Genome-Wide Survey of Transcription Factors in Prokaryotes Reveals Many Bacteria-Specific Families Not Found in Archaea
Author(s) -
Yoshiaki Minezaki,
Keiichi Homma,
Ken Nishikawa
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
dna research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.647
H-Index - 98
eISSN - 1756-1663
pISSN - 1340-2838
DOI - 10.1093/dnares/dsi016
Subject(s) - biology , archaea , genome , bacteria , genetics , evolutionary biology , transcription factor , transcription (linguistics) , computational biology , gene , linguistics , philosophy
Assignment of all transcription factors (TFs) from genome sequence data is not a straightforward task due to the wide variation in TFs among different species. A DNA binding domain (DBD) and a contiguous non-DBD with a characteristic SCOP or Pfam domain combination are observed in most members of TF families. We found that most of the experimentally verified TFs in prokaryotes are detectable by a combination of SCOP or Pfam domains assigned to DBDs and non-DBDs. Based on this finding, we set up rules to detect TFs and classify them into 52 TF families. Application of the rules to 154 entirely sequenced prokaryotic genomes detected >18,000 TFs classified into families, which have been made publicly available from the 'GTOP_TF' database. Despite the rough proportionality of the number of TFs per genome with genome size, species with reduced genomes, i.e. obligatory parasites and symbionts, have only a few if any TFs, reflecting a nearly complete loss. Also the number of TFs is significantly lower in archaea than in bacteria. In addition, all but 1 of the 19 TF families present in archaea is present in bacteria, whereas 33 TF families are found exclusively in bacteria. This observation indicates that a number of new TF families have evolved in bacteria, making the transcription regulatory system more divergent in bacteria than in archaea.
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