The<i>Physarum polycephalum</i>Genome Reveals Extensive Use of Prokaryotic Two-Component and Metazoan-Type Tyrosine Kinase Signaling

Pauline Schaap(University of Dundee), Israel Barrantes(University Hospital Magdeburg), Pat Minx, Narie Sasaki(Nagoya University), Roger W. Anderson(University of Sheffield), Marianne Bénard(Sorbonne Université), Kyle K. Biggar(Western University), Nicolas E. Buchler(Duke University), Ralf Bundschuh(The Ohio State University), Xiao Chen(Princeton University), Catrina C. Fronick, Lucinda A. Fulton, Georg Golderer(Innsbruck Medical University), Niels Jahn(Leibniz Institute on Aging - Fritz Lipmann Institute (FLI)), Volker Knoop(University of Bonn), Laura F. Landweber(Princeton University), Chrystelle Maric(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Dennis L. Miller(The University of Texas at Dallas), Angelika A. Noegel(University of Cologne), Rob Peace(Carleton University), Gérard Pierron(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Taeko Sasaki(Nagoya University), Mareike Schallenberg‐Rüdinger(University of Bonn), Michael Schleicher(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Reema Singh(University of Dundee), Thomas Spaller(Friedrich Schiller University Jena), Kenneth B. Storey(Carleton University), Takamasa Suzuki(Nagoya University), Chad Tomlinson, John J. Tyson(Virginia Tech), Wesley C. Warren, Ernst R. Werner(Innsbruck Medical University), Gabriele Werner‐Felmayer(Innsbruck Medical University), Richard K. Wilson, Thomas Winckler(Friedrich Schiller University Jena), Jonatha M. Gott(Case Western Reserve University), Gernot Glöckner(University of Cologne), Wolfgang Marwan(University Hospital Magdeburg)
Genome Biology and Evolution
November 27, 2015
Cited by 100Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Physarum polycephalum is a well-studied microbial eukaryote with unique experimental attributes relative to other experimental model organisms. It has a sophisticated life cycle with several distinct stages including amoebal, flagellated, and plasmodial cells. It is unusual in switching between open and closed mitosis according to specific life-cycle stages. Here we present the analysis of the genome of this enigmatic and important model organism and compare it with closely related species. The genome is littered with simple and complex repeats and the coding regions are frequently interrupted by introns with a mean size of 100 bases. Complemented with extensive transcriptome data, we define approximately 31,000 gene loci, providing unexpected insights into early eukaryote evolution. We describe extensive use of histidine kinase-based two-component systems and tyrosine kinase signaling, the presence of bacterial and plant type photoreceptors (phytochromes, cryptochrome, and phototropin) and of plant-type pentatricopeptide repeat proteins, as well as metabolic pathways, and a cell cycle control system typically found in more complex eukaryotes. Our analysis characterizes P. polycephalum as a prototypical eukaryote with features attributed to the last common ancestor of Amorphea, that is, the Amoebozoa and Opisthokonts. Specifically, the presence of tyrosine kinases in Acanthamoeba and Physarum as representatives of two distantly related subdivisions of Amoebozoa argues against the later emergence of tyrosine kinase signaling in the opisthokont lineage and also against the acquisition by horizontal gene transfer.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis