Ancient Origin of the Tryptophan Operon and the Dynamics of Evolutionary Change
Open Access
- 1 September 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews
- Vol. 67 (3) , 303-342
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mmbr.67.3.303-342.2003
Abstract
SUMMARY: The seven conserved enzymatic domains required for tryptophan (Trp) biosynthesis are encoded in seven genetic regions that are organized differently (whole-pathway operons, multiple partial-pathway operons, and dispersed genes) in prokaryotes. A comparative bioinformatics evaluation of the conservation and organization of the genes of Trp biosynthesis in prokaryotic operons should serve as an excellent model for assessing the feasibility of predicting the evolutionary histories of genes and operons associated with other biochemical pathways. These comparisons should provide a better understanding of possible explanations for differences in operon organization in different organisms at a genomics level. These analyses may also permit identification of some of the prevailing forces that dictated specific gene rearrangements during the course of evolution. Operons concerned with Trp biosynthesis in prokaryotes have been in a dynamic state of flux. Analysis of closely related organisms among the Bacteria at various phylogenetic nodes reveals many examples of operon scission, gene dispersal, gene fusion, gene scrambling, and gene loss from which the direction of evolutionary events can be deduced. Two milestone evolutionary events have been mapped to the 16S rRNA tree of Bacteria, one splitting the operon in two, and the other rejoining it by gene fusion. The Archaea, though less resolved due to a lesser genome representation, appear to exhibit more gene scrambling than the Bacteria. The trp operon appears to have been an ancient innovation; it was already present in the common ancestor of Bacteria and Archaea. Although the operon has been subjected, even in recent times, to dynamic changes in gene rearrangement, the ancestral gene order can be deduced with confidence. The evolutionary history of the genes of the pathway is discernible in rough outline as a vertical line of descent, with events of lateral gene transfer or paralogy enriching the analysis as interesting features that can be distinguished. As additional genomes are thoroughly analyzed, an increasingly refined resolution of the sequential evolutionary steps is clearly possible. These comparisons suggest that present-day trp operons that possess finely tuned regulatory features are under strong positive selection and are able to resist the disruptive evolutionary events that may be experienced by simpler, poorly regulated operons.Keywords
This publication has 94 references indexed in Scilit:
- The antiquity of RNA-based evolutionNature, 2002
- Correction: retraction: Directed evolution of new catalytic activity using the α/β-barrel scaffoldNature, 2002
- A Complete Sequence of the T. tengcongensis GenomeGenome Research, 2002
- Comparison of repressor and transcriptional attenuator systems for control of amino acid biosynthetic operonsJournal of Molecular Biology, 2001
- Homology among (βα) 8 barrels: implications for the evolution of metabolic pathways 1 1Edited by G. Von HeijneJournal of Molecular Biology, 2000
- Mixed-Function Supraoperons That Exhibit Overall Conservation, Albeit Shuffled Gene Organization, across Wide Intergenomic Distances within EubacteriaMicrobial & Comparative Genomics, 1999
- Gapped BLAST and PSI-BLAST: a new generation of protein database search programsNucleic Acids Research, 1997
- CLUSTAL W: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choiceNucleic Acids Research, 1994
- Structural conservation in parallel .beta./.alpha.-barrel enzymes that catalyze three sequential reactions in the pathway of tryptophan biosynthesisBiochemistry, 1991
- The regulatory significance of intermediary metabolites: Control of aromatic acid biosynthesis by feedback inhibition in Bacillus subtilisJournal of Molecular Biology, 1965