日本地球惑星科学連合2015年大会

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セッション記号 B (地球生命科学) » B-AO 宇宙生物学・生命起源

[B-AO01] Astrobiology: Origins, Evolution, Distribution of Life

2015年5月27日(水) 16:15 〜 18:03 105 (1F)

コンビーナ:*小林 憲正(横浜国立大学大学院工学研究院)、山岸 明彦(東京薬科大学生命科学部)、大石 雅寿(国立天文台天文データセンター)、田近 英一(東京大学大学院新領域創成科学研究科複雑理工学専攻)、掛川 武(東北大学大学院理学研究科地学専攻)、井田 茂(東京工業大学大学院理工学研究科地球惑星科学専攻)、座長:掛川 武(東北大学大学院理学研究科地学専攻)、井田 茂(東京工業大学大学院理工学研究科地球惑星科学専攻)

16:15 〜 16:30

[BAO01-03] 祖先生物超好熱菌説の確実さの検証

*別所 瑞萌1赤沼 哲史1横堀 伸一1山岸 明彦1 (1.東京薬科大学・生命科学部・応用生命生命科学科)

キーワード:祖先タンパク質復元, コモノート, ヌクレオシド二リン酸キナーゼ, 超好熱菌

All of the modern organisms are thought to have evolved from a single common ancestor named Commonote (1). In order to investigate the environmental temperatures of the ancient organisms, we resurrected amino acid sequences of ancestral nucleoside diphosphate kinases (NDKs) that might be hosted by the last common ancestors of Archaea and of Bacteria. The enzyme catalyzes the transfer of a phosphate from a nucleoside triphosphate to a nucleoside diphosphate.The ancestor of NDK family is thought to have been possessed by the ancient organisms because most extant cells, from bacteria to human, contain the gene(s) that encode a member of this family of proteins. More importantly, the denaturation temperature of a NDK correlates well with the optimal growth temperature of its host. Therefore, we can estimate the environmental temperature of the ancient organisms by reconstruction ancestral NDK's amino acid sequences and characterizing their thermal stabilities. In our previous study (2), the ancestral amino acid sequences of NDK were inferred from two phylogenetic trees with different topologies using a maximum likelihood program. The sequences were then reconstructed and characterized. From thermal denaturation experiments of the reconstructed enzymes, we estimated that the common ancestors of Archaea and of Bacteria lived at 81-97℃ and 80-94℃, respectively. The Commonote was also likely to be a (hyper)thermophile that lived at a temperature above 75℃. However, a criticism for our conclusion is that the ancestral sequences have been inferred with an assumption that the amino acid composition has been constant through evolutionary time. Gouy and coworkers (3) predicted the amino acid sequences of ancestral proteins using a Bayesian method that does not assume the constant evolutionary process through time. They estimated the optimal environmental temperature of the ancestral organisms from the amino acid composition of seven amino acid types: leucine, isoleucine, valine, tyrosine, tryptophan, arginine, and glutamate. Based on the analysis, they suggested that the archaeal and bacterial ancestors were thermophilic but the Commonote was not a thermophilic organism. In this study, we re-inferred ancestral NDK sequences using the same Bayesian program. The ancestral NDK sequences were inferred from two phylogenetic trees. One tree was built without constraints and the other with the constraint that Archaea and Bacteria each represent a monophyletic group. The gene encoding the ancestral NDK sequences were synthesized, expressed in Escherichia coli, and then the ancestral NDKs were purified. Thermal denaturation measurements showed that the newly inferred ancestral NDK sequences are also extremely thermally stable. Therefore, our conclusion of the (hyper)thermophilic ancestry is robust even if the ancestral amino acid sequences were inferred without the assumption that the amino acid composition has been constant over evolution.
(1) Yamagishi et al. In Thermophiles: the keys to molecular evolution and the origin of life? (1998), pp287-295.
(2) Akanuma et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA (2013)110, 11067-11072
(3) Boussau et al. Nature (2008)456, 942-947