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Eukaryotic Acquisition of a Bacterial Operon
Author(s) -
Jacek Kominek,
Drew T. Doering,
Dana A. Opulente,
XingXing Shen,
Xiaofan Zhou,
Jeremy DeVirgilio,
Amanda Beth Hulfachor,
Marizeth Groenewald,
Mcsean A. Mcgee,
Steven D. Karlen,
Cletus P. Kurtzman,
Antonis Rokas,
Chris Todd Hittinger
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2019.01.034
Subject(s) - biology , operon , gene , genetics , horizontal gene transfer , genome , gene cluster , transcription (linguistics) , escherichia coli , computational biology , linguistics , philosophy
Operons are a hallmark of bacterial genomes, where they allow concerted expression of functionally related genes as single polycistronic transcripts. They are rare in eukaryotes, where each gene usually drives expression of its own independent messenger RNAs. Here, we report the horizontal operon transfer of a siderophore biosynthesis pathway from relatives of Escherichia coli into a group of budding yeast taxa. We further show that the co-linearly arranged secondary metabolism genes are expressed, exhibit eukaryotic transcriptional features, and enable the sequestration and uptake of iron. After transfer, several genetic changes occurred during subsequent evolution, including the gain of new transcription start sites that were sometimes within protein-coding sequences, acquisition of polyadenylation sites, structural rearrangements, and integration of eukaryotic genes into the cluster. We conclude that the genes were likely acquired as a unit, modified for eukaryotic gene expression, and maintained by selection to adapt to the highly competitive, iron-limited environment.

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