4.6 Article

The Patchy Distribution of Restriction-Modification System Genes and the Conservation of Orphan Methyltransferases in Halobacteria

Journal

GENES
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes10030233

Keywords

HGT; restriction; methylation; gene transfer; selfish genes; archaea; haloarchaea; DNA methylase; epigenetics

Funding

  1. Binational Science Foundation [BSF 2013061]
  2. National Science Foundation [NSF/MCB 1716046]
  3. NASA exobiology [NNX15AM09G, 80NSSC18K1533]
  4. NASA [807623, NNX15AM09G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Restriction-modification (RM) systems in bacteria are implicated in multiple biological roles ranging from defense against parasitic genetic elements, to selfish addiction cassettes, and barriers to gene transfer and lineage homogenization. In bacteria, DNA-methylation without cognate restriction also plays important roles in DNA replication, mismatch repair, protein expression, and in biasing DNA uptake. Little is known about archaeal RM systems and DNA methylation. To elucidate further understanding for the role of RM systems and DNA methylation in Archaea, we undertook a survey of the presence of RM system genes and related genes, including orphan DNA methylases, in the halophilic archaeal class Halobacteria. Our results reveal that some orphan DNA methyltransferase genes were highly conserved among lineages indicating an important functional constraint, whereas RM systems demonstrated patchy patterns of presence and absence. This irregular distribution is due to frequent horizontal gene transfer and gene loss, a finding suggesting that the evolution and life cycle of RM systems may be best described as that of a selfish genetic element. A putative target motif (CTAG) of one of the orphan methylases was underrepresented in all of the analyzed genomes, whereas another motif (GATC) was overrepresented in most of the haloarchaeal genomes, particularly in those that encoded the cognate orphan methylase.

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