SummaryThe ability of a bacterial cell to monitor and adaptively respond to its environment is crucial for survival.
Two-component systems that link environmental signals to cellular responses are viewed as the primary mode of signal transduction in prokaryotes. By analyz-ing information encoded by 145 prokaryotic genomes, we found that the majority of signal transduction systems consist of a single protein that contains input and output domains but lacks phosphotransfer domains typical of twocomponent systems. One-component systems are evolutionarily older, more widely distributed among bacteria and archaea, and display a greater diversity of domains than two-component systems.
Bacterioplankton of the marine Roseobacter clade have genomes that reflect a dynamic environment and diverse interactions with marine plankton. Comparative genome sequence analysis of three cultured representatives suggests that cellular requirements for nitrogen are largely provided by regenerated ammonium and organic compounds (polyamines, allophanate, and urea), while typical sources of carbon include amino acids, glyoxylate, and aromatic metabolites. An unexpectedly large number of genes are predicted to encode proteins involved in the production, degradation, and efflux of toxins and metabolites. A mechanism likely involved in cell-to-cell DNA or protein transfer was also discovered: vir-related genes encoding a type IV secretion system typical of bacterial pathogens. These suggest a potential for interacting with neighboring cells and impacting the routing of organic matter into the microbial loop. Genes shared among the three roseobacters and also common in nine draft Roseobacter genomes include those for carbon monoxide oxidation, dimethylsulfoniopropionate demethylation, and aromatic compound degradation. Genes shared with other cultured marine bacteria include those for utilizing sodium gradients, transport and metabolism of sulfate, and osmoregulation.In surface waters of the open ocean, 1 in 10 bacterial cells is a member of the Roseobacter group (17). In coastal waters, the number of Roseobacter cells increases to 1 in 5 (11, 19). Despite their obvious ecological success, however, roseobacters do not fit the stereotype of a small, metabolically conservative, "oligotrophic" bacterium (8, 18). Instead, they are large (0.08 m 3 ) (38), easily cultured (19), and respond readily to increased substrate availability (7). Analysis of the first Roseobacter genome sequence, that of Silicibacter pomeroyi, revealed a fairly large genome (4.5 Mb) housing abundant and diverse transporters, complex regulatory systems, and multiple pathways for acquiring carbon and energy in seawater. Roseobacters thus appear to be quite versatile from metabolic and ecological standpoints (43), with an assortment of strategies for obtaining carbon and nutrients and, directly or indirectly, affecting the biogeochemical status of seawater.The availability of two additional closed genome sequences of cultured roseobacters provides the opportunity for an ecologically based analysis of the genetic capabilities of this bacterial taxon. The three organisms are assumed to have different niches in the surface ocean based on the conditions of their isolation: S. pomeroyi is a free-living heterotrophic bacterioplankter obtained from coastal seawater (43), congener Silicibacter sp. strain TM1040 (96% 16S rRNA sequence identity to S. pomeroyi [ Fig. 1]) is an associate of the marine dinoflagellate Pfiesteria piscicida (1, 40), and Jannaschia sp. strain CCS1 (with 94% 16S rRNA sequence identity to the two Silicibacter species) represents a recently discovered class of marine aerobic bacteriochlorophyll a-based phototrophs (4). Our comparative an...
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