Network Analysis of Plasmidomes: The Azospirillum brasilense Sp245 Case
Author(s) -
Valerio Orlandini,
Giovanni Emiliani,
Marco Fondi,
Isabel Maida,
Elena Perrin,
Renato Fani
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
international journal of evolutionary biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-8032
pISSN - 2090-052X
DOI - 10.1155/2014/951035
Subject(s) - azospirillum brasilense , plasmid , biology , in silico , genetics , genome , homology (biology) , context (archaeology) , gene , phylogenetic tree , computational biology , microbial inoculant , bacteria , paleontology
Azospirillum brasilense is a nitrogen-fixing bacterium living in association with plant roots. The genome of the strain Sp245, isolated in Brazil from wheat roots, consists of one chromosome and six plasmids. In this work, the A. brasilense Sp245 plasmids were analyzed in order to shed some light on the evolutionary pathways they followed over time. To this purpose, a similarity network approach was applied in order to identify the evolutionary relationships among all the A. brasilense plasmids encoded proteins; in this context a computational pipeline specifically devoted to the analysis and the visualization of the network-like evolutionary relationships among different plasmids molecules was developed. This information was supplemented with a detailed ( in silico ) functional characterization of both the connected (i.e., sharing homology with other sequences in the dataset) and the unconnected (i.e., not sharing homology) components of the network. Furthermore, the most likely source organism for each of the genes encoded by A. brasilense plasmids was checked, allowing the identification of possible trends of gene loss/gain in this microorganism. Data obtained provided a detailed description of the evolutionary landscape of the plasmids of A. brasilense Sp245, suggesting some of the molecular mechanisms responsible for the present-day structure of these molecules.
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