Impact of Genome Reduction on Bacterial Metabolism and Its Regulation

Eva Yus(Centre for Genomic Regulation), Tobias Maier(Centre for Genomic Regulation), Konstantinos Michalodimitrakis(Centre for Genomic Regulation), Vera van Noort(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Takuji Yamada(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Wei‐Hua Chen(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Judith A. H. Wodke(Centre for Genomic Regulation), Marc Güell(Centre for Genomic Regulation), Sira Martínez(Centre for Genomic Regulation), Ronan Bourgeois(Centre for Genomic Regulation), Sebastian Kühner(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Emanuele Raineri(Centre for Genomic Regulation), Ivica Letunić(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Olga V. Kalinina(Institute for Information Transmission Problems), Michaela Rode(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Richard Herrmann(Institute for Information Transmission Problems), Ricardo Gutiérrez–Gallego(DKFZ-ZMBH Alliance), Robert B. Russell(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Anne‐Claude Gavin(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Peer Bork(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Luís Serrano(Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats)
Science
November 27, 2009
Cited by 326

Abstract

Simply Mycoplasma The bacterium Mycoplasma pneumoniae , a human pathogen, has a genome of reduced size and is one of the simplest organisms that can reproduce outside of host cells. As such, it represents an excellent model organism in which to attempt a systems-level understanding of its biological organization. Now three papers provide a comprehensive and quantitative analysis of the proteome, the metabolic network, and the transcriptome of M. pneumoniae (see the Perspective by Ochman and Raghavan ). Anticipating what might be possible in the future for more complex organisms, Kühner et al. (p. 1235 ) combine analysis of protein interactions by mass spectrometry with extensive structural information on M. pneumoniae proteins to reveal how proteins work together as molecular machines and map their organization within the cell by electron tomography. The manageable genome size of M. pneumoniae allowed Yus et al. (p. 1263 ) to map the metabolic network of the organism manually and validate it experimentally. Analysis of the network aided development of a minimal medium in which the bacterium could be cultured. Finally, G‡ell et al. (p. 1268 ) applied state-of-the-art sequencing techniques to reveal that this “simple” organism makes extensive use of noncoding RNAs and has exon- and intron-like structure within transcriptional operons that allows complex gene regulation resembling that of eukaryotes.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis