4.2 Article

The iron-sulfur scaffold protein HCF101 unveils the complexity of organellar evolution in SAR, Haptista and Cryptista

期刊

BMC ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 21, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12862-021-01777-x

关键词

HCF101; Ind1; Iron-sulfur cluster; Mitochondrion; Plastid; Evolution

资金

  1. Centre for research of pathogenicity and virulence of parasites (CePaViP) by European Regional Development Funds [CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000759]
  2. University Research Centre (UNCE) from Charles University [SCI/12]
  3. project Microbial Communities in Biomedical and Environmental Areas, and Systems Biology (MICOBION) from H2020 Spreading Excellence and Widening [810224]
  4. LOEWE Center for Synthetic Microbiology (Synmikro)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The Nbp35-like proteins are important for iron-sulfur cluster assembly in cells. Different eukaryotic lineages have variations in the cellular distribution of these proteins, with exceptions such as Nbp35 localization in mitochondria and the presence of a mitochondrial paralog (mHCF101) in some organisms that was previously thought to only target plastids. Phylogenetic analysis suggests a lateral gene transfer of ancestral HCF101 from bacteria, rather than its acquisition from specific bacterial endosymbionts.
Background Nbp35-like proteins (Nbp35, Cfd1, HCF101, Ind1, and AbpC) are P-loop NTPases that serve as components of iron-sulfur cluster (FeS) assembly machineries. In eukaryotes, Ind1 is present in mitochondria, and its function is associated with the assembly of FeS clusters in subunits of respiratory Complex I, Nbp35 and Cfd1 are the components of the cytosolic FeS assembly (CIA) pathway, and HCF101 is involved in FeS assembly of photosystem I in plastids of plants (chHCF101). The AbpC protein operates in Bacteria and Archaea. To date, the cellular distribution of these proteins is considered to be highly conserved with only a few exceptions. Results We searched for the genes of all members of the Nbp35-like protein family and analyzed their targeting sequences. Nbp35 and Cfd1 were predicted to reside in the cytoplasm with some exceptions of Nbp35 localization to the mitochondria; Ind1was found in the mitochondria, and HCF101 was predicted to reside in plastids (chHCF101) of all photosynthetically active eukaryotes. Surprisingly, we found a second HCF101 paralog in all members of Cryptista, Haptista, and SAR that was predicted to predominantly target mitochondria (mHCF101), whereas Ind1 appeared to be absent in these organisms. We also identified a few exceptions, as apicomplexans possess mHCF101 predicted to localize in the cytosol and Nbp35 in the mitochondria. Our predictions were experimentally confirmed in selected representatives of Apicomplexa (Toxoplasma gondii), Stramenopila (Phaeodactylum tricornutum, Thalassiosira pseudonana), and Ciliophora (Tetrahymena thermophila) by tagging proteins with a transgenic reporter. Phylogenetic analysis suggested that chHCF101 and mHCF101 evolved from a common ancestral HCF101 independently of the Nbp35/Cfd1 and Ind1 proteins. Interestingly, phylogenetic analysis supports rather a lateral gene transfer of ancestral HCF101 from bacteria than its acquisition being associated with either alpha-proteobacterial or cyanobacterial endosymbionts. Conclusion Our searches for Nbp35-like proteins across eukaryotic lineages revealed that SAR, Haptista, and Cryptista possess mitochondrial HCF101. Because plastid localization of HCF101 was only known thus far, the discovery of its mitochondrial paralog explains confusion regarding the presence of HCF101 in organisms that possibly lost secondary plastids (e.g., ciliates, Cryptosporidium) or possess reduced nonphotosynthetic plastids (apicomplexans).

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