Award details

The diversity and phylogeny of molecular motor proteins and fungal cell evolution

ReferenceBB/G00885X/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor Professor Thomas Richards
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Institution University of Exeter
DepartmentBiosciences
Funding typeResearch
Value (£) 333,314
StatusCompleted
TypeResearch Grant
Start date 01/07/2009
End date 30/06/2010
Duration12 months

Abstract

This project is based on the recent discovery that molecular motor proteins have a huge diversity of gene architectures and that evolutionary analyses of these proteins can be useful for understanding cell evolution. This project will use molecular biology, comparative genomic and phylogenetic methods to explore the diversity of motor-encoding genes across a wide diversity of fungi representing diverse cellular forms. The project will make use of new publicly available complete or near-complete fungal, animal and amoebozoan genomes and include a number of different fungal lifestyles and cellular forms. To further improve chytrid genome sequences sampling, the project will generate two large-scale 454-sequence surveys from divergent chytrid fungi to identify motor protein encoding genes. For every candidate motor protein, the gene architectures will first be defined. Phylogenetic analyses will then be conducted on each motor family enabling us to identify the diversification of fungal motor proteins. A concatenated phylogeny of ~100 protein sequences will be used to pinpoint the branching order of the fungi and their close relatives. The distribution and phylogeny of motor protein types will then be compared with the species phylogeny to define the relationship between motor protein diversification and fungal cell evolution. To statistically test the correlation of motor types, cellular characteristics and the fungal species phylogeny we will use a trait-to-phylogeny correlation method identifying motor characters of ancient fungal cells, and mapping how motor types relate to the phylogenetic distribution of cellular characters such as cilia, filamentous growth (e.g. hypha), dimorphism, gain of the fungal cell wall and loss of phagotrophy. This process will enable us to test the hypothesis presented by Richards & Cavalier-Smith (2005 Nature 436: 1113-8) that patterns of motor protein evolution can be used to map ancient patterns of cell evolution.

Summary

The aim of this project is to understand the evolutionary history of proteins that control movement within cells, specifically the cells of fungal organisms. The rise and diversification of the Fungi has involved several key changes in cell structures, giving rise to a wealth of biodiversity. This diversity includes organisms responsible for recycling biomass in all environments and microbes that co-operate with plants and algae in important ecological processes, for example, fungi that live in plant roots (mycorrhizae) and fungi that live with algae (lichens). The Fungi also include many species that cause diseases of plants and animals, such as the human pathogens Candida albicans and Cryptococcus neoformans. One of the features that distinguish eukaryote cells, including fungal cells, from bacterial cells, is a cellular skeleton which functions as a three-dimensional network providing the means of tethering, moving and re-organising cellular components. This three-dimensional network is like a complicated railway system with a range of different motors attaching and using chemical energy to transport cellular components throughout the cell. This process is conducted by three types of 'locomotive' and on two different types of 'railway track' and is vitally important for many cell functions. Hence, many international communities of scientists study these motors in order to understand how cells work. We already know that fungal cells make very diverse use of motor proteins. For example, some fungal cells have swimming tails that require the function of several different types of motor protein. In contrast, other types of fungi move by forming cylindrical and filamentous cells; these elongated cells require long-distant transfer of cell components by motor proteins. As such the diversification of motor proteins was critical for these and many other cellular characters of the Fungi. Only recently with the advent of numerous genome sequencing projects can we begin to compare the diversity of the motor protein families across the evolutionary tree of life. By comparing motor protein diversity across different genomes we have improved our understanding of the evolution and functional diversity of these very important protein families. This project is designed to help understand the origin and diversification of fungal cellular functions and the evolutionary history of the Fungi by studying the evolution of their cellular motors and associated cellular machinery. The project will test the idea that by investigating the evolutionary history of the fungal motor protein families we can identify how motor protein evolution relates to cell evolution. This project is significant because it will describe the relationship between motor protein evolution and cell evolution, providing information about how motor protein evolution relates to the diversification of fungal forms. The project will provide important clues about potential pharmaceutical targets in agriculturally and medically important fungi.
Committee Closed Committee - Genes & Developmental Biology (GDB)
Research TopicsMicrobiology
Research PriorityX – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative X - not in an Initiative
Funding SchemeX – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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