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dc.contributor.author Vergara, Eva
dc.contributor.author Neira, Gonzalo
dc.contributor.author González, Carolina
dc.contributor.author Cortez, Diego
dc.contributor.author Dopson, Mark
dc.contributor.author Holmes, David S.
dc.date.accessioned 2024-09-26T00:33:20Z
dc.date.available 2024-09-26T00:33:20Z
dc.date.issued 2020-04
dc.identifier.issn 2073-4425
dc.identifier.uri https://repositorio.uss.cl/handle/uss/12585
dc.description Publisher Copyright: © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
dc.description.abstract Organisms that thrive in extremely acidic environments (≤pH 3.5) are of widespread importance in industrial applications, environmental issues, and evolutionary studies. Leptospirillum spp. constitute the only extremely acidophilic microbes in the phylogenetically deep-rooted bacterial phylum Nitrospirae. Leptospirilli are Gram-negative, obligatory chemolithoautotrophic, aerobic, ferrous iron oxidizers. This paper predicts genes that Leptospirilli use to survive at low pH and infers their evolutionary trajectory. Phylogenetic and other bioinformatic approaches suggest that these genes can be classified into (i) “first line of defense”, involved in the prevention of the entry of protons into the cell, and (ii) neutralization or expulsion of protons that enter the cell. The first line of defense includes potassium transporters, predicted to form an inside positive membrane potential, spermidines, hopanoids, and Slps (starvation-inducible outer membrane proteins). The “second line of defense“ includes proton pumps and enzymes that consume protons. Maximum parsimony, clustering methods, and gene alignments are used to infer the evolutionary trajectory that potentially enabled the ancestral Leptospirillum to transition from a postulated circum-neutral pH environment to an extremely acidic one. The hypothesized trajectory includes gene gains/loss events driven extensively by horizontal gene transfer, gene duplications, gene mutations, and genomic rearrangements. en
dc.language.iso eng
dc.relation.ispartof vol. 11 Issue: no. 4 Pages:
dc.source Genes
dc.title Evolution of predicted acid resistance mechanisms in the extremely acidophilic Leptospirillum genus en
dc.type Artículo
dc.identifier.doi 10.3390/genes11040389
dc.publisher.department Facultad de Medicina y Ciencia


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