Functional phylogenomics analysis of bacteria and archaea using consistent genome annotation with UniFam

  • Juanjuan Chai
  • , Guruprasad Kora
  • , Tae Hyuk Ahn
  • , Doug Hyatt
  • , Chongle Pan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Phylogenetic studies have provided detailed knowledge on the evolutionary mechanisms of genes and species in Bacteria and Archaea. However, the evolution of cellular functions, represented by metabolic pathways and biological processes, has not been systematically characterized. Many clades in the prokaryotic tree of life have now been covered by sequenced genomes in GenBank. This enables a large-scale functional phylogenomics study of many computationally inferred cellular functions across all sequenced prokaryotes.

Results: A total of 14,727 GenBank prokaryotic genomes were re-annotated using a new protein family database, UniFam, to obtain consistent functional annotations for accurate comparison. The functional profile of a genome was represented by the biological process Gene Ontology (GO) terms in its annotation. The GO term enrichment analysis differentiated the functional profiles between selected archaeal taxa. 706 prokaryotic metabolic pathways were inferred from these genomes using Pathway Tools and MetaCyc. The consistency between the distribution of metabolic pathways in the genomes and the phylogenetic tree of the genomes was measured using parsimony scores and retention indices. The ancestral functional profiles at the internal nodes of the phylogenetic tree were reconstructed to track the gains and losses of metabolic pathways in evolutionary history.

Conclusions: Our functional phylogenomics analysis shows divergent functional profiles of taxa and clades. Such function-phylogeny correlation stems from a set of clade-specific cellular functions with low parsimony scores. On the other hand, many cellular functions are sparsely dispersed across many clades with high parsimony scores. These different types of cellular functions have distinct evolutionary patterns reconstructed from the prokaryotic tree.

Original languageEnglish
Article number207
JournalBMC Evolutionary Biology
Volume14
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 9 2014

Funding

This work was supported by Bioenergy Science Center (BESC) and Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) from Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The contribution of JC was sponsored by the Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research. This research used resources of the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility. Oak Ridge National Laboratory is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC05-00OR22725.

Keywords

  • Cellular function
  • Evolution
  • Genomes
  • Pathway
  • Phylogenomics
  • Prokaryotes

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