Limited Influence of Oxygen on the Evolution of Chemical Diversity in Metabolic Networks

Oxygen is thought to promote species and biomolecule diversity. Previous studies have suggested that oxygen expands metabolic networks by acquiring metabolites with different chemical properties (higher hydrophobicity, for example). However, such conclusions are typically based on biased evaluation,...

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Main Authors: Kazuhiro Takemoto, Ikumi Yoshitake
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-10-01
Series:Metabolites
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2218-1989/3/4/979
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spelling doaj-26a844f7d9b84d63ae974c11b5b9ffa62020-11-24T23:56:41ZengMDPI AGMetabolites2218-19892013-10-013497999210.3390/metabo3040979Limited Influence of Oxygen on the Evolution of Chemical Diversity in Metabolic NetworksKazuhiro TakemotoIkumi YoshitakeOxygen is thought to promote species and biomolecule diversity. Previous studies have suggested that oxygen expands metabolic networks by acquiring metabolites with different chemical properties (higher hydrophobicity, for example). However, such conclusions are typically based on biased evaluation, and are therefore non-conclusive. Thus, we re-investigated the effect of oxygen on metabolic evolution using a phylogenetic comparative method and metadata analysis to reduce the bias as much as possible. Notably, we found no difference in metabolic network expansion between aerobes and anaerobes when evaluating phylogenetic relationships. Furthermore, we showed that previous studies have overestimated or underestimated the degrees of differences in the chemical properties (e.g., hydrophobicity) between oxic and anoxic metabolites in metabolic networks of unicellular organisms; however, such overestimation was not observed when considering the metabolic networks of multicellular organisms. These findings indicate that the contribution of oxygen to increased chemical diversity in metabolic networks is lower than previously thought; rather, phylogenetic signals and cell-cell communication result in increased chemical diversity. However, this conclusion does not contradict the effect of oxygen on metabolic evolution; instead, it provides a deeper understanding of how oxygen contributes to metabolic evolution despite several limitations in data analysis methods.http://www.mdpi.com/2218-1989/3/4/979metabolismchemoinformaticsenvironmental interactionevolution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kazuhiro Takemoto
Ikumi Yoshitake
spellingShingle Kazuhiro Takemoto
Ikumi Yoshitake
Limited Influence of Oxygen on the Evolution of Chemical Diversity in Metabolic Networks
Metabolites
metabolism
chemoinformatics
environmental interaction
evolution
author_facet Kazuhiro Takemoto
Ikumi Yoshitake
author_sort Kazuhiro Takemoto
title Limited Influence of Oxygen on the Evolution of Chemical Diversity in Metabolic Networks
title_short Limited Influence of Oxygen on the Evolution of Chemical Diversity in Metabolic Networks
title_full Limited Influence of Oxygen on the Evolution of Chemical Diversity in Metabolic Networks
title_fullStr Limited Influence of Oxygen on the Evolution of Chemical Diversity in Metabolic Networks
title_full_unstemmed Limited Influence of Oxygen on the Evolution of Chemical Diversity in Metabolic Networks
title_sort limited influence of oxygen on the evolution of chemical diversity in metabolic networks
publisher MDPI AG
series Metabolites
issn 2218-1989
publishDate 2013-10-01
description Oxygen is thought to promote species and biomolecule diversity. Previous studies have suggested that oxygen expands metabolic networks by acquiring metabolites with different chemical properties (higher hydrophobicity, for example). However, such conclusions are typically based on biased evaluation, and are therefore non-conclusive. Thus, we re-investigated the effect of oxygen on metabolic evolution using a phylogenetic comparative method and metadata analysis to reduce the bias as much as possible. Notably, we found no difference in metabolic network expansion between aerobes and anaerobes when evaluating phylogenetic relationships. Furthermore, we showed that previous studies have overestimated or underestimated the degrees of differences in the chemical properties (e.g., hydrophobicity) between oxic and anoxic metabolites in metabolic networks of unicellular organisms; however, such overestimation was not observed when considering the metabolic networks of multicellular organisms. These findings indicate that the contribution of oxygen to increased chemical diversity in metabolic networks is lower than previously thought; rather, phylogenetic signals and cell-cell communication result in increased chemical diversity. However, this conclusion does not contradict the effect of oxygen on metabolic evolution; instead, it provides a deeper understanding of how oxygen contributes to metabolic evolution despite several limitations in data analysis methods.
topic metabolism
chemoinformatics
environmental interaction
evolution
url http://www.mdpi.com/2218-1989/3/4/979
work_keys_str_mv AT kazuhirotakemoto limitedinfluenceofoxygenontheevolutionofchemicaldiversityinmetabolicnetworks
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