4.6 Article

The Evolutionary History of a DNA Methylase Reveals Frequent Horizontal Transfer and Within-Gene Recombination

Journal

GENES
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes14020288

Keywords

actinophage; actinobacteriophage; inteins; LAGLIDADG endonuclease; homing; horizontal gene transfer; DNA methyltransferase; homologous recombination; selfish genetic elements

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In this study, we discovered a protein family of methylases in actinophages that contains a putative intein and two unique insertion elements. We found that the distribution of these methylases is not conserved within phage clusters and varies across divergent phage groups. Furthermore, we observed evidence of long-distance horizontal gene transfer events involving the intein and ShiLan domain in the dispersed distribution of methylases.
Inteins, often referred to as protein introns, are highly mobile genetic elements that invade conserved genes throughout the tree of life. Inteins have been found to invade a wide variety of key genes within actinophages. While in the process of conducting a survey of these inteins in actinophages, we discovered that one protein family of methylases contained a putative intein, and two other unique insertion elements. These methylases are known to occur commonly in phages as orphan methylases (possibly as a form of resistance to restriction-modification systems). We found that the methylase family is not conserved within phage clusters and has a disparate distribution across divergent phage groups. We determined that two of the three insertion elements have a patchy distribution within the methylase protein family. Additionally, we found that the third insertion element is likely a second homing endonuclease, and that all three elements (the intein, the homing endonuclease, and what we refer to as the ShiLan domain) have different insertion sites that are conserved in the methylase gene family. Furthermore, we find strong evidence that both the intein and ShiLan domain are partaking in long-distance horizontal gene transfer events between divergent methylases in disparate phage hosts within the already dispersed methylase distribution. The reticulate evolutionary history of methylases and their insertion elements reveals high rates of gene transfer and within-gene recombination in actinophages.

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