Department of Microbiology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA.
Nature. 2013 Mar 28;495(7442):512-5. doi: 10.1038/nature11989.
Several mechanisms that increase the rate of mutagenesis across the entire genome have been identified; however, how the rate of evolution might be promoted in individual genes is unclear. Most genes in bacteria are encoded on the leading strand of replication. This presumably avoids the potentially detrimental head-on collisions that occur between the replication and transcription machineries when genes are encoded on the lagging strand. Here we identify the ubiquitous (core) genes in Bacillus subtilis and determine that 17% of them are on the lagging strand. We find a higher rate of point mutations in the core genes on the lagging strand compared with those on the leading strand, with this difference being primarily in the amino-acid-changing (nonsynonymous) mutations. We determine that, overall, the genes under strong negative selection against amino-acid-changing mutations tend to be on the leading strand, co-oriented with replication. In contrast, on the basis of the rate of convergent mutations, genes under positive selection for amino-acid-changing mutations are more commonly found on the lagging strand, indicating faster adaptive evolution in many genes in the head-on orientation. Increased gene length and gene expression amounts are positively correlated with the rate of accumulation of nonsynonymous mutations in the head-on genes, suggesting that the conflict between replication and transcription could be a driving force behind these mutations. Indeed, using reversion assays, we show that the difference in the rate of mutagenesis of genes in the two orientations is transcription dependent. Altogether, our findings indicate that head-on replication-transcription conflicts are more mutagenic than co-directional conflicts and that these encounters can significantly increase adaptive structural variation in the coded proteins. We propose that bacteria, and potentially other organisms, promote faster evolution of specific genes through orientation-dependent encounters between DNA replication and transcription.
已经确定了几种可以提高整个基因组突变率的机制;然而,如何促进个别基因的进化速度尚不清楚。大多数细菌基因都编码在复制的前导链上。这大概可以避免在基因编码在滞后链上时,复制和转录机制之间可能发生的潜在有害的正面碰撞。在这里,我们鉴定了枯草芽孢杆菌中普遍存在的(核心)基因,并确定其中 17%位于滞后链上。我们发现,与前导链上的核心基因相比,滞后链上的核心基因的点突变率更高,这种差异主要存在于氨基酸改变(非同义)突变中。我们确定,总的来说,受到强烈负选择以防止氨基酸改变突变的基因往往位于前导链上,与复制共取向。相比之下,根据趋同突变的速率,正选择氨基酸改变突变的基因更常见于滞后链上,这表明许多在正面取向的基因中适应性进化更快。基因长度和基因表达量的增加与正面基因中非同义突变积累的速率呈正相关,这表明复制和转录之间的冲突可能是这些突变的驱动力。事实上,通过回复实验,我们表明两种取向基因的突变率差异依赖于转录。总之,我们的研究结果表明,正面复制-转录冲突比共取向冲突更具突变性,这些冲突可以显著增加编码蛋白的适应性结构变异。我们提出,细菌,可能还有其他生物,通过 DNA 复制和转录之间的定向依赖性相互作用,促进特定基因的更快进化。