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Comparative genomics: functional characterization of new genes and regulatory interactions using computer analysis Mikhail Gelfand Institute for Information Transmission Problems (The Kharkevich Institute), RAS Workshop at the Landau Instiute of Theoretical Physics, RAS September 27-28, 2007, Moscow
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The genome is decyphered!
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Is it? To intercept a message does not mean to understand it
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Fragment of a genome (0.1% of E. coli) A typical bacterial genome: several million nucleotides ~600 through ~9,000 genes (~90% of the genome encodes proteins)
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Propaganda sequences in GenBank (~genes) articles in PubMed (~experiments)
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More propaganda Most genes will never be studied in experiment Even in E.coli: only 20-30 new genes per year (hundreds are still uncharacterized) “Universally missing genes” – not a single known gene even for ~10% reactions of the central metabolism. No genes for >40% reactions overall. “Conserved hypothetical genes” (5-15% of any bacterial genome) – essential, but unknown function.
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The local goal: to characterize the genes What? –function (rather, role) When? –regulation (conditions) gene expression lifetime (mRNA, protein) Where? –Localization Cellular/membrane/secreted How? –Mechanism of action Specificity, regulation (biochemistry)
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2007: > 1200 bacterial genomes Propaganda-2: complete genomes
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The global goal: to predict the organism’s properties given its genome (plus some additional information, e.g. the initial state after cell division) and “to understand” the evolution of genomes/organisms
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Haemophilus influenzae, 1995
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Vibrio cholerae, 2000
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The metabolic map, the bird’s view
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Metabolic pathways, the eagle’s view
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A submap (metabolism of arginine and proline)
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Approaches Similarity => homology (common origin) Homology => common function “The Pearson Principle” (after Karl Pearson): important features are conserved –functional sites in proteins –regulatory (protein-binding) sites in DNA –not necessarily sequences: structure of protein and RNA gene localization on chromosomes co-expression of genes Allows one to annotate 50-75% of genes in a bacterial genome Necessary first step, may be automated (to some extent)
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… but not so simple Similarity ≠ homology –Low complexity regions, unstructured domains, transmembrane segments and other regions with non-strandard amino acid composition The need for correct similarity measures – Does homology always follow from the structural similarity? What is structural similarity? How can it be measured? Convergent evolution of structures? Independent emergence of folds? Homology ≠ same function –What is «the same function»? Biochemical details and cellular role
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“The Fermi principle” (after Enrico Fermi) Purely homology-based annotation: boring (nothing radically new) It turns out, one can predict something completely new Comparative genomics
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Positional clustering Genes that are located in immediate proximity tend to be involved in the same metabolic pathway or functional subsystem –caused by operon structure, but not only horizontal transfer of loci containing several functionally linked operons compartmentalisation of products in the cytoplasm –very weak evidence stronger if observed in may unrelated genomes May be measured –e.g. the STRING database/server (P.Bork, EMBL) –and other sources
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STRING: trpB – positional clusters
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Functionally dependent genes tend to cluster on chromosomes in many different organisms Vertical axis: number of gene pairs with association score exceeding a threshold. Control: same graph, random re-labeling of vertices
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More genomes (stronger links) => highly significant clustering
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Fusions If two (or more) proteins form a single multidomain protein in some organism, they all are likely to be tightly functionally related Very useful for the analysis of eukaryotes Sometimes useful for the analysis of prokaryotes
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STRING: trpB – fusions
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Phyletic patterns Functionally linked genes tend to occur together Enzymes with the same function (isozymes) have complementary phyletic profiles
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STRING: trpB – co-occurrence (phyletic patterns)
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Phyletic patterns in the Phe/Tyr pathway shikimate kinase
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Archaeal shikimate-kinase Chorismate biosynthesis pathway (E. coli)
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Arithmetics of phyletic patterns 3-dehydroquinate dehydratase (EC 4.2.1.10): Class I (AroD) COG0710 aompkzyq---lb-e----n---i-- Class II (AroQ) COG0757 ------y-vdr-bcefghs-uj---- Two forms combined aompkzyqvdrlbcefghsnuj-i-- + 5-enolpyruvylshikimate 3-phosphate synthase (EC 2.5.1.19) AroA COG0128 aompkzyqvdrlbcefghsnuj-i-- Shikimate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.25): AroE COG0169 aompkzyqvdrlbcefghsnuj-i-- + Shikimate kinase (EC 2.7.1.71): Typical (AroK) COG0703 ------yqvdrlbcefghsnuj-i-- Archaeal-type COG1685 aompkz-------------------- Two forms combined aompkzyqvdrlbcefghsnuj-i-- Chorismate synthase (EC 2.5.1.19) AroC COG0082 aompkzyqvdrlbcefghsnuj-i--
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Distribution of association scores: monotonic for subunits, bimodal for isozymes
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Comparative analysis of regulation Phylogenetic footprinting: regulatory sites are more conserved than non-coding regions in general and are often seen as conserved islands in alignments of gene upstream regions Consistency filtering: regulons (sets of co- regulated genes) are conserved => –true sites occur upstream of orthologous genes –false sites are scattered at random
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Riboflavin (vitamin B2) biosynthesis pathway
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5’ UTR regions of riboflavin genes from bacteria
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Conserved secondary structure of the RFN- element Capitals: invariant (absolutely conserved) positions. Lower case letters: strongly conserved positions. Dashes and stars: obligatory and facultative base pairs Degenerate positions: R = A or G; Y = C or U; K = G or U; B= not A; V = not U. N: any nucleotide. X: any nucleotide or deletion
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RFN: the mechanism of regulation Transcription attenuation Translation attenuation
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Early observation: an uncharacterized gene (ypaA) with an upstream RFN element
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Phylogenetic tree of RFN-elements (regulation of riboflavin biosynthesis) duplications no riboflavin biosynthesis
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YpaA a.k.a. RibU: riboflavin transporter in Gram-positive bacteria 5 predicted transmembrane segments => a transporter Upstream RFN element (likely co-regulation with riboflavin genes) => transport of riboflaving or a precursor S. pyogenes, E. faecalis, Listeria sp.: ypaA, no riboflavin pathway => transport of riboflavin Prediction: YpaA is riboflavin transporter (Gelfand et al., 1999) Validation: YpaA transports flavines (riboflavin, FMN, FAD): by genetic analysis (Kreneva et al., 2000) by direct measurement (Burgess et al., 2006; Vogl et al., 2007 ) ypaA is regulated by riboflavin: by microarray expression study (Lee et al., 2001) … via attenuation of transcription (and to some extent inhibition of translaition) (Winkler et al., 2003)
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Conserved structures of riboswitches (circled: X-ray)
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Mechanisms gcvT: ribozyme, cleaves its mRNA (the Breaker group) THI-box in plants: inhibition of splicing (the Breaker and Hanamoto groups)
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Characterized riboswitches (more are predicted) RFNRiboflavin biosynthesis and transport FMN (flavin mononucleotide) Bacillus/Clostridium group, proteobacteria, actinobacteria, other bacteria THIBiosynthesis and transport of thiamin and related compounds TPP (thiamin pyrophosphate) Bacillus/Clostridium group, proteobacteria, actinobacteria, cyanobacteria, other bacteria, archea (thermoplasmas), plants, fungi B12Biosynthesis of cobalamine, transport of cobalt, cobalamin- dependent enzymes Coenzyme B12 (adenosyl- cobalamin) Bacillus/Clostridium group, proteobacteria, actinobacteria, cyanobacteria, spirochaetes, other bacteria S-box SAM-II SAM-III Metabolism of methionine and cystein SAM (S-adenosyl- methionine) Bacillus/Clostridium group and some other bacteria SAM-II (alpha), SAM-III (Streptococci) LYSLysine metabolismlysineBacillus/Clostridium group, enterobacteria, other bacteria G-boxMetabolism of purines purinesBacillus/Clostridium group and some other bacteria glmS (ribozyme) Synthesis of glucosamine-6- phosphate glucosamine-6- phosphate Bacillus/Clostridium group gcvT (tandem) Catabolism of glycine glycineBacillus/Clostridium group
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Properties of riboswitches Direct binding of ligands High conservation –Including “unpaired” regions: tertiary interactions, ligand binding Same structure – different mechanisms: transcription, translation, splicing, (RNA cleavage) Distribution in all taxonomic groups –diverse bacteria –archaea: thermoplasmas –eukaryotes: plants and fungi Correlation of the mechanism and taxonomy: –attenuation of transcription (anti-anti-terminator) – Bacillus/Clostridium group –attenuation of translation (anti-anti-sequestor of translation initiation) – proteobacteria –attenuation of translation (direct sequestor of translation initiation) – actinobacteria Evolution: horizontal transfer, duplications, lineage-specific loss Sometimes very narrow distribution: evolution from scratch?
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Conserved signal upstream of nrd genes
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Identification of the candidate regulator by the analysis of phyletic patterns COG1327: the only COG with exactly the same phylogenetic pattern as the signal –“large scale” on the level of major taxa –“small scale” within major taxa: absent in small parasites among alpha- and gamma- proteobacteria absent in Desulfovibrio spp. among delta-proteobacteria absent in Nostoc sp. among cyanobacteria absent in Oenococcus and Leuconostoc among Firmicutes present only in Treponema denticola among four spirochetes
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COG1327 “Predicted transcriptional regulator, consists of a Zn-ribbon and ATP-cone domains”: regulator of the riboflavin pathway (RibX)?
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Additional evidence: co-localization nrdR is sometimes clustered with nrd genes or with replication genes dnaB, dnaI, polA
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Additional evidence: co-regulated genes In some genomes, candidate NrdR- binding sites are found upstream of other replication- related genes –dNTP salvage –topoisomerase I, replication initiator dnaA, chromosome partitioning, DNA helicase II
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Multiple sites (nrd genes): FNR, DnaA, NrdR
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Mode of regulation Repressor (overlaps with promoters) Co-operative binding: –most sites occur in tandem (> 90% cases) –the distance between the copies (centers of palindromes) equals an integer number of DNA turns: mainly (94%) 30-33 bp, in 84% 31-32 bp – 3 turns 21 bp (2 turns) in Vibrio spp. 41-42 bp (4 turns) in some Firmicutes
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Experimental validations
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Acknowledgements Dmitry Rodionov (comparative genomics) Andrei Mironov (software) Alexei Vitreschak (riboswitches) Funding: –Howard Hughes Medical Institute –Russian Foundation of Basic Research –RAS, program “Molecular and Cellular Biology” –INTAS
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