López-García P
Institut de Génétique et Microbiologie, Université Paris-Sud, Bât. 409, 91405 Orsay Cedex, France.
J Mol Evol. 1999 Oct;49(4):439-52. doi: 10.1007/pl00006567.
Cellular systems to control an appropriate DNA geometry for function probably evolved simultaneously with DNA genomes. Such systems are basically DNA topoisomerases and DNA-binding proteins. Therefore, their distribution in extant organisms may be a source of information on early evolution and the nature of the last common ancestor (cenancestor). Most living beings need the strand-opening potential of negative DNA supercoiling to allow transcription and other DNA-dependent processes. Mesophiles have global negatively supercoiled DNA, essentially due to gyrase (introducing negative supercoils) in bacteria and to DNA wrapping around histone cores in eukaryotes. Mesophilic archaea, halophilic methanogens, and halophiles might use a gyrase, whereas some methanogens might use histone wrapping. The existence of these two distinct mechanisms suggests that mesophily appeared at least twice in evolution. On the other hand, only one system which is based on reverse gyrase (introducing positive supercoils) appears to be required for hyperthermophilic life. Archaeal hyperthermophiles lacking gyrase have relaxed to positively supercoiled DNA, but hyperthermophilic bacteria of the genus Thermotoga, which have both gyrase and reverse gyrase, have negative supercoiling. This suggests that reverse gyrase is necessary at least locally, but whereas these hyperthermophilic bacteria favor general melting potential and stability at critical active regions, hyperthermophilic archaea favor general linking excess and local melting. In this context, the existence of a thermophilic (60-80 degrees C) ancestor endowed with only relaxing topoisomerases is hypothesized. Such temperatures allow a compromise between melting potential and stability, i.e., an appropriate DNA geometry for function. Subsequent duplication and functional specialization of existing DNA topoisomerases would then have facilitated adaptation to hyperthermophily and mesophily in archaea and bacteria, respectively. If reverse gyrase is an ancient character in hyperthermophilic bacteria, the cenancestor would have already been a hyperthermophile. Histone sequence homology and similarities of nucleosome structural dynamics suggest that eukaryotes inherited this system for DNA structural homeostasis from methanogenic euryarchaea. Some mesophilic archaea would have improved their adaptability to mesophily by importing gyrase from bacteria.
控制适合功能的DNA几何结构的细胞系统可能与DNA基因组同时进化。这类系统主要是DNA拓扑异构酶和DNA结合蛋白。因此,它们在现存生物中的分布可能是了解早期进化和最后共同祖先(cenancestor)性质的信息来源。大多数生物需要负超螺旋DNA的解链潜能来进行转录和其他依赖DNA的过程。嗜温生物具有整体负超螺旋DNA,这主要是由于细菌中的促旋酶(引入负超螺旋)以及真核生物中DNA缠绕在组蛋白核心周围。嗜温古菌、嗜盐产甲烷菌和嗜盐菌可能使用促旋酶,而一些产甲烷菌可能使用组蛋白缠绕。这两种不同机制的存在表明嗜温性在进化过程中至少出现了两次。另一方面,嗜热生命似乎只需要一种基于反向促旋酶(引入正超螺旋)的系统。缺乏促旋酶的古菌嗜热菌具有松弛至正超螺旋的DNA,但同时具有促旋酶和反向促旋酶的嗜热栖热菌属嗜热细菌具有负超螺旋。这表明反向促旋酶至少在局部是必需的,然而这些嗜热细菌在关键活性区域倾向于整体解链潜能和稳定性,而嗜热古菌则倾向于整体连接过剩和局部解链。在这种情况下,假设存在一个仅具有松弛拓扑异构酶的嗜热(60 - 80摄氏度)祖先。这样的温度允许在解链潜能和稳定性之间达成妥协,即适合功能的适当DNA几何结构。随后现有DNA拓扑异构酶的复制和功能特化分别促进了古菌和细菌对嗜热和嗜温环境的适应。如果反向促旋酶是嗜热细菌中的一个古老特征,那么cenancestor可能已经是嗜热菌。组蛋白序列同源性和核小体结构动力学的相似性表明,真核生物从产甲烷广古菌继承了这个用于DNA结构稳态的系统。一些嗜温古菌可能通过从细菌中引入促旋酶来提高其对嗜温环境的适应性。