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Large-Scale Evolutionary Analyses on SecB Subunits of Bacterial Sec System

Protein secretion systems are extremely important in bacteria because they are involved in many fundamental cellular processes. Of the various secretion systems, the Sec system is composed of seven different subunits in bacteria, and subunit SecB brings secreted preproteins to subunit SecA, which wi...

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Autores principales: Yan, Shaomin, Wu, Guang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4361572/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25775430
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120417
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author Yan, Shaomin
Wu, Guang
author_facet Yan, Shaomin
Wu, Guang
author_sort Yan, Shaomin
collection PubMed
description Protein secretion systems are extremely important in bacteria because they are involved in many fundamental cellular processes. Of the various secretion systems, the Sec system is composed of seven different subunits in bacteria, and subunit SecB brings secreted preproteins to subunit SecA, which with SecYEG and SecDF forms a complex for the translocation of secreted preproteins through the inner membrane. Because of the wide existence of Sec system across bacteria, eukaryota, and archaea, each subunit of the Sec system has a complicated evolutionary relationship. Until very recently, 5,162 SecB sequences have been documented in UniProtKB, however no phylogenetic study has been conducted on a large sampling of SecBs from bacterial Sec secretion system, and no statistical study has been conducted on such size of SecBs in order to exhaustively investigate their variances of pairwise p-distance along taxonomic lineage from kingdom to phylum, to class, to order, to family, to genus and to organism. To fill in these knowledge gaps, 3,813 bacterial SecB sequences with full taxonomic lineage from kingdom to organism covering 4 phyla, 11 classes, 41 orders, 82 families, 269 genera, and 3,744 organisms were studied. Phylogenetic analysis revealed how the SecBs evolved without compromising their function with examples of 3-D structure comparison of two SecBs from Proteobacteria, and possible factors that affected the SecB evolution were considered. The average pairwise p-distances showed that the variance varied greatly in each taxonomic group. Finally, the variance was further partitioned into inter- and intra-clan variances, which could correspond to vertical and horizontal gene transfers, with relevance for Achromobacter, Brevundimonas, Ochrobactrum, and Pseudoxanthomonas.
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spelling pubmed-43615722015-03-23 Large-Scale Evolutionary Analyses on SecB Subunits of Bacterial Sec System Yan, Shaomin Wu, Guang PLoS One Research Article Protein secretion systems are extremely important in bacteria because they are involved in many fundamental cellular processes. Of the various secretion systems, the Sec system is composed of seven different subunits in bacteria, and subunit SecB brings secreted preproteins to subunit SecA, which with SecYEG and SecDF forms a complex for the translocation of secreted preproteins through the inner membrane. Because of the wide existence of Sec system across bacteria, eukaryota, and archaea, each subunit of the Sec system has a complicated evolutionary relationship. Until very recently, 5,162 SecB sequences have been documented in UniProtKB, however no phylogenetic study has been conducted on a large sampling of SecBs from bacterial Sec secretion system, and no statistical study has been conducted on such size of SecBs in order to exhaustively investigate their variances of pairwise p-distance along taxonomic lineage from kingdom to phylum, to class, to order, to family, to genus and to organism. To fill in these knowledge gaps, 3,813 bacterial SecB sequences with full taxonomic lineage from kingdom to organism covering 4 phyla, 11 classes, 41 orders, 82 families, 269 genera, and 3,744 organisms were studied. Phylogenetic analysis revealed how the SecBs evolved without compromising their function with examples of 3-D structure comparison of two SecBs from Proteobacteria, and possible factors that affected the SecB evolution were considered. The average pairwise p-distances showed that the variance varied greatly in each taxonomic group. Finally, the variance was further partitioned into inter- and intra-clan variances, which could correspond to vertical and horizontal gene transfers, with relevance for Achromobacter, Brevundimonas, Ochrobactrum, and Pseudoxanthomonas. Public Library of Science 2015-03-16 /pmc/articles/PMC4361572/ /pubmed/25775430 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120417 Text en © 2015 Yan, Wu http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yan, Shaomin
Wu, Guang
Large-Scale Evolutionary Analyses on SecB Subunits of Bacterial Sec System
title Large-Scale Evolutionary Analyses on SecB Subunits of Bacterial Sec System
title_full Large-Scale Evolutionary Analyses on SecB Subunits of Bacterial Sec System
title_fullStr Large-Scale Evolutionary Analyses on SecB Subunits of Bacterial Sec System
title_full_unstemmed Large-Scale Evolutionary Analyses on SecB Subunits of Bacterial Sec System
title_short Large-Scale Evolutionary Analyses on SecB Subunits of Bacterial Sec System
title_sort large-scale evolutionary analyses on secb subunits of bacterial sec system
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4361572/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25775430
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120417
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