Title of article :
Organization and Evolution of the Biological Response to Singlet Oxygen Stress
Author/Authors :
Yann S. Dufour، نويسنده , , Robert Landick، نويسنده , , Timothy J. Donohue، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
18
From page :
713
To page :
730
Abstract :
The appearance of atmospheric oxygen from photosynthetic activity led to the evolution of aerobic respiration and responses to the resulting reactive oxygen species. In Rhodobacter sphaeroides, a photosynthetic α-proteobacterium, a transcriptional response to the reactive oxygen species singlet oxygen (1O2) is controlled by the group IV σ factor σE and the anti-σ factor ChrR. In this study, we integrated various large datasets to identify genes within the 1O2 stress response that contain σE-dependent promoters both within R. sphaeroides and across the bacterial phylogeny. Transcript pattern clustering and a σE-binding sequence model were used to predict candidate promoters that respond to 1O2 stress in R. sphaeroides. These candidate promoters were experimentally validated to nine R. sphaeroides σE-dependent promoters that control the transcription of 15 1O2-activated genes. Knowledge of the R. sphaeroides response to 1O2 and its regulator σE–ChrR was combined with large-scale phylogenetic and sequence analyses to predict the existence of a core set of approximately eight conserved σE-dependent genes in α-proteobacteria and γ-proteobacteria. The bacteria predicted to contain this conserved response to 1O2 include photosynthetic species, as well as free-living and symbiotic/pathogenic nonphotosynthetic species. Our analysis also predicts that the response to 1O2 evolved within the time frame of the accumulation of atmospheric molecular oxygen on this planet.
Keywords :
species gene regulation , sigma factors , singlet oxygen , stress responses , Reactive oxygen
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number :
1257667
Link To Document :
بازگشت