Evolution of the translocation and assembly module (TAM)
Heinz, Eva and Selkrig, Joel and Belousoff, Matthew J. and Lithgow, Trevor (2015) Evolution of the translocation and assembly module (TAM). Genome Biology and Evolution, 7 (6). pp. 1628-1643. ISSN 1759-6653 (https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evv097)
Preview |
Text.
Filename: Heinz-etal-GBE-2015-Evolution-of-the-translocation-and-assembly-module.pdf
Final Published Version License: Download (2MB)| Preview |
Abstract
Bacterial outer membrane proteins require the beta-barrel assembly machinery (BAM) for their correct folding and function. The central component of this machinery is BamA, an Omp85 protein that is essential and found in all Gram-negative bacteria. An additional feature of the BAM is the translocation and assembly module (TAM), comprised TamA (an Omp85 family protein) and TamB. We report that TamA and a closely related protein TamL are confined almost exclusively to Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes/ Chlorobi respectively, whereas TamB is widely distributed across the majority of Gram-negative bacterial lineages. A comprehensive phylogenetic and secondary structure analysis of the TamB protein family revealed that TamB was present very early in the evolution of bacteria. Several sequence characteristics were discovered to define the TamB protein family: A signal-anchor linkage to the inner membrane, beta-helical structure, conserved domain architecture and a C-terminal region that mimics outer membrane protein beta-strands. Taken together, the structural and phylogenetic analyses suggest that the TAM likely evolved from an original combination of BamA and TamB, with a later gene duplication event of BamA, giving rise to an additional Omp85 sequence that evolved to be TamA in Proteobacteria and TamL in Bacteroidetes/Chlorobi.
ORCID iDs
Heinz, Eva ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4413-3756, Selkrig, Joel, Belousoff, Matthew J. and Lithgow, Trevor;-
-
Item type: Article ID code: 90667 Dates: DateEvent1 June 2015Published20 May 2015Published Online17 May 2015AcceptedSubjects: Medicine > Pharmacy and materia medica Department: Faculty of Science > Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 23 Sep 2024 15:28 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 14:27 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/90667