Evolutionary gradient of predicted nuclear localization signals (NLS)-bearing proteins in genomes of family Planctomycetaceae

Abstract Background The nuclear envelope is considered a key classification marker that distinguishes prokaryotes from eukaryotes. However, this marker does not apply to the family Planctomycetaceae, which has intracellular spaces divided by lipidic intracytoplasmic membranes (ICMs). Nuclear localiz...

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Main Authors: Min Guo, Ruifu Yang, Chen Huang, Qiwen Liao, Guangyi Fan, Chenghang Sun, Simon Ming-Yuen Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-04-01
Series:BMC Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12866-017-0981-y
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spelling doaj-93982a61a3ef466dab2f15575b2c64572020-11-25T02:34:21ZengBMCBMC Microbiology1471-21802017-04-0117111010.1186/s12866-017-0981-yEvolutionary gradient of predicted nuclear localization signals (NLS)-bearing proteins in genomes of family PlanctomycetaceaeMin Guo0Ruifu Yang1Chen Huang2Qiwen Liao3Guangyi Fan4Chenghang Sun5Simon Ming-Yuen Lee6State Key Laboratory of Quality Research of Chinese Medicine and Institute of Chinese Medical Sciences, University of MacauState Key Laboratory of Pathogen and Biosecurity, Beijing Institute of Microbiology and EpidemiologyState Key Laboratory of Quality Research of Chinese Medicine and Institute of Chinese Medical Sciences, University of MacauState Key Laboratory of Quality Research of Chinese Medicine and Institute of Chinese Medical Sciences, University of MacauState Key Laboratory of Quality Research of Chinese Medicine and Institute of Chinese Medical Sciences, University of MacauDepartment of Microbial Chemistry, Institute of Medicinal Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical CollegeState Key Laboratory of Quality Research of Chinese Medicine and Institute of Chinese Medical Sciences, University of MacauAbstract Background The nuclear envelope is considered a key classification marker that distinguishes prokaryotes from eukaryotes. However, this marker does not apply to the family Planctomycetaceae, which has intracellular spaces divided by lipidic intracytoplasmic membranes (ICMs). Nuclear localization signal (NLS), a short stretch of amino acid sequence, destines to transport proteins from cytoplasm into nucleus, and is also associated with the development of nuclear envelope. We attempted to investigate the NLS motifs in Planctomycetaceae genomes to demonstrate the potential molecular transition in the development of intracellular membrane system. Results In this study, we identified NLS-like motifs that have the same amino acid compositions as experimentally identified NLSs in genomes of 11 representative species of family Planctomycetaceae. A total of 15 NLS types and 170 NLS-bearing proteins were detected in the 11 strains. To determine the molecular transformation, we compared NLS-bearing protein abundances in the 11 representative Planctomycetaceae genomes with them in genomes of 16 taxonomically varied microorganisms: nine bacteria, two archaea and five fungi. In the 27 strains, 29 NLS types and 1101 NLS-bearing proteins were identified, principal component analysis showed a significant transitional gradient from bacteria to Planctomycetaceae to fungi on their NLS-bearing protein abundance profiles. Then, we clustered the 993 non-redundant NLS-bearing proteins into 181 families and annotated their involved metabolic pathways. Afterwards, we aligned the ten types of NLS motifs from the 13 families containing NLS-bearing proteins among bacteria, Planctomycetaceae or fungi, considering their diversity, length and origin. A transition towards increased complexity from non-planctomycete bacteria to Planctomycetaceae to archaea and fungi was detected based on the complexity of the 10 types of NLS-like motifs in the 13 NLS-bearing proteins families. Conclusion The results of this study reveal that Planctomycetaceae separates slightly from the members of non-planctomycete bacteria but still has substantial differences from fungi, based on the NLS-like motifs and NLS-bearing protein analysis.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12866-017-0981-yPlanctomycetaceaeComparative genomicsNuclear localization signalSignal peptide transformation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Min Guo
Ruifu Yang
Chen Huang
Qiwen Liao
Guangyi Fan
Chenghang Sun
Simon Ming-Yuen Lee
spellingShingle Min Guo
Ruifu Yang
Chen Huang
Qiwen Liao
Guangyi Fan
Chenghang Sun
Simon Ming-Yuen Lee
Evolutionary gradient of predicted nuclear localization signals (NLS)-bearing proteins in genomes of family Planctomycetaceae
BMC Microbiology
Planctomycetaceae
Comparative genomics
Nuclear localization signal
Signal peptide transformation
author_facet Min Guo
Ruifu Yang
Chen Huang
Qiwen Liao
Guangyi Fan
Chenghang Sun
Simon Ming-Yuen Lee
author_sort Min Guo
title Evolutionary gradient of predicted nuclear localization signals (NLS)-bearing proteins in genomes of family Planctomycetaceae
title_short Evolutionary gradient of predicted nuclear localization signals (NLS)-bearing proteins in genomes of family Planctomycetaceae
title_full Evolutionary gradient of predicted nuclear localization signals (NLS)-bearing proteins in genomes of family Planctomycetaceae
title_fullStr Evolutionary gradient of predicted nuclear localization signals (NLS)-bearing proteins in genomes of family Planctomycetaceae
title_full_unstemmed Evolutionary gradient of predicted nuclear localization signals (NLS)-bearing proteins in genomes of family Planctomycetaceae
title_sort evolutionary gradient of predicted nuclear localization signals (nls)-bearing proteins in genomes of family planctomycetaceae
publisher BMC
series BMC Microbiology
issn 1471-2180
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Abstract Background The nuclear envelope is considered a key classification marker that distinguishes prokaryotes from eukaryotes. However, this marker does not apply to the family Planctomycetaceae, which has intracellular spaces divided by lipidic intracytoplasmic membranes (ICMs). Nuclear localization signal (NLS), a short stretch of amino acid sequence, destines to transport proteins from cytoplasm into nucleus, and is also associated with the development of nuclear envelope. We attempted to investigate the NLS motifs in Planctomycetaceae genomes to demonstrate the potential molecular transition in the development of intracellular membrane system. Results In this study, we identified NLS-like motifs that have the same amino acid compositions as experimentally identified NLSs in genomes of 11 representative species of family Planctomycetaceae. A total of 15 NLS types and 170 NLS-bearing proteins were detected in the 11 strains. To determine the molecular transformation, we compared NLS-bearing protein abundances in the 11 representative Planctomycetaceae genomes with them in genomes of 16 taxonomically varied microorganisms: nine bacteria, two archaea and five fungi. In the 27 strains, 29 NLS types and 1101 NLS-bearing proteins were identified, principal component analysis showed a significant transitional gradient from bacteria to Planctomycetaceae to fungi on their NLS-bearing protein abundance profiles. Then, we clustered the 993 non-redundant NLS-bearing proteins into 181 families and annotated their involved metabolic pathways. Afterwards, we aligned the ten types of NLS motifs from the 13 families containing NLS-bearing proteins among bacteria, Planctomycetaceae or fungi, considering their diversity, length and origin. A transition towards increased complexity from non-planctomycete bacteria to Planctomycetaceae to archaea and fungi was detected based on the complexity of the 10 types of NLS-like motifs in the 13 NLS-bearing proteins families. Conclusion The results of this study reveal that Planctomycetaceae separates slightly from the members of non-planctomycete bacteria but still has substantial differences from fungi, based on the NLS-like motifs and NLS-bearing protein analysis.
topic Planctomycetaceae
Comparative genomics
Nuclear localization signal
Signal peptide transformation
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12866-017-0981-y
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