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Flexibility and Symmetry of Prokaryotic Genome Rearrangement Reveal Lineage-Associated Core-Gene-Defined Genome Organizational Frameworks

The prokaryotic pangenome partitions genes into core and dispensable genes. The order of core genes, albeit assumed to be stable under selection in general, is frequently interrupted by horizontal gene transfer and rearrangement, but how a core-gene-defined genome maintains its stability or flexibil...

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Autores principales: Kang, Yu, Gu, Chaohao, Yuan, Lina, Wang, Yue, Zhu, Yanmin, Li, Xinna, Luo, Qibin, Xiao, Jingfa, Jiang, Daquan, Qian, Minping, Ahmed Khan, Aftab, Chen, Fei, Zhang, Zhang, Yu, Jun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society of Microbiology 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4251990/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25425232
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01867-14
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author Kang, Yu
Gu, Chaohao
Yuan, Lina
Wang, Yue
Zhu, Yanmin
Li, Xinna
Luo, Qibin
Xiao, Jingfa
Jiang, Daquan
Qian, Minping
Ahmed Khan, Aftab
Chen, Fei
Zhang, Zhang
Yu, Jun
author_facet Kang, Yu
Gu, Chaohao
Yuan, Lina
Wang, Yue
Zhu, Yanmin
Li, Xinna
Luo, Qibin
Xiao, Jingfa
Jiang, Daquan
Qian, Minping
Ahmed Khan, Aftab
Chen, Fei
Zhang, Zhang
Yu, Jun
author_sort Kang, Yu
collection PubMed
description The prokaryotic pangenome partitions genes into core and dispensable genes. The order of core genes, albeit assumed to be stable under selection in general, is frequently interrupted by horizontal gene transfer and rearrangement, but how a core-gene-defined genome maintains its stability or flexibility remains to be investigated. Based on data from 30 species, including 425 genomes from six phyla, we grouped core genes into syntenic blocks in the context of a pangenome according to their stability across multiple isolates. A subset of the core genes, often species specific and lineage associated, formed a core-gene-defined genome organizational framework (cGOF). Such cGOFs are either single segmental (one-third of the species analyzed) or multisegmental (the rest). Multisegment cGOFs were further classified into symmetric or asymmetric according to segment orientations toward the origin-terminus axis. The cGOFs in Gram-positive species are exclusively symmetric and often reversible in orientation, as opposed to those of the Gram-negative bacteria, which are all asymmetric and irreversible. Meanwhile, all species showing strong strand-biased gene distribution contain symmetric cGOFs and often specific DnaE (α subunit of DNA polymerase III) isoforms. Furthermore, functional evaluations revealed that cGOF genes are hub associated with regard to cellular activities, and the stability of cGOF provides efficient indexes for scaffold orientation as demonstrated by assembling virtual and empirical genome drafts. cGOFs show species specificity, and the symmetry of multisegmental cGOFs is conserved among taxa and constrained by DNA polymerase-centric strand-biased gene distribution. The definition of species-specific cGOFs provides powerful guidance for genome assembly and other structure-based analysis.
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spelling pubmed-42519902014-12-05 Flexibility and Symmetry of Prokaryotic Genome Rearrangement Reveal Lineage-Associated Core-Gene-Defined Genome Organizational Frameworks Kang, Yu Gu, Chaohao Yuan, Lina Wang, Yue Zhu, Yanmin Li, Xinna Luo, Qibin Xiao, Jingfa Jiang, Daquan Qian, Minping Ahmed Khan, Aftab Chen, Fei Zhang, Zhang Yu, Jun mBio Research Article The prokaryotic pangenome partitions genes into core and dispensable genes. The order of core genes, albeit assumed to be stable under selection in general, is frequently interrupted by horizontal gene transfer and rearrangement, but how a core-gene-defined genome maintains its stability or flexibility remains to be investigated. Based on data from 30 species, including 425 genomes from six phyla, we grouped core genes into syntenic blocks in the context of a pangenome according to their stability across multiple isolates. A subset of the core genes, often species specific and lineage associated, formed a core-gene-defined genome organizational framework (cGOF). Such cGOFs are either single segmental (one-third of the species analyzed) or multisegmental (the rest). Multisegment cGOFs were further classified into symmetric or asymmetric according to segment orientations toward the origin-terminus axis. The cGOFs in Gram-positive species are exclusively symmetric and often reversible in orientation, as opposed to those of the Gram-negative bacteria, which are all asymmetric and irreversible. Meanwhile, all species showing strong strand-biased gene distribution contain symmetric cGOFs and often specific DnaE (α subunit of DNA polymerase III) isoforms. Furthermore, functional evaluations revealed that cGOF genes are hub associated with regard to cellular activities, and the stability of cGOF provides efficient indexes for scaffold orientation as demonstrated by assembling virtual and empirical genome drafts. cGOFs show species specificity, and the symmetry of multisegmental cGOFs is conserved among taxa and constrained by DNA polymerase-centric strand-biased gene distribution. The definition of species-specific cGOFs provides powerful guidance for genome assembly and other structure-based analysis. American Society of Microbiology 2014-11-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4251990/ /pubmed/25425232 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01867-14 Text en Copyright © 2014 Kang et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/) , which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kang, Yu
Gu, Chaohao
Yuan, Lina
Wang, Yue
Zhu, Yanmin
Li, Xinna
Luo, Qibin
Xiao, Jingfa
Jiang, Daquan
Qian, Minping
Ahmed Khan, Aftab
Chen, Fei
Zhang, Zhang
Yu, Jun
Flexibility and Symmetry of Prokaryotic Genome Rearrangement Reveal Lineage-Associated Core-Gene-Defined Genome Organizational Frameworks
title Flexibility and Symmetry of Prokaryotic Genome Rearrangement Reveal Lineage-Associated Core-Gene-Defined Genome Organizational Frameworks
title_full Flexibility and Symmetry of Prokaryotic Genome Rearrangement Reveal Lineage-Associated Core-Gene-Defined Genome Organizational Frameworks
title_fullStr Flexibility and Symmetry of Prokaryotic Genome Rearrangement Reveal Lineage-Associated Core-Gene-Defined Genome Organizational Frameworks
title_full_unstemmed Flexibility and Symmetry of Prokaryotic Genome Rearrangement Reveal Lineage-Associated Core-Gene-Defined Genome Organizational Frameworks
title_short Flexibility and Symmetry of Prokaryotic Genome Rearrangement Reveal Lineage-Associated Core-Gene-Defined Genome Organizational Frameworks
title_sort flexibility and symmetry of prokaryotic genome rearrangement reveal lineage-associated core-gene-defined genome organizational frameworks
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4251990/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25425232
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01867-14
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