0000000000150345

AUTHOR

Francisco J. Silva

0000-0002-6911-6541

showing 57 related works from this author

Why are the genomes of endosymbiotic bacteria so stable?

2003

The comparative analysis of three strains of the endosymbiotic bacterium Buchnera aphidicola has revealed high genome stability associated with an almost complete absence of chromosomal rearrangements and horizontal gene transfer events during the past 150 million years. The loss of genes involved in DNA uptake and recombination in the initial stages of endosymbiosis probably underlies this stability. Gene loss, which was extensive during the initial steps of Buchnera evolution, has continued in the different Buchnera lineages since their divergence.

GeneticsGene Transfer HorizontalbiologyEndosymbiosisbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationGenomechemistry.chemical_compoundTransformation GeneticBuchnerachemistryEvolutionary biologyGene DuplicationHorizontal gene transferEscherichia coliGeneticsBuchneraGeneConserved SequenceGenome BacterialRecombinationDNAEndosymbiotic bacteriaTrends in Genetics
researchProduct

Gene expression levels influence amino acid usage and evolutionary rates in endosymbiotic bacteria

2005

International audience; Most endosymbiotic bacteria have extremely reduced genomes, accelerated evolutionary rates, and strong AT base compositional bias thought to reflect reduced efficacy of selection and increased mutational pressure. Here, we present a comparative study of evolutionary forces shaping five fully sequenced bacterial endosymbionts of insects. The results of this study were three-fold: (i) Stronger conservation of high expression genes at not just nonsynonymous, but also synonymous, sites. (ii) Variation in amino acid usage strongly correlates with GC content and expression level of genes. This pattern is largely explained by greater conservation of high expression genes, l…

0106 biological sciencesNonsynonymous substitutionInsectafood.ingredientBlochmanniaBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenomeEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesfoodBacterial ProteinsBuchneraSpecies SpecificityGeneticsAnimalsAmino AcidsCodonSymbiosisWigglesworthiaGene030304 developmental biology2. Zero hungerGeneticschemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciences[SDV.GEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/GeneticsBacteriaGene Expression Regulation BacterialGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationAT Rich SequenceGC Rich SequenceAmino acidINSECTEAmino Acid SubstitutionchemistryCodon usage biasMutationDatabases Nucleic AcidBuchneraGC-content
researchProduct

The frontier between cell and organelle: genome analysis of Candidatus Carsonella ruddii

2007

Background Bacterial symbioses are widespread among insects. The early establishment of such symbiotic associations has probably been one of the key factors for the evolutionary success of insects, since it may have allowed access to novel ecological niches and to new imbalanced food resources, such as plant sap or blood. Several genomes of bacterial endosymbionts of different insect species have been recently sequenced, and their biology has been extensively studied. Recently, the complete genome sequence of Candidatus Carsonella ruddii, considered the primary endosymbiont of the psyllid Pachpsylla venusta, has been published. This genome consists of a circular chromosome of 159,662 bp and…

DNA BacterialCandidatus Carsonella ruddiiEvolutionBacterial genome sizeBiologyGenome analysis; Candidatus Carsonella ruddii; Circular chromosome of 159662 bpPolymerase Chain ReactionGenomeHemipteraOpen Reading FramesQH359-425AnimalsSymbiosisGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOrganism:CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Genética ::Otras [UNESCO]Whole genome sequencingGeneticsCircular bacterial chromosomefungiGenes rRNASequence Analysis DNAGenome analysisCircular chromosome of 159662 bpbiology.organism_classificationUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Genética ::OtrasCandidatus Carsonella ruddiiOpen reading frameGenes BacterialGammaproteobacteriaGenome BacterialResearch ArticleBMC Evolutionary Biology
researchProduct

Mobile genetic element proliferation and gene inactivation impact over the genome structure and metabolic capabilities of Sodalis glossinidius, the s…

2010

Abstract Background Genome reduction is a common evolutionary process in symbiotic and pathogenic bacteria. This process has been extensively characterized in bacterial endosymbionts of insects, where primary mutualistic bacteria represent the most extreme cases of genome reduction consequence of a massive process of gene inactivation and loss during their evolution from free-living ancestors. Sodalis glossinidius, the secondary endosymbiont of tsetse flies, contains one of the few complete genomes of bacteria at the very beginning of the symbiotic association, allowing to evaluate the relative impact of mobile genetic element proliferation and gene inactivation over the structure and funct…

lcsh:QH426-470Tsetse Flieslcsh:BiotechnologyPseudogeneProphagesBacterial genome sizeBiologyWigglesworthia glossinidiaGenomeEnterobacteriaceaelcsh:TP248.13-248.65GeneticsAnimalsGene SilencingSymbiosisGeneGeneticsfungiSodalis glossinidiusGenomicsbiology.organism_classificationlcsh:GeneticsWigglesworthiaGenes BacterialDNA Transposable ElementsMobile genetic elementsPseudogenesBiotechnologyResearch ArticleBMC Genomics
researchProduct

Genome size reduction through multiple events of gene disintegration in Buchnera APS

2001

The evolution of the endosymbiont Buchnera during its adaptation to intracellular life involved a massive reduction in its genome. By comparing the orthologous genes of Buchnera, Escherichia coli and Vibrio cholerae, we show that the minimal genome size of Buchnera arose from multiple events of gene disintegration dispersed over the whole genome. The elimination of the genes was a continuous process that began with gene inactivation and progressed until the DNA corresponding to the pseudogenes were completely deleted.

GeneticsGenome evolutionPseudogeneBacterial genome sizebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionBiologybiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionGenomeBuchneraEscherichia coliGeneticsMinimal genomeBuchneraVibrio choleraeGeneGenome sizeGene DeletionGenome BacterialPseudogenesTrends in Genetics
researchProduct

Genome reduction of the aphid endosymbiont Buchnera aphidicola in a recent evolutionary time scale.

2007

International audience; Genome reduction, a typical feature of symbiotic bacteria, was analyzed in the last stages of evolution of Buchnera aphidicola, the primary aphid endosymbiont, in two neutrally evolving regions: the pseudogene cmk and an intergenic region. These two regions were examined in endosymbionts from several lineages of their aphid host Rhopalosiphum padi, and different species of the same genus, whose divergence times ranged from 0.62 to 19.51 million years. Estimates of nucleotide substitution rates were between 4.3 and 6.7 x 10(-9) substitution/site/year, with G or C nucleotides being substituted around four times more frequently than A or T. Two different types of indel …

0106 biological sciencesTime FactorsPseudogeneBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenomeDNA MitochondrialEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesIntergenic regionBuchneraPhylogeneticsGeneticsAnimalsMolecular clockIndelSymbiosisPhylogeny030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health sciences[SDV.GEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/GeneticsBase SequenceGeographyNucleotidesGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationFixation (population genetics)HaplotypesAphidsCalibrationMutationBuchneraGenome BacterialGene
researchProduct

Complete Genome Sequence of “Candidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum” BT-QVLC, an Obligate Symbiont That Supplies Amino Acids and Carotenoids to Bemisia ta…

2012

ABSTRACT The genome of “ Candidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum,” the primary endosymbiont of the whitefly Bemisia tabaci (Mediterranean species), is reported. It presents a reduced genome (357 kb) encoding the capability to synthetize, or participate in the synthesis of, several amino acids and carotenoids, being the first insect endosymbiont capable of supplying carotenoids.

DNA Bacterial0106 biological sciencesSequence analysisMolecular Sequence Datamacromolecular substancesWhitefly01 natural sciencesMicrobiologyGenomeHemiptera03 medical and health sciencesSymbiosisBotanyAnimalsAmino AcidsSymbiosisMolecular BiologyCarotenoid030304 developmental biologyWhole genome sequencingGeneticschemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesbiologyObligatefungifood and beveragesSequence Analysis DNAbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classification[SDV.BIBS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Quantitative Methods [q-bio.QM]CarotenoidsGenome AnnouncementsAmino acidHalomonadaceae010602 entomologychemistrybacteria[INFO.INFO-BI]Computer Science [cs]/Bioinformatics [q-bio.QM]Genome BacterialJournal of Bacteriology
researchProduct

Occurrence of three different binding sites forBacillus thuringiensisδ-endotoxins in the midgut brush border membrane of the potato tuber moth,phthor…

1994

The potato tuber moth is susceptible to at least three insecticidal crystal proteins (ICPs) from Bacillus thuringiensis: CrylA(b), CrylB, and CrylC. To design useful combinations of toxin genes either in transgenic plants or in new genetically modified B. thuringiensis strains, it is necessary to determine the binding characteristics of the different ICPs so as not to combine a pair sharing the same binding site. This has been accomplished using two different techniques: 125I-labeling of the ICPs with further measurement of the radioactivity bound to brush border membrane vesicles, and microscopic visualization of the bound ICPs by enzyme-linked reagents such as antibodies or streptavidin u…

education.field_of_studyintegumentary systemBrush borderPhysiologymusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyfungiPopulationMidgutGeneral MedicineBiologybiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryBacillaleshumanitiesPhthorimaea operculellaBiochemistryInsect ScienceBacillus thuringiensisBiotinylationBinding siteeducationArchives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology
researchProduct

The Evolutionary Fate of Nonfunctional DNA in the Bacterial Endosymbiont Buchnera aphidicola

2004

Reduction of the genome size in endosymbiotic bacteria is the main feature linked to the adaptation to a host-associated lifestyle. We have analyzed the fate of the nonfunctional DNA in Buchnera aphidicola, the primary endosymbiont of aphids. At least 164 gene losses took place during the recent evolution of three B. aphidicola strains, symbionts of the aphids Acyrthosiphon pisum (BAp), Schizaphis graminum (BSg), and Baizongia pistacia (BBp). A typical pattern starts with the inactivation of a gene, which produces a pseudogene, and is followed by the progressive loss of its DNA. Our results show that during the period from the separation of the Aphidinae and Pemphiginae lineages (86-164 MYA…

DNA BacterialGeneticsTime FactorsModels GeneticPseudogenemyrDNASequence Analysis DNABiologybiology.organism_classificationGenomeEvolution MolecularIntergenic regionBuchneraSpecies SpecificityEscherichia coliGeneticsBuchneraMolecular BiologyGeneGenome sizeGene DeletionGenome BacterialEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGC-contentMolecular Biology and Evolution
researchProduct

Genome reduction and potential metabolic complementation of the dual endosymbionts in the whitefly Bemisia tabaci

2015

Background The whitefly Bemisia tabaci is an important agricultural pest with global distribution. This phloem-sap feeder harbors a primary symbiont, “Candidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum”, which compensates for the deficient nutritional composition of its food sources, and a variety of secondary symbionts. Interestingly, all of these secondary symbionts are found in co-localization with the primary symbiont within the same bacteriocytes, which should favor the evolution of strong interactions between symbionts. Results In this paper, we analyzed the genome sequences of the primary symbiont Portiera and of the secondary symbiont Hamiltonella in the B. tabaci Mediterranean (MED) species in orde…

0106 biological sciencesHamiltonellaCandidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Molecular Sequence DataWhiteflyPortiera010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenomeHemiptera03 medical and health sciencesMetabolic complementationSymbiosisEnterobacteriaceaeBotanyGeneticsAnimalsAmino AcidsSymbiosisIn Situ Hybridization Fluorescence030304 developmental biology2. Zero hungerGenetics0303 health sciencesEndosymbiontGenomebiologyfungifood and beveragesHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingDNASequence Analysis DNAVitaminsbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationEnterobacteriaceaeHemipteraWhiteflyComplementationHalomonadaceaeGlobal distribution[INFO.INFO-BI]Computer Science [cs]/Bioinformatics [q-bio.QM]Genome BacterialMetabolic Networks and PathwaysBiotechnologyResearch ArticleBMC Genomics
researchProduct

Patterns and rates of nucleotide substitution, insertion and deletion in the endosymbiont of antsBlochmannia floridanus

2009

Genome reduction is a general process that has been studied in numerous symbiotic bacteria associated with insects. We investigated the last stages of genome degradation in Blochmannia floridanus, a mutualistic bacterial endosymbiont of the ant Camponotus floridanus. We determined the tempo (rates of insertion and deletion) and mode (size and number of insertion-deletion events) of the process in the last 200,000 years by analysing a total of 16 intergenic regions in several strains of this endosymbiont from different ant populations. We provide the first calculation of the reduction rate for noncoding DNA in this endosymbiont (2.2 x 10(-8) lost nucleotides/site/year) and compare it with th…

medicine.disease_causePolymerase Chain ReactionPolymorphism Single NucleotideGenomeIntergenic regionGeneticsmedicineAnimalsSymbiosisIndelEscherichia coliEcosystemPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSequence DeletionGeneticsGenomeBase SequencebiologyAntsbiology.organism_classificationNoncoding DNADNA Transposable ElementsFloridaMicrosatelliteCamponotus floridanusBuchneraMolecular Ecology
researchProduct

Prephenate dehydratase from the aphid endosymbiont (Buchnera) displays changes in the regulatory domain that suggest its desensitization to inhibitio…

2000

ABSTRACT Buchnera aphidicola , the prokaryotic endosymbiont of aphids, complements dietary deficiencies with the synthesis and provision of several essential amino acids. We have cloned and sequenced a region of the genome of B. aphidicola isolated from Acyrthosiphon pisum which includes the two-domain aroQ/pheA gene. This gene encodes the bifunctional chorismate mutase-prephenate dehydratase protein, which plays a central role in l -phenylalanine biosynthesis. Two changes involved in the overproduction of this amino acid have been detected. First, the absence of an attenuator region suggests a constitutive expression of this gene. Second, the regulatory domain of the Buchnera prephenate de…

DNA BacterialPhenylalanineMolecular Sequence DataPrephenate dehydratasePhenylalanineMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundBiosynthesisBuchneraEscherichia coliAnimalsHumansAmino Acid SequenceEnzyme InhibitorsSymbiosisMolecular BiologyGenechemistry.chemical_classificationGeneticsBinding SitesbiologyBase SequenceSequence Homology Amino Acidbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationPrephenate DehydrataseAmino acidEnzymeBiochemistrychemistryDehydrataseAphidsBuchneraGenome BacterialPopulation Genetics and EvolutionChorismate MutaseJournal of bacteriology
researchProduct

Slow and fast evolving endosymbiont lineages: positive correlation between the rates of synonymous and nonsynonymous substitution

2015

The availability of complete genome sequences of bacterial endosymbionts with strict vertical transmission to the host progeny opens the possibility to estimate molecular evolutionary rates in different lineages and understand the main biological mechanisms influencing these rates. We have compared the rates of evolution for non-synonymous and synonymous substitutions in nine bacterial endosymbiont lineages, belonging to four clades (Baumannia, Blochmannia, Portiera, and Sulcia). The main results are the observation of a positive correlation between both rates with differences among lineages of up to three orders of magnitude and that the substitution rates decrease over long endosymbioses.…

Microbiology (medical)GeneticsDNA ReplicationNatural selectionfood.ingredientGeneration timeendosymbiosisEndosymbiosisObligateDNA RepairDNA repair[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]BlochmanniaDNA replicationlcsh:QR1-502BiologyEvolutionary rateMicrobiologyGenomelcsh:MicrobiologyfoodGeneration timePerspectiveComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSnucleotide substitutionFrontiers in Microbiology
researchProduct

Nature lessons: the whitefly bacterial endosymbiont is a minimal amino acid factory with unusual energetics

2016

Reductive genome evolution is a universal phenomenon observed in endosymbiotic bacteria in insects. As the genome reduces its size and irreversibly losses coding genes, the functionalities of the cell system, including the energetics processes, are more restricted. Several energetic pathways can also be lost. How do these reduced metabolic networks sustain the energy needs of the system? Among the bacteria with reduced genomes Candidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum, obligate endosymbiont of whiteflies, represents an extreme case since lacks several key mechanisms for ATP generation. Thus, to analyze the cell energetics in this system, a genome-scale metabolic model of this endosymbiont was const…

0301 basic medicineStatistics and ProbabilityGenome evolutionAnabolismSystems biology030106 microbiologyCell EnergeticsBiologyModels BiologicalGenomeGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyHemiptera03 medical and health sciencesMetabolic flux analysisAnimalsAmino AcidsSymbiosisGeneGenome sizeCarotenoidchemistry.chemical_classificationGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyObligateApplied MathematicsEnergeticsGeneral MedicineMetabolismbeta Carotenebiology.organism_classificationMetabolic Flux AnalysisAmino acidHalomonadaceae030104 developmental biologychemistryBiochemistryModeling and SimulationEnergy MetabolismGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesGenome BacterialMetabolic Networks and PathwaysBacteria
researchProduct

To B or Not to B: Comparative Genomics Suggests Arsenophonus as a Source of B Vitamins in Whiteflies

2018

Insect lineages feeding on nutritionally restricted diets such as phloem sap, xylem sap, or blood, were able to diversify by acquiring bacterial species that complement lacking nutrients. These bacteria, considered obligate/primary endosymbionts, share a long evolutionary history with their hosts. In some cases, however, these endosymbionts are not able to fulfill all of their host's nutritional requirements, driving the acquisition of additional symbiotic species. Phloem-feeding members of the insect family Aleyrodidae (whiteflies) established an obligate relationship with Candidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum, which provides its hots with essential amino acids and carotenoids. In addition, ma…

0301 basic medicineMicrobiology (medical)food.ingredientPseudogeneRiboflavin[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]030106 microbiologyArsenophonuslcsh:QR1-502GenomeMicrobiologylcsh:Microbiology03 medical and health sciencesMetabolic complementationfooda section of the journal Frontiers in Microbiology whiteflywhiteflyriboflavinSymbiosisgenome reductionGeneticsComparative genomicsGenome reductionbiologyObligatefungiVitaminsbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationvitaminsWhiteflysymbiosismetabolic complementationB vitamins030104 developmental biologyAleurodicus dispersusWolbachiaThis article was submitted to Evolutionary and Genomic MicrobiologyArsenophonusWolbachiaFrontiers in Microbiology
researchProduct

The genome sequence of Blochmannia floridanus: Comparative analysis of reduced genomes

2003

Bacterial symbioses are widespread among insects, probably being one of the key factors of their evolutionary success. We present the complete genome sequence of Blochmannia floridanus , the primary endosymbiont of carpenter ants. Although these ants feed on a complex diet, this symbiosis very likely has a nutritional basis: Blochmannia is able to supply nitrogen and sulfur compounds to the host while it takes advantage of the host metabolic machinery. Remarkably, these bacteria lack all known genes involved in replication initiation ( dna A, pri A, and rec A). The phylogenetic analysis of a set of conserved protein-coding genes shows that Bl. floridanus is phylogenetically related to Buch…

replicationInsectafood.ingredientMolecular Sequence DataBlochmanniaselectionWigglesworthia glossinidiaModels BiologicalGenomeescherichia-coli k-12Open Reading FramesfoodPhylogeneticsevolutionAnimalsGenebuchneraPhylogenyGeneticsMultidisciplinaryPhylogenetic treebiologyphylogenetic analysisSequence Analysis DNABiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationDnaAproteinsgene-clusterPRI Bioscienceaphidsendosymbiotic bacteriaBuchneraGammaproteobacteriaGenome Bacterial
researchProduct

To B or not to B: Arsenophonus as a source of B-vitamins in whiteflies

2018

1AbstractInsect lineages feeding on nutritionally restricted diets such as phloem, xylem, or blood, were able to diversify by acquiring bacterial species that complemented the missing nutrients. These bacteria, considered obligate/primary endosymbionts, share a long evolutionary history with their hosts. In some cases, however, these endosymbionts are not able to fulfill all the nutritional requirements of their host, driving the acquisition of additional symbiotic species. Whiteflies, which feed on phloem, established an obligate relationship with Candidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum, who provides essential amino acids and carotenoids to the host. As many Whiteflies species harbor additional …

Geneticsfood.ingredientObligatebiologyPseudogeneLineage (evolution)fungibiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationGenomeB vitaminsfoodWolbachiaArsenophonusGC-content
researchProduct

Differential annotation of tRNA genes with anticodon CAT in bacterial genomes.

2006

We have developed three strategies to discriminate among the three types of tRNA genes with anticodon CAT (tRNA(Ile), elongator tRNA(Met) and initiator tRNA(fMet)) in bacterial genomes. With these strategies, we have classified the tRNA genes from 234 bacterial and several organellar genomes. These sequences, in an aligned or unaligned format, may be used for the identification and annotation of tRNA (CAT) genes in other genomes. The first strategy is based on the position of the problem sequences in a phenogram (a tree-like network), the second on the minimum average number of differences against the tRNA sequences of the three types and the third on the search for the highest score value …

GeneticsRNA Transfer MetPhotobacterium profundumRNAComputational BiologySequence alignmentGenomicsBacterial genome sizeGenomicsBiologybiology.organism_classificationGenomeBacterial ProteinsEnterobacteriaceaeRNA TransferGenes BacterialTransfer RNAGeneticsAnticodonRNA Transfer IleGeneSequence AlignmentGenome BacterialTenericutesNucleic acids research
researchProduct

Reconstructing the ancestor of Mycobacterium leprae: The dynamics of gene loss and genome reduction

2007

We have reconstructed the gene content and order of the last common ancestor of the human pathogens Mycobacterium leprae and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. During the reductive evolution of M. leprae, 1537 of 2977 ancestral genes were lost, among which we found 177 previously unnoticed pseudogenes. We find evidence that a massive gene inactivation took place very recently in the M. leprae lineage, leading to the loss of hundreds of ancestral genes. A large proportion of their nucleotide content (∼89%) still remains in the genome, which allowed us to characterize and date them. The age of the pseudogenes was computed using a new methodology based on the rates and patterns of substitution in the…

Most recent common ancestorGeneticsLetterLineage (genetic)PseudogeneComputational BiologyMycobacterium tuberculosisBiologybiology.organism_classificationGenomeEvolution MolecularMycobacterium lepraeMycobacterium tuberculosisPhylogeneticsGeneticsDNA FungalMycobacterium lepraeGeneGene DeletionGenome BacterialPhylogenyGenetics (clinical)Genome Research
researchProduct

2006

Understanding evolutionary processes that drive genome reduction requires determining the tempo (rate) and the mode (size and types of deletions) of gene losses. In this study, we analysed five endosymbiotic genome sequences of the gamma-proteobacteria (three different Buchnera aphidicola strains, Wigglesworthia glossinidia, Blochmannia floridanus) to test if gene loss could be driven by the selective importance of genes. We used a parsimony method to reconstruct a minimal ancestral genome of insect endosymbionts and quantified gene loss along the branches of the phylogenetic tree. To evaluate the selective or functional importance of genes, we used a parameter that measures the level of ad…

Genetics0303 health sciencesPhylogenetic treeBiologyWigglesworthia glossinidiabiology.organism_classificationGenome03 medical and health sciencesNegative selection0302 clinical medicineEvolutionary biologyPhylogeneticsCodon usage biasBuchneraGene030217 neurology & neurosurgeryEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyBMC Evolutionary Biology
researchProduct

Structure of the phenylalanine hydroxylase gene in Drosophila melanogaster and evidence of alternative promoter usage.

1996

The complete Drosophila melanogaster phenylalanine hydroxylase gene isolated from a genomic library was sequenced. Gene structure consisted of five exons covering a region of around 3 kb. Position of introns in the C-terminal domain was conserved with mammalian aromatic amino acid hydroxylase genes. Putative promoter sequences in the 5'UTR and intron 1 were identified. A novel transcript was detected differing from that previously reported by the inclusion of a part of the intron 1 sequence. It could be produced using an alternative promoter. The deduced open reading frame would code a protein with a small difference at the N-terminus. Expression of the alternative transcripts was examined …

Phenylalanine hydroxylaseTranscription GeneticMolecular Sequence DataBiophysicsGenes InsectBiochemistryPolymerase Chain ReactionExonchemistry.chemical_compoundAromatic amino acidsAnimalsGenomic libraryAmino Acid SequenceRNA MessengerPromoter Regions GeneticMolecular BiologyGeneDNA PrimersGeneticsGenomic LibrarybiologyBase SequenceIntronPhenylalanine HydroxylaseCell BiologyExonsbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyIntronsOpen reading frameDrosophila melanogasterchemistrybiology.proteinDrosophila melanogasterBiochemical and biophysical research communications
researchProduct

Gut Microbiota Cannot Compensate the Impact of (quasi) Aposymbiosis in Blattella germanica

2021

Simple Summary The German cockroach Blattella germanica is a good model to study complex symbiotic relationships because the following two symbiotic systems coexist in a single individual: the endosymbiont Blattabacterium (living inside specialized cells called bacteriocytes) and the gut microbiota. Although the role of the endosymbiont has been fully elucidated, the function of the gut microbiota remains unclear. The study of the gut microbiota will benefit from the availability of insects deprived of Blattabacterium. Our goal is to determine the effect of the removal (or, at least, the reduction) of the endosymbiont population on the cockroach’s fitness, in a normal gut microbiota communi…

medicine.drug_classQH301-705.5AntibioticsPopulationMicrobiologia<i>Blattella germanica</i>Gut florarifampicindigestive systemBacterisGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyArticleMicrobiologyBlattabacteriumSymbiosisbiology.animalmedicineBiology (General)educationCockroacheducation.field_of_studyBlattabacteriumGeneral Immunology and Microbiologybiologygut microbiotaHost (biology)Bacteriocyteaposymbiontfungibiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationsymbiosisBlattella germanicabacteriaGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciences<i>Blattabacterium</i>
researchProduct

Estudios de epidemiología molecular en población inmigrante en España

2014

Fundamentos: La epidemiología molecular es una nueva disciplina que permite la integración de la información sobre la variabilidad genética de patógenos infecciosos con su difusión en la población y subgrupos de la misma incluyendo, por ejemplo, las mutaciones de resistencia a antibióticos y antivirales. El objetivo es conocer qué posibles diferencias existe en las características genéticas de los agentes infecciosos que afectan a las poblaciones inmigrante y autóctoctona en España. Métodos: Se revisaron artículos originales publicados entre 1998-2013, con las palabras clave "epidemiología molecular", "tipado molecular", "secuenciación", "inmigrante", "España". Resultados: De un total de 26…

medicine.medical_specialtyResistencia a antibióticosPopulationHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)lcsh:Medicinemedicine.disease_causeInmigrantesHepatitisMycobacterium tuberculosisMolecular typingGenetic variationTuberculosisMedicineTypingeducationImmigrant populationGeneticseducation.field_of_studyMolecular epidemiologybiologybusiness.industrylcsh:Public aspects of medicinelcsh:REpidemiología molecularVIHlcsh:RA1-1270General Medicinebiology.organism_classificationSurgerybusinessRevista Española de Salud Pública
researchProduct

Pigment patterns in mutants affecting the biosynthesis of pteridines and xanthommatin in Drosophila melanogaster.

1986

Eye-color mutants of Drosophila melanogaster have been analyzed for their pigment content and related metabolites. Xanthommatin and dihydroxanthommatin (pigments causing brown eye color) were measured after selective extraction in acidified butanol. Pteridines (pigments causing red eye color) were quantitated after separation of 28 spots by thin-layer chromatography, most of which are pteridines and a few of which are fluorescent metabolites from the xanthommatin pathway. Pigment patterns have been studied in 45 loci. The pteridine pathway ramifies into two double branches giving rise to isoxanthopterin, “drosopterins,” and biopterin as final products. The regulatory relationship among the …

genetic structuresMutantDihydroxanthommatinBiopterinBiochemistryPigmentchemistry.chemical_compoundBiosynthesisOxazinesGeneticsEye colormedicineAnimalsAmino AcidsMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsbiologyEye ColorPteridinesGeneral MedicinePigments Biologicalbiology.organism_classificationDrosophila melanogasterBiochemistrychemistryXanthenesvisual_artMutationvisual_art.visual_art_mediumsense organsDrosophila melanogasterRetinal PigmentsPteridinemedicine.drugBiochemical genetics
researchProduct

Genome Economization in the Endosymbiont of the Wood Roach Cryptocercus punctulatus Due to Drastic Loss of Amino Acid Synthesis Capabilities

2011

Cockroaches (Blattaria: Dictyoptera) harbor the endosymbiont Blattabacterium sp. in their abdominal fat body. This endosymbiont is involved in nitrogen recycling and amino acid provision to its host. In this study, the genome of Blattabacterium sp. of Cryptocercus punctulatus (BCpu) was sequenced and compared with those of the symbionts of Blattella germanica and Periplaneta americana, BBge and BPam, respectively. The BCpu genome consists of a chromosome of 605.7 kb and a plasmid of 3.8 kb and is therefore approximately 31 kb smaller than the other two aforementioned genomes. The size reduction is due to the loss of 55 genes, 23 of which belong to biosynthetic pathways for amino acids. The …

0106 biological sciencesMaleMolecular Sequence DataCockroachesBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundBlattabacteriumGenome SizeValineGeneticsEndophytesAnimalsAmino Acidsgenome reductionGenome sizeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAmino acid synthesisResearch Articles030304 developmental biology2. Zero hungerchemistry.chemical_classificationGenetics0303 health sciencesBlattabacteriumMethionineBacteroideteswood-feedingbiology.organism_classificationsymbiosisAmino acidchemistryBiochemistrymetabolic pathway lossFemaleIsoleucineLeucineGenome BacterialGenome Biology and Evolution
researchProduct

Genome rearrangement distances and gene order phylogeny in gamma-Proteobacteria.

2005

Genome rearrangements have been studied in 30 gamma-proteobacterial complete genomes by comparing the order of a reduced set of genes on the chromosome. This set included those genes fulfilling several characteristics, the main ones being that an ortholog was present in every genome and that none of them had been acquired by horizontal gene transfer. Genome rearrangement distances were estimated based on either the number of breakpoints or the minimal number of inversions separating two genomes. Breakpoint and inversion distances were highly correlated, indicating that inversions were the main type of rearrangement event in gamma-Proteobacteria. In general, the progressive increase in seque…

food.ingredientTime FactorsGene Transfer HorizontalYersinia pestisLineage (evolution)BlochmanniaBiologyWigglesworthia glossinidiaGenomeEvolution MolecularfoodPhylogeneticsGene OrderGeneticsEscherichia coliMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyGeneticsGenomePhylogenetic treeModels GeneticModels Theoreticalbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionHorizontal gene transferBuchneraGammaproteobacteriaGenome BacterialMolecular biology and evolution
researchProduct

Genome Evolution in the Primary Endosymbiont of Whiteflies Sheds Light on Their Divergence

2015

International audience; Hemipteran insects are well-known in their ability to establish symbiotic relationships with bacteria. Among them, heteropteran insects present an array of symbiotic systems, ranging from the most common gut crypt symbiosis to the more restricted bacteriome-associated endosymbiosis, which have only been detected in members of the superfamily Lygaeoidea and the family Cimicidae so far. Genomic data of heteropteran endosymbionts are scarce and have merely been analyzed from the Wolbachia endosymbiont in bed bug and a few gut crypt-associated symbionts in pentatomoid bugs. In this study, we present the first detailed genomic analysis of a bacteriome-associated endosymbi…

Nonsynonymous substitutionMutation rateGenome evolution[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Lineage (evolution)divergence timecomparative genomicsPortieraBiologyGenomeEvolution MolecularHemipterataxonomyMolecular evolutionwhitefliesGeneticsAnimalsSymbiosisgenome reductionCladeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsComparative genomicsGeneticsendosymbiosisamino acid biosynthesismolecular evolutiongenome stasisfungiGenomicsbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionLygaeoideaHalomonadaceaebacteriametabolismendosymbiontGenome BacterialResearch ArticleGenome Biology and Evolution
researchProduct

Molecular characterization of the leucine cluster in Buchnera PSY, primary endosymbiont of the aphid Pemphigus spyrothecae

2002

ABSTRACT Buchnera strains from most aphid subfamilies studied to date have been found to carry the leucine gene cluster ( leuA , - B , - C , and - D ) on a plasmid, an organization unique among bacteria. Here, however, we demonstrate a classical chromosomal location of the cluster in Buchnera sp. strain PSY from the aphid Pemphigus spyrothecae (subfamily Pemphiginae). The genes that flank leuABCD in Buchnera sp. strain PSY appear to be adjacent in the genome of Buchnera sp. strain APS, a strain carrying a leucine plasmid. We propose that the presence of a leucine plasmid predates the diversification of symbiotic Buchnera and that the chromosomal location observed in Buchnera sp. strain PSY …

DNA BacterialSubfamilyMolecular Sequence DataPemphigus spyrothecaeApplied Microbiology and Biotechnologysymbiotic bacteriaPlasmidBacterial ProteinsBuchneraLeucineplasmidGene clusterevolutionInvertebrate MicrobiologyAnimalsgeneticsCloning MolecularSymbiosisGeneHydro-LyasesGeneticsBase SequenceEcologybiologyStrain (chemistry)Gene Amplificationbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationPRI BioscienceMultigene FamilyLeucinebiosynthesisBuchneraPemphigusFood ScienceBiotechnologyanthranilate synthase trpegApplied and Environmental Microbiology
researchProduct

Comparative Sequence Analysis ofMycobacterium lepraeand the New Leprosy-CausingMycobacterium lepromatosis

2009

ABSTRACTMycobacterium lepromatosisis a newly discovered leprosy-causing organism. Preliminary phylogenetic analysis of its 16S rRNA gene and a few other gene segments revealed significant divergence fromMycobacterium leprae, a well-known cause of leprosy, that justifies the status ofM. lepromatosisas a new species. In this study we analyzed the sequences of 20 genes and pseudogenes (22,814 nucleotides). Overall, the level of matching of these sequences withM. lepraesequences was 90.9%, which substantiated the species-level difference; the levels of matching for the 16S rRNA genes and 14 protein-encoding genes were 98.0% and 93.1%, respectively, but the level of matching for five pseudogenes…

Nonsynonymous substitutionSequence analysisPseudogeneMolecular Sequence Datamedicine.disease_causePolymerase Chain ReactionMicrobiologyMycobacteriumBacterial ProteinsPhylogeneticsLeprosyRNA Ribosomal 16SmedicineMolecular BiologyMycobacterium lepraePhylogenyGeneticsMycobacterium lepromatosisBase CompositionLikelihood FunctionsbiologyPhylogenetic treeComputational BiologySequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationMycobacterium lepraePseudogenesMycobacteriumJournal of Bacteriology
researchProduct

The All-Rounder Sodalis: A New Bacteriome-Associated Endosymbiont of the Lygaeoid Bug Henestaris halophilus (Heteroptera: Henestarinae) and a Critica…

2017

International audience; Hemipteran insects are well-known in their ability to establish symbiotic relationships with bacteria. Among them, heteropteran insects present an array of symbiotic systems, ranging from the most common gut crypt symbiosis to the more restricted bacteriome-associated endosymbiosis, which have only been detected in members of the superfamily Lygaeoidea and the family Cimicidae so far. Genomic data of heteropteran endosymbionts are scarce and have merely been analyzed from the Wolbachia endosymbiont in bed bug and a few gut crypt-associated symbionts in pentatomoid bugs. In this study, we present the first detailed genomic analysis of a bacteriome-associated endosymbi…

DNA BacterialendosymbiosisDatabases Factualmolecular evolution[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]fungiSequence Analysis DNAcomparative genomicsbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionLygaeoideaEvolution MolecularHeteropterataxonomyEnterobacteriaceaeGenome SizeAnimalsbacteriaSymbiosismetabolismGenome BacterialMetabolic Networks and PathwaysPhylogenyPseudogenesResearch Article
researchProduct

Blattella germanica displays a large arsenal of antimicrobial peptide genes

2020

Defence systems against microbial pathogens are present in most living beings. The German cockroach Blattella germanica requires these systems to adapt to unhealthy environments with abundance of pathogenic microbes, in addition to potentially control its symbiotic systems. To handle this situation, four antimicrobial gene families (defensins, termicins, drosomycins and attacins) were expanded in its genome. Remarkably, a new gene family (blattellicins) emerged recently after duplication and fast evolution of an attacin gene, which is now encoding larger proteins with the presence of a long stretch of glutamines and glutamic acids. Phylogenetic reconstruction, within Blattellinae, suggests …

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinePore Forming Cytotoxic ProteinsGenome InsectEvolutionary biology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenomeArticle03 medical and health sciencesProtein DomainsPhylogeneticsGene duplicationGene expressionGene familyAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceSymbiosisGenePhylogenyRegulation of gene expressionGeneticsGerman cockroachMultidisciplinarybiologyAntimicrobial responsesBlattellidaebiology.organism_classificationGenome evolution030104 developmental biologyGene Expression RegulationEntomology
researchProduct

Metabolic Networks of Sodalis glossinidius: A Systems Biology Approach to Reductive Evolution

2012

BackgroundGenome reduction is a common evolutionary process affecting bacterial lineages that establish symbiotic or pathogenic associations with eukaryotic hosts. Such associations yield highly reduced genomes with greatly streamlined metabolic abilities shaped by the type of ecological association with the host. Sodalis glossinidius, the secondary endosymbiont of tsetse flies, represents one of the few complete genomes available of a bacterium at the initial stages of this process. In the present study, genome reduction is studied from a systems biology perspective through the reconstruction and functional analysis of genome-scale metabolic networks of S. glossinidius.ResultsThe functiona…

Genome evolutionTsetse FliesSystems biologyScienceGenomeMicrobiologyModels BiologicalAnimals Genetically ModifiedEvolution MolecularEnterobacteriaceaeEscherichia coliAnimalsComputer SimulationBiologyGeneticsEvolutionary BiologyMultidisciplinarybiologyHost (biology)Human evolutionary geneticsBacterial genomicsSystems BiologyQSodalis glossinidiusEnterobacteriaceae InfectionsRComputational BiologyGenomicsbiology.organism_classificationPhenotypePhenotypeEvolutionary biologyHost-Pathogen InteractionsMedicineDirected Molecular EvolutionGenome BacterialMetabolic Networks and PathwaysResearch Article
researchProduct

On the Age of Leprosy

2014

Leprosy is a chronic infection of the skin and nerves caused by Mycobacterium leprae and the newly discovered Mycobacterium lepromatosis. Human leprosy has been documented for millennia in ancient cultures. Recent genomic studies of worldwide M. leprae strains have further traced it along global human dispersals during the past ∼ 100,000 years. Because leprosy bacilli are strictly intracellular, we wonder how long humans have been affected by this disease-causing parasite. Based on recently published data on M. leprae genomes, M. lepromatosis discovery, leprosy bacilli evolution, and human evolution, it is most likely that the leprosy bacilli started parasitic evolution in humans or early h…

Immune defenselcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicinelcsh:RC955-962EpidemiologyImmunologyReviewDermatologymedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyMycobacteriumLeprosymedicineHumansMycobacterium lepraeBiologyPhylogenyMycobacterium lepromatosisClinical GeneticsbiologyHuman evolutionary geneticslcsh:Public aspects of medicinePublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthlcsh:RA1-1270Genomicsbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseBiological EvolutionMycobacterium lepraeChronic infectionInfectious DiseasesHuman evolutionImmunologyHost-Pathogen InteractionsMedicineClinical ImmunologyLeprosyPublic HealthMycobacteriumPLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
researchProduct

Genetic and biochemical characterization of little isoxanthopterin (lix), a gene controlling dihydropterin oxidase activity in Drosophila melanogaste…

1991

Dihydropterin oxidase catalyses the oxidation of 7,8-dihydropteridines into their fully oxidized products, and is involved in the biosynthesis of isoxanthopterin. Fifteen Drosophila melanogaster mutants, selected for their low pterin and isoxanthopterin content, were assayed for dihydropterin oxidase activity. The activity was around 100% in most mutants tested, slightly reduced in red, g and dke, and undetectable in lix. In flies carrying various doses of the lix+ allele, a correlation was found between enzyme activity and the number of lix+ copies in the genome. The results suggest that lix is the structural gene for the dihydropterin oxidase enzyme. Isoxanthopterin was quantitated in str…

MaleX ChromosomeGenotypeMutantSubstrate Specificitychemistry.chemical_compoundDihydropterin oxidase activityDrosophilidaeGeneticsAnimalsPterinMolecular BiologyCrosses Geneticchemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyPteridinesStructural geneTemperatureChromosome Mappingbiology.organism_classificationEnzyme assayEnzymeDrosophila melanogasterchemistryBiochemistryMutationbiology.proteinFemaleDrosophila melanogasterOxidoreductasesMoleculargeneral genetics : MGG
researchProduct

Extreme genome reduction in Buchnera spp.: Toward the minimal genome needed for symbiotic life

2002

Buchnera is a mutualistic intracellular symbiont of aphids. Their association began about 200 million years ago, with host and symbiont lineages evolving in parallel since that time. During this coevolutionary process, Buchnera has experienced a dramatic decrease of genome size, retaining only essential genes for its specialized lifestyle. Previous studies reported that genome size in Buchnera spp. is very uniform, suggesting that genome shrinkage occurred early in evolution, and that modern lineages retain the genome size of a common ancestor. Our physical mapping of Buchnera genomes obtained from five aphid lineages shows that the genome size is not conserved among them, but has been red…

GeneticsDNA BacterialGenome evolutionMultidisciplinarybiologyBase SequenceMolecular Sequence DataGenome projectBacterial genome sizebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationGenomeBuchneraGene densityAphidsAnimalsMinimal genomeBuchneraSymbiosisGenome sizeGenome Bacterial
researchProduct

Genomic Changes in Bacteria: From Free-Living to Endosymbiotic Life

2007

Symbiosis is the association between two or more distinct organisms during at least one part of their lifecycle. Although this term is sometimes used in a narrower sense, it includes for most authors a set of different situations such as mutualism, parasitism and commensalism. Mutualism is defined as an association in which both partners derive benefit from living together. Parasitism is an association in which one of the partners benefits, while the other is harmed. Finally, commensalism is an association in which one of the two members benefits while the other is neither harmed nor obtains an advantage. In most cases, the association is established between a pluricellular eukaryote and a …

Mutualism (biology)GeneticsbiologyEndosymbiosisObligateBacteriocytefungiBacteriomebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationCommensalismSymbiosisBotanybacteriaWolbachia
researchProduct

2001

Symbioses between unicellular and multicellular organisms have contributed significantly to the evolution of life on Earth. As exemplified by several studies of bacterium-insect symbioses, modern genomic techniques are providing exciting new information about the molecular basis and the biological roles of these complex relationships, revealing for instance that symbionts have lost many genes for functions that are provided by the host, but that they can provide amino acids that the host cannot synthesize.

Multicellular organismbiologySymbiosisEvolutionary biologyPhylogeneticsHost (biology)fungiDNA microarrayBuchnerabiology.organism_classificationGeneGenomeGenome Biology
researchProduct

Identification of the Gene Repertoire of the IMD Pathway and Expression of Antimicrobial Peptide Genes in Several Tissues and Hemolymph of the Cockro…

2022

This article belongs to the Special Issue Antimicrobial Peptides and Immunology.

Innate immune responseantimicrobial peptides (AMPs); IMD pathway; innate immune response; symbiosis; transcriptome; <i>Blattella germanica</i>Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs)Organic ChemistryAntibiòtics pèptidsIMD pathwayGeneral MedicineCatalysisComputer Science ApplicationsInorganic ChemistryBlattella germanicaTranscripció genèticaResposta immunitàriaPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryTranscriptomeSymbiosisMolecular BiologySpectroscopyInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
researchProduct

Plasmids in the aphid endosymbiont Buchnera aphidicola with the smallest genomes. A puzzling evolutionary story

2006

Buchnera aphidicola, the primary endosymbiont of aphids, has undergone important genomic and biochemical changes as an adaptation to intracellular life. The most important structural changes include a drastic genome reduction and the amplification of genes encoding key enzymes for the biosynthesis of amino acids by their translocation to plasmids. Molecular characterization through different aphid subfamilies has revealed that the genes involved in leucine and tryptophan biosynthesis show a variable fate, since they can be located on plasmids or on the chromosome in different lineages. This versatility contrasts with the genomic stasis found in three distantly related B. aphidicola strains …

GeneticsRecombination GeneticSubfamilybiologyfood and beveragesChromosomeGeneral Medicinebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationGenomeEvolution MolecularRec A RecombinasesPlasmidBuchneraAphidsGeneticsAnimalsLeucineAmino AcidsBuchneraSymbiosisGeneBacteriaGenome BacterialPlasmids
researchProduct

Evolution of the leucine gene cluster in Buchnera aphidicola: insights from chromosomal versions of the cluster.

2004

ABSTRACT In Buchnera aphidicola strains associated with the aphid subfamilies Thelaxinae, Lachninae, Pterocommatinae, and Aphidinae, the four leucine genes ( leuA , - B , - C , and - D ) are located on a plasmid. However, these genes are located on the main chromosome in B. aphidicola strains associated with the subfamilies Pemphiginae and Chaitophorinae. The sequence of the chromosomal fragment containing the leucine cluster and flanking genes has different positions in the chromosome in B. aphidicola strains associated with three tribes of the subfamily Pemphiginae and one tribe of the subfamily Chaitophorinae. Due to the extreme gene order conservation of the B. aphidicola genomes, the v…

ChaitophorinaeSubfamilygenome sequenceGenetics and Molecular BiologyMicrobiologyGenomemolecular characterizationsymbiotic bacteriaPlasmidschizaphis-graminumBuchneraLeucinemitochondrial-dnaplasmidGene clusterMolecular BiologyGeneHeat-Shock ProteinsPhylogenyGeneticsRecombination GeneticBinding SitesbiologyEscherichia coli ProteinsChromosomeChromosomes Bacterialbiology.organism_classificationPRI Bioscienceaphidsendosymbiotic bacteriaMultigene Familyescherichia-coliBuchneraanthranilate synthase trpegPlasmidsJournal of bacteriology
researchProduct

Phenylalanine Hydroxylase Participation in the Synthesis of Serotonin and Pteridines in Drosophila melanogaster

1997

Abstract Phenylalanine hydroxylase is involved in the synthesis of serotonin and pteridines, probably catalysing the hydroxylation of tryptophan and a tetrahydropterin oxidase reaction, respectively. Supplementation of the wild-type Drosophila diet with either L-Phe or L-Trp induced a significant increase in the phenylalanine hydroxylase concentration, while L-Tyr supplementation had no effect. The level of serotonin in adult heads of the PAH-defective mutant Henna recessive-3 was significantly lower than that obtained for the wild-type strain. A 4-fold increase in the concentration of phenylalanine hydroxylase is observed during the pharate adult head development. It occurs in parallel wit…

PharmacologyPhenylalanine hydroxylasebiologyTyrosine hydroxylaseImmunologyTryptophanTryptophan hydroxylaseHydroxylationchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryBiochemistrybiology.proteinAromatic amino acidsSerotonin5-HydroxytryptophanComparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part C: Pharmacology, Toxicology and Endocrinology
researchProduct

The Genome of Cardinium cBtQ1 Provides Insights into Genome Reduction, Symbiont Motility, and Its Settlement in Bemisia tabaci

2014

International audience; Many insects harbor inherited bacterial endosymbionts. Although some of them are not strictly essential and are considered facultative, they can be a key to host survival under specific environmental conditions, such as parasitoid attacks, climate changes, or insecticide pressures. The whitefly Bemisia tabaci is at the top of the list of organisms inflicting agricultural damage and outbreaks, and changes in its distribution may be associated to global warming. In this work, we have sequenced and analyzed the genome of Cardinium cBtQ1, a facultative bacterial endosymbiont of B. tabaci and propose that it belongs to a new taxonomic family, which also includes Candidatu…

Transposable elementhost–symbiont interactionGliding motility[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]CytophagaceaeMolecular Sequence DataBiologyGenomeIS elementsEvolution MolecularHemiptera03 medical and health sciencesPlasmidBotanyGene duplicationGeneticsAnimalsInsertion sequenceSymbiosisGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health sciencesFacultativeBase SequenceCandidatus Cardinium hertigii030306 microbiologyfungibiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutrition13. Climate actionCandidatus Card...gliding motilityAmoebophilaceaeGenome BacterialResearch Article
researchProduct

Inheritance of resistance to aBacillus thuringiensistoxin in a field population of diamondback moth (Plutella xylostella)

1995

Inheritance of resistance to the Bacillus thuringiensis Berl. CryIA(b) crystal protein was studied in Plutella xylostella L. (diamondback moth). A field population 50-fold more resistant to CryIA(b) than a control susceptible strain was used. Dose-mortality curves of the resistant population, the susceptible strain and the F 1 from the two reciprocal crosses were compared. Resistance transmission to the F 1 was dependent on the sex of the resistant progenitor. Sex ratio of the survivors to high doses of CryIA(b) in the F 1 of the two reciprocal crosses did not corroborate the preliminary hypothesis of resistance being due to a recessive sex-linked allele. Since, in a previous work, the loss…

Geneticseducation.field_of_studyPesticide resistanceDiamondback mothbiologyReciprocal crossPopulationPlutellabiology.organism_classificationApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyNatural population growthBacillus thuringiensisBotanyAlleleeducationPesticide Science
researchProduct

Aberrant splicing of the Drosophila melanogaster phenylalanine hydroxylase pre-mRNA caused by the insertion of a B104/roo transposable element in the…

1999

Abstract We report the insertion of the transposable element B104 in the Phenylalanine hydroxylase gene of the Drosophila mutant Henna-recessive 3 . Its presence alters the Phenylalanine hydroxylase splicing pattern, producing at least two aberrant mRNAs which contain part of the B104 sequence interrupting the coding region. This aberrant splicing is provoked by the use of a cryptic donor site encoded by the B104 3′ long terminal repeat in combination with either the gene intron 3 acceptor site or a novel acceptor site generated by the target duplication caused by transposition. One of them, referred as mRNA type 1, encodes a truncated protein that could be predictably non-functional. In mR…

Transposable elementDNA ComplementaryPhenylalanine hydroxylaseMolecular Sequence DataGenes InsectBiologyBiochemistryRNA PrecursorsAnimalsCoding regionAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyGeneBase SequenceIntronPhenylalanine HydroxylaseExonsTryptophan hydroxylaseMolecular biologyAlternative SplicingMutagenesis InsertionalDrosophila melanogasterInsect ScienceRNA splicingDNA Transposable Elementsbiology.proteinPrecursor mRNAInsect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
researchProduct

Comparative Molecular Evolution of Primary (Buchnera) and Secondary Symbionts of Aphids Based on Two Protein-Coding Genes

2001

A+T content, phylogenetic relationships, codon usage, evolutionary rates, and ratio of synonymous versus non-synonymous substitutions have been studied in partial sequences of the atpD and aroQ/pheA genes of primary ( Buchnera) and secondary symbionts of aphids and a set of selected non-symbiotic bacteria, belonging to the five subdivisions of the Proteobacteria. Compared to the homologous genes of the last group, both genes belonging to Buchnera behave in a similar way, showing a higher A+T content, forming a monophyletic group, a loss in codon bias, especially in third base position, an evolutionary acceleration and an increase in the number of non-synonymous substitutions, confirming pre…

DNA BacterialBiologyEvolution MolecularMonophylyBuchneraMolecular evolutionProteobacteriaGeneticsAnimalsCodonSymbiosisMolecular BiologyGenePhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsBase CompositionPhylogenetic treeHost (biology)Sequence Analysis DNAbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationAT Rich SequenceAphidsCodon usage biasProteobacteriaBuchneraJournal of Molecular Evolution
researchProduct

Immunological detection of phenylalanine hydroxylase protein in Drosophila melanogaster.

1992

A monoclonal antibody raised against monkey liver phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) has been used to detect this protein in Drosophila melanogaster. A cross-reacting material (CRM) band of apparent molecular mass 50-52 kDa, equivalent to that deduced for the Drosophila melanogaster PAH protein based on the pah gene cDNA sequence, has been detected. This CRM was analysed throughout development and showed an equivalent pattern to that reported for PAH activity in this insect, with maxima at pupariation and at pharate adult formation. Distribution of this CRM in larval tissues, the haemolymph and the adult body is mainly restricted to the larval fat body and the adult head. Demonstration of this…

animal structuresPhenylalanine hydroxylaseBlotting WesternBiochemistryDrosophilidaeComplementary DNAHemolymphAnimalsMolecular Biologychemistry.chemical_classificationImmunoassaybiologyMolecular massintegumentary systemfungiPhenylalanine HydroxylaseCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationEnzymeDrosophila melanogasterchemistryBiochemistrybiology.proteinDrosophila melanogasterPupariationResearch Article
researchProduct

Chromosomal stasis versus plasmid plasticity in aphid endosymbiont Buchnera aphidicola.

2005

The study of three genomes of the aphid endosymbiont Buchnera aphidicola has revealed an extraordinary stasis: conservation of gene order and genetic composition of the chromosome, while the chromosome size and number of genes has reduced. The reduction in genome size appears to be ongoing since some lineages we now know to have even smaller chromosomes than the first B. aphidicola analysed. The current sequencing by our group of one of these smaller genomes with an estimated size of 450 kb, and its comparison with the other three available genomes provide insights into the nature of processes involved in shrinkage. We discuss whether B. aphidicola might be driven to extinction and be repla…

Comparative genomicsGeneticsAphidbiologyTryptophanChromosomeChromosomes Bacterialbiology.organism_classificationGenomeEvolution MolecularPlasmidBuchneraLeucineAphidsMultigene FamilyGeneticsAnimalsBuchneraSymbiosisGeneGenome sizeGenetics (clinical)PhylogenyPlasmidsHeredity
researchProduct

Molecular Characterization of the Leucine Plasmid from Buchnera aphidicola , Primary Endosymbiont of the Aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum

2000

The complete sequence of the leucine plasmid of Buchnera aphidicola from the aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum (pLeu-BAp) is reported. Its gene organization was concordant with those of other leucine plasmids of Buchnera from aphids of the Aphidini and Macrosiphini tribes. Three inverted repeats are present in pLeu-BAp. Two of them are also present in pLeu from the family Aphididae: (i) SIR1, located downstream the leucine operon, resembles a rho-independent terminator of transcription, and (ii) LIR1, located upstream of the leucine operon, is suggested to be involved in transcription termination or messenger stability. The third, located near the putative ATGC repeats involved in the origin of rep…

OperonInverted repeatMolecular Sequence DataMinisatellite RepeatsBiologyOrigin of replicationApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyOpen Reading FramesPlasmidBuchneraLeucinePhylogeneticsAnimalsSymbiosisPhylogenyGeneticsBase Sequencefood and beveragesGeneral Medicinebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationAcyrthosiphon pisumTerminator (genetics)Genes BacterialAphidsBuchneraMicrosatellite RepeatsPlasmidsCurrent Microbiology
researchProduct

Occurrence of a common binding site in Mamestra brassicae, Phthorimaea operculella, and Spodoptera exigua for the insecticidal crystal proteins CryIA…

1997

Specific binding to midgut membrane proteins is required for the toxicity of insecticidal crystal proteins (ICP) from Bacillus thuringiensis. A direct relationship between toxicity and binding has been proposed. It has been hypothesized that sharing of a single receptor by more than one ICP could lead to the occurrence of multiple resistance in the event of an alteration in the common receptor. Binding of CryIA(a), CryIA(b) and CryIA(c), three structurally related ICPs, has been studied in Phthorimaea operculella, Mamestra brassicae and, Spodoptera exigua using brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) from the midgut tissue. Using iodinated CryIA(b), the three insects showed similar results: o…

Bacterial ToxinsBacillus thuringiensisReceptors Cell SurfaceSpodopteraMothsSpodopteraBiochemistryHemolysin ProteinsBacterial ProteinsBacillus thuringiensisExiguaBotanyAnimalsBinding siteReceptorMolecular BiologyBinding SitesbiologyBacillus thuringiensis ToxinsfungiMidgutbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyPhthorimaea operculellaEndotoxinsMembrane proteinInsect ScienceInsect ProteinsInsect biochemistry and molecular biology
researchProduct

Small but Powerful, the Primary Endosymbiont of Moss Bugs, Candidatus Evansia muelleri, Holds a Reduced Genome with Large Biosynthetic Capabilities

2014

International audience; Moss bugs (Coleorrhyncha: Peloridiidae) are members of the order Hemiptera, and like many hemipterans, they have symbiotic associations with intracellular bacteria to fulfill nutritional requirements resulting from their unbalanced diet. The primary endosymbiont of the moss bugs, Candidatus Evansia muelleri, is phylogenetically related to Candidatus Carsonella ruddii and Candidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum, primary endosymbionts of psyllids and whiteflies, respectively. In this work, we report the genome of Candidatus Evansia muelleri Xc1 from Xenophyes cascus, which is the only obligate endosymbiont present in the association. This endosymbiont possesses an extremely …

Candidatus Carsonella ruddiimutualism[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]GenomeEvolution MolecularHemiptera03 medical and health sciencesMicroscopy Electron TransmissionBotanyGeneticsAnimalsColeorrhynchaPeloridiidaeSymbiosisgenome reductionGenome sizePhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyGene RearrangementGenetics0303 health sciencesbiology030306 microbiologyfungiGene rearrangementbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationHemipterametabolic complementationHalomonadaceaeCandidatusbacteriaendosymbiontResearch Article
researchProduct

Structure and evolution of the leucine plasmids carried by the endosymbiont (Buchnera aphidicola) from aphids of the family Aphididae.

1998

In all examined species of the family Aphididae, the bacterial endosymbiont Buchnera aphidicola carries a plasmid encoding the genes leuABCD (involved in leucine biosynthesis) along with repA1, repA2 and ORF1. The gene organisation of the leucine plasmids was conserved, except in Buchnera isolated from Pterocomma populeum, where ORF1 was located in a different position. An inverted repeat (LIR1) located between repA2 and leuA is found in all of the Buchnera leucine plasmids examined. The predicted secondary structure of the LIR1 transcript conforms to a long hairpin loop, suggesting an involvement in transcription termination or messenger stability. Phylogenetic reconstruction based on repA…

Inverted repeatMolecular Sequence DataSequence alignmentBiologyMicrobiologyOpen Reading FramesPlasmidEnterobacteriaceaeLeucineGeneticsAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceRNA MessengerSymbiosisMolecular BiologyGenePhylogenyRepetitive Sequences Nucleic AcidGeneticsBase SequenceChromosome MappingGene Expression Regulation Bacterialbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationOpen reading frameRNA BacterialGenes BacterialAphidsHorizontal gene transferNucleic Acid ConformationLeucineBuchneraSequence AlignmentPlasmidsFEMS microbiology letters
researchProduct

Genome degeneration and adaptation in a nascent stage of symbiosis

2014

Symbiotic associations between animals and microbes are ubiquitous in nature, with an estimated 15% of all insect species harboring intracellular bacterial symbionts. Most bacterial symbionts share many genomic features including small genomes, nucleotide composition bias, high coding density, and a paucity of mobile DNA, consistent with long-term host association. In this study, we focus on the early stages of genome degeneration in a recently derived insect-bacterial mutualistic intracellular association. We present the complete genome sequence and annotation of Sitophilus oryzae primary endosymbiont (SOPE). We also present the finished genome sequence and annotation of strain HS, a close…

pseudogènePseudogene[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Molecular Sequence DataIS elements;comparative genomics;degenerative genome evolution;pseudogenes;recent symbiontpseudogenesBacterial genome sizedegenerative genome evolutioncomparative genomicsBiologyGenomeIS elementsEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesEnterobacteriaceaeGeneticsAnimalsdonnée de séquence moléculaireInsertion sequenceSymbiosisGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS030304 developmental biology2. Zero hungerGeneticsComparative genomicsWhole genome sequencing0303 health sciencesBase Sequence030306 microbiologygénomique comparativeAdaptation PhysiologicalColeopterarecent symbiontAdaptationsymbiosedégradation du génomeGenome Bacterialséquence d'insertionResearch Article
researchProduct

Determination of the Core of a Minimal Bacterial Gene Set

2004

SUMMARY The availability of a large number of complete genome sequences raises the question of how many genes are essential for cellular life. Trying to reconstruct the core of the protein-coding gene set for a hypothetical minimal bacterial cell, we have performed a computational comparative analysis of eight bacterial genomes. Six of the analyzed genomes are very small due to a dramatic genome size reduction process, while the other two, corresponding to free-living relatives, are larger. The available data from several systematic experimental approaches to define all the essential genes in some completely sequenced bacterial genomes were also considered, and a reconstruction of a minima…

GeneticsBacteriaComputational BiologyReviewComputational biologyBacterial genome sizeBiologyMicrobiologyGenomeSet (abstract data type)Core (game theory)Infectious DiseasesBacterial ProteinsGenes BacterialMinimal genomeMolecular BiologyGeneGenome sizeGenome BacterialComplement (set theory)Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews
researchProduct

No exception to the rule: Candidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum cell wall revisited

2014

International audience; Many insect endosymbionts described so far are gram-negative bacteria. Primary endosymbionts are obligatory bacteria usually harboured by insects inside vacuoles in specialized cells called bacteriocytes. This combination produces a typical three-membrane system with one membrane derived from the insect vacuole and the other two from the bacterial gram-negative cell envelope, composed by the cell wall (the outer membrane plus the periplasmic space) and the plasma membrane (the inner membrane). For the last 21 years, the primary endosymbiont of whiteflies 'Candidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum' was considered an exception to this rule. Previous works stated that only two …

0106 biological sciencesGram-negative bacteriacell envelopeCandidatus Carsonella ruddii[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Bemisia tabaci endosymbiont01 natural sciencesMicrobiologyMicrobiologyHemipteraCell membrane03 medical and health sciencesMicroscopy Electron TransmissionCell WallGeneticsmedicineAnimalsInner membraneMolecular Biology030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesbiologyfungiPeriplasmic spacebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationHalomonadaceaemedicine.anatomical_structureGenes Bacterialendosymbiont membranesCandidatusbacteriaCell envelopeBacterial outer membrane010606 plant biology & botany
researchProduct

Genome interdependence in insect-bacterium symbioses

2001

Symbioses between unicellular and multicellular organisms have contributed significantly to the evolution of life on Earth. As exemplified by several studies of bacterium-insect symbioses, modern genomic techniques are providing exciting new information about the molecular basis and the biological roles of these complex relationships, revealing for instance that symbionts have lost many genes for functions that are provided by the host, but that they can provide amino acids that the host cannot synthesize.

InsectaBuchnerafungiAnimalsMinireviewBacterial Physiological PhenomenaSymbiosisModels BiologicalGenome BacterialPhylogenyHost-Parasite InteractionsOligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis
researchProduct

Whole-Genome Sequence of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia D457, a Clinical Isolate and a Model Strain

2012

ABSTRACT Stenotrophomonas maltophilia is an opportunistic pathogen with an environmental origin, and it is an increasingly relevant cause of nosocomial infections. Here we present the whole-genome sequence of S. maltophilia strain D457, a clinical isolate that is being used as a model for studying antibiotic resistance in this bacterial species.

Sequence analysisStenotrophomonas maltophiliaDrug resistanceMicrobiologyGenomeMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesAntibiotic resistanceDrug Resistance BacterialHumansMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologySequence (medicine)Whole genome sequencing0303 health sciencesbiology030306 microbiologyStrain (biology)Sequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationbacterial infections and mycoses3. Good healthGenome AnnouncementsAnti-Bacterial AgentsStenotrophomonas maltophiliaGenes BacterialbacteriaGram-Negative Bacterial InfectionsGenome BacterialJournal of Bacteriology
researchProduct

Developmental and biochemical studies on the phenylalanine hydroxylation system in Drosophila melanogaster

1992

Abstract The enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase, the substrate phenylalanine, the product of the reaction tyrosine, and the probable in vivo cofactors (6R)- l -erytro-5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin (H4Bip) and 5,6,7,8-tetrahydropterin (H4Ptr), have been measured during development in Drosophila. The developmental profile of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity shows two peaks. The larger occurs at the time of pupation, coiciding with an important accumulation of tyrosine in the insect. The minor peak appears at the time of adult emergence. The developmental profile of H4Bip shows also two peaks, coinciding with those of maximal phenylalanine hydroxylase activity. However, H4Ptr is only detectable …

chemistry.chemical_classificationDevelopmental profilebiologyPhenylalanine hydroxylasePhenylalanineTetrahydrobiopterinBiochemistryCofactorHydroxylationchemistry.chemical_compoundEnzymechemistryBiochemistryInsect Sciencebiology.proteinmedicineTyrosineMolecular Biologymedicine.drug
researchProduct