Identification of interdomain sequences promoting the intronless evolution of a bacterial protein family.

1996 
Abstract In the evolution of eukaryotic genes, introns are believed to have played a major role in increasing the probability of favorable duplication events, chance recombinations, and exon shuffling resulting in functional hybrid proteins. As a rule, prokaryotic genes lack introns, and the examples of prokaryotic introns described do not seem to have contributed to gene evolution by exon shuffling. Still, certain protein families in modern bacteria evolve rapidly by recombination of genes, duplication of functional domains, and as shown for protein PAB of the anaerobic bacterial species Peptostreptococcus magnus, by the shuffling of an albumin-binding protein module from group C and G streptococci. Characterization of a protein PAB-related gene in a P. magnus strain with less albumin-binding activity revealed that the shuffled module was missing. Based on this fact and observations made when comparing gene sequences of this family of bacterial surface proteins interacting with albumin and/or immunoglobulin, a model is presented that can explain how this rapid intronless evolution takes place. A new kind of genetic element is introduced: the recer sequence promoting interdomain, in frame recombination and acting as a structure-less flexibility-promoting spacer in the corresponding protein. The data presented also suggest that antibiotics could represent the selective pressure behind the shuffling of protein modules in P. magnus, a member of the indigenous bacterial flora.
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