viruses). However, it cannot be ruled out that these genes have been acquired by the mesophilic archaeal ancestor of eukaryotes (presumably, a member of the Lokiarchaeota) prior to endosymbiosis. RIII, RNAse III
The core proteins and domains comprising the RNA/DNA-guided immune systemsa
| pAgo: innate immunity in prokaryotes | Eukaryotic RNAi: innate immunity (piRNA branch: adaptive immunity) | CRISPR-Cas: adaptive immunity in prokaryotes |
|---|---|---|
| Adaptation/spacer acquisition | ||
| NA | NA | Cas1: unique α-helical fold |
| Guide RNA processing/maturation and amplification | ||
| pAgo: | Dicer: | Class1: multi-RRM complexes |
| Target recognition and cleavage | ||
| pAgo: | eAgo: | Class 1: |
aOnly the key, evolutionarily conserved domains are included for each system. The domains that are homologous between different classes of RNA/DNA-guided systems are shown in bold type. For Class 2 CRISPR-Cas, RNase III is shown in brackets, to indicate that this is not a Cas protein
Fig. 2The fates of prokaryotic defense systems in eukaryotes. C, CRISPR-Cas; RM, restriction-modification; TA, toxins-antitoxins
Fig. 3Evolution of RNA/DNA-guided defense and regulatory systems: from the RNA world to the present