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. 2008 Sep;25(9):2031-41.
doi: 10.1093/molbev/msn150. Epub 2008 Jul 8.

Halogenase genes in nonribosomal peptide synthetase gene clusters of Microcystis (cyanobacteria): sporadic distribution and evolution

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Halogenase genes in nonribosomal peptide synthetase gene clusters of Microcystis (cyanobacteria): sporadic distribution and evolution

Sabrina Cadel-Six et al. Mol Biol Evol. 2008 Sep.

Abstract

Cyanobacteria of the genus Microcystis are known to produce secondary metabolites of large structural diversity by nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) pathways. For a number of such compounds, halogenated congeners have been reported along with nonhalogenated ones. In the present study, chlorinated cyanopeptolin- and/or aeruginosin-type peptides were detected by mass spectrometry in 17 out of 28 axenic strains of Microcystis. In these strains, a halogenase gene was identified between 2 genes coding for NRPS modules in respective gene clusters, whereas it was consistently absent when the strains produced only nonchlorinated corresponding congeners. Nucleotide sequences were obtained for 12 complete halogenase genes and 14 intermodule regions of gene clusters lacking a halogenase gene or containing only fragments of it. When a halogenase gene was found absent, a specific, identical excision pattern was observed for both synthetase gene clusters in most strains. A phylogenetic analysis including other bacterial halogenases showed that the NRPS-related halogenases of Microcystis form a monophyletic group divided into 2 subgroups, corresponding to either the cyanopeptolin or the aeruginosin peptide synthetases. The distribution of these peptide synthetase gene clusters, among the tested Microcystis strains, was found in relative agreement with their phylogeny reconstructed from 16S-23S rDNA intergenic spacer sequences, whereas the distribution of the associated halogenase genes appears to be sporadic. The presented data suggest that in cyanobacteria these prevalent halogenase genes originated from an ancient horizontal gene transfer followed by duplication in the cyanobacterial lineage. We propose an evolutionary scenario implying repeated gene losses to explain the distribution of halogenase genes in 2 NRPS gene clusters that subsequently defines the seemingly erratic production of halogenated and nonhalogenated aeruginosins and cyanopeptolins among Microcystis strains.

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Figures

F<sc>IG</sc>. 1.—
FIG. 1.—
Flat structures of aeruginosin 101 (A; Ishida et al. 1999) and cyanopeptolin 954 (B; von Elert et al. 2005). Conserved parts of the structures of aeruginosins and cyanopeptolins, respectively, are indicated by bold lines. In other congeners, the chlorine atoms can be replaced by hydrogen atoms as it is the case for the sulfate group at Choi. Hpla: 4-hydroxyphenyl lactic acid; Choi: 2-carboxy-6-hydroxyoctahydroindole; Arg-derivative: agmatine (as shown), argininal, or argininol; Ahp: 3-amino-6-hydroxy-2-piperidone; and side chain: very variable consisting of amino acids, fatty acids, or (sulfated) glyceric acid (Welker and von Döhren 2006).
F<sc>IG</sc>. 2.—
FIG. 2.—
Schematic illustration of the halogenase genes (aerJ and mcnD) in segments of the aeruginosin (aerA–aerB; A) and cyanopeptolin (mcnC–mcnE; B) NRPS gene clusters of Microcystis strains. Full lines delimit deletions and triangles indicate insertions. Arrows indicate DRs as described in the text. Strains grouped by their numbers have the same gene arrangement in the respective regions; for further details, see text.
F<sc>IG</sc>. 3.—
FIG. 3.—
Distance tree of the ITS nucleotide sequences of Microcystis strains and distribution of the aeruginosin (aer, circles) and cyanopeptolin (mcn, squares) synthetase gene clusters, with their corresponding halogenase genes (aerJ and mcnD). Full circles: complete aerJ; empty circles: lack of aerJ; full squares: complete mcnD; and empty squares: truncated mcnD. ML (above) and distance (below) bootstrap values exceeding 50% are given at the nodes. The geographic origin of the strains is indicated.
F<sc>IG</sc>. 4.—
FIG. 4.—
PHYML tree of the halogenase amino acid sequences (for further details, see supplementary table 2, Supplementary Material online) based on the WAG substitution model. Bootstrap values exceeding 50% are given at the nodes. Sequence names in bold are obtained in the present study.

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