Tandem repeats in giant archaeal Borg elements undergo rapid evolution and create new intrinsically disordered regions in proteins


Loading...

Date

2023-01-26

Publication Type

Journal Article, Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

no

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

Borgs are huge, linear extrachromosomal elements associated with anaerobic methane-oxidizing archaea. Striking features of Borg genomes are pervasive tandem direct repeat (TR) regions. Here, we present six new Borg genomes and investigate the characteristics of TRs in all ten complete Borg genomes. We find that TR regions are rapidly evolving, recently formed, arise independently, and are virtually absent in host Methanoperedens genomes. Flanking partial repeats and A-enriched character constrain the TR formation mechanism. TRs can be in intergenic regions, where they might serve as regulatory RNAs, or in open reading frames (ORFs). TRs in ORFs are under very strong selective pressure, leading to perfect amino acid TRs (aaTRs) that are commonly intrinsically disordered regions. Proteins with aaTRs are often extracellular or membrane proteins, and functionally similar or homologous proteins often have aaTRs composed of the same amino acids. We propose that Borg aaTR-proteins functionally diversify Methanoperedens and all TRs are crucial for specific Borg–host associations and possibly cospeciation.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Journal / series

Volume

21 (1)

Pages / Article No.

Publisher

PLOS

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Organisational unit

09817 - Schoelmerich, Marie / Schoelmerich, Marie check_circle

Notes

Funding

Related publications and datasets