Abstract

Doc number: 131

Abstract

Background: Elongation factor-1α (EF-1α) and elongation factor-like (EFL) proteins are functionally homologous to one another, and are core components of the eukaryotic translation machinery. The patchy distribution of the two elongation factor types across global eukaryotic phylogeny is suggestive of a 'differential loss' hypothesis that assumes that EF-1α and EFL were present in the most recent common ancestor of eukaryotes followed by independent differential losses of one of the two factors in the descendant lineages. To date, however, just one diatom and one fungus have been found to have both EF-1α and EFL (dual-EF-containing species).

Results: In this study, we characterized 35 new EF-1α/EFL sequences from phylogenetically diverse eukaryotes. In so doing we identified 11 previously unreported dual-EF-containing species from diverse eukaryote groups including the Stramenopiles, Apusomonadida, Goniomonadida, and Fungi. Phylogenetic analyses suggested vertical inheritance of both genes in each of the dual-EF lineages. In the dual-EF-containing species we identified, the EF-1α genes appeared to be highly divergent in sequence and suppressed at the transcriptional level compared to the co-occurring EFL genes.

Conclusions: According to the known EF-1α/EFL distribution, the differential loss process should have occurred independently in diverse eukaryotic lineages, and more dual-EF-containing species remain unidentified. We predict that dual-EF-containing species retain the divergent EF-1α homologues only for a sub-set of the original functions. As the dual-EF-containing species are distantly related to each other, we propose that independent re-modelling of EF-1α function took place in multiple branches in the tree of eukaryotes.

Details

Title
Parallel re-modeling of EF-1[alpha] function: divergent EF-1[alpha] genes co-occur with EFL genes in diverse distantly related eukaryotes
Author
Kamikawa, Ryoma; Brown, Matthew W; Nishimura, Yuki; Sako, Yoshihiko; Heiss, Aaron A; Yubuki, Naoji; Gawryluk, Ryan; Simpson, Alastair GB; Roger, Andrew J; Hashimoto, Tetsuo; Inagaki, Yuji
Pages
131
Publication year
2013
Publication date
2013
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
14712148
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1398339142
Copyright
© 2013 Kamikawa et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.