Solar-panel and parasol strategies shape the proteorhodopsin distribution pattern in marine Flavobacteriia

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作者
Yohei Kumagai
Susumu Yoshizawa
Yu Nakajima
Mai Watanabe
Tsukasa Fukunaga
Yoshitoshi Ogura
Tetsuya Hayashi
Kenshiro Oshima
Masahira Hattori
Masahiko Ikeuchi
Kazuhiro Kogure
Edward F. DeLong
Wataru Iwasaki
机构
[1] The University of Tokyo,Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute
[2] The University of Tokyo,Department of Natural Environmental Studies, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences
[3] The University of Tokyo,Department of Life Sciences, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
[4] The University of Tokyo,Department of Computational Biology and Medical Sciences, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences
[5] Kyushu University,Department of Bacteriology, Faculty of Medical Sciences
[6] The University of Tokyo,Center for Omics and Bioinformatics, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences
[7] Waseda University,Graduate School of Advanced Science and Engineering
[8] University of Hawaii,Center for Microbial Oceanography: Research and Education
[9] The University of Tokyo,Department of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science
来源
The ISME Journal | 2018年 / 12卷
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摘要
Proteorhodopsin (PR) is a light-driven proton pump that is found in diverse bacteria and archaea species, and is widespread in marine microbial ecosystems. To date, many studies have suggested the advantage of PR for microorganisms in sunlit environments. The ecophysiological significance of PR is still not fully understood however, including the drivers of PR gene gain, retention, and loss in different marine microbial species. To explore this question we sequenced 21 marine Flavobacteriia genomes of polyphyletic origin, which encompassed both PR-possessing as well as PR-lacking strains. Here, we show that the possession or alternatively the lack of PR genes reflects one of two fundamental adaptive strategies in marine bacteria. Specifically, while PR-possessing bacteria utilize light energy (“solar-panel strategy”), PR-lacking bacteria exclusively possess UV-screening pigment synthesis genes to avoid UV damage and would adapt to microaerobic environment (“parasol strategy”), which also helps explain why PR-possessing bacteria have smaller genomes than those of PR-lacking bacteria. Collectively, our results highlight the different strategies of dealing with light, DNA repair, and oxygen availability that relate to the presence or absence of PR phototrophy.
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页码:1329 / 1343
页数:14
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  • [1] Solar-panel and parasol strategies shape the proteorhodopsin distribution pattern in marine Flavobacteriia
    Kumagai, Yohei
    Yoshizawa, Susumu
    Nakajima, Yu
    Watanabe, Mai
    Fukunaga, Tsukasa
    Ogura, Yoshitoshi
    Hayashi, Tetsuya
    Oshima, Kenshiro
    Hattori, Masahira
    Ikeuchi, Masahiko
    Kogure, Kazuhiro
    DeLong, Edward F.
    Iwasaki, Wataru
    [J]. ISME JOURNAL, 2018, 12 (05): : 1329 - 1343