The 3,308,274-bp sequence of the chromosome of Lactobacillus plantarum strain WCFS1, a single colony isolate of strain NCIMB8826 that was originally isolated from human saliva, has been determined, and contains 3,052 predicted protein-encoding genes. Putative biological functions could be assigned to 2,120 (70%) of the predicted proteins. Consistent with the classification of L. plantarum as a facultative heterofermentative lactic acid bacterium, the genome encodes all enzymes required for the glycolysis and phosphoketolase pathways, all of which appear to belong to the class of potentially highly expressed genes in this organism, as was evident from the codon-adaptation index of individual genes. Moreover, L. plantarum encodes a large pyruvate-dissipating potential, leading to various end-products of fermentation. L. plantarum is a species that is encountered in many different environmental niches, and this flexible and adaptive behavior is reflected by the relatively large number of regulatory and transport functions, including 25 complete PTS sugar transport systems. Moreover, the chromosome encodes >200 extracellular proteins, many of which are predicted to be bound to the cell envelope. A large proportion of the genes encoding sugar transport and utilization, as well as genes encoding extracellular functions, appear to be clustered in a 600-kb region near the origin of replication. Many of these genes display deviation of nucleotide composition, consistent with a foreign origin. These findings suggest that these genes, which provide an important part of the interaction of L. plantarum with its environment, form a lifestyle adaptation region in the chromosome.
The mechanisms of carbon starvation: how, when, or does it even occur at all?Recent observations of increasing vegetation mortality events appear to be a result of changing climate, in particular, an increase in the frequency, length and intensity of droughts (e.g. Allen et al., 2010). The threat of widespread increases in future mortality has rekindled interest in the mechanisms of plant mortality and survival because we do not yet understand them well enough to confidently model future vegetation dynamics (Sitch et al., 2008). In this issue of New Phytologist, provide a viewpoint on the 'carbon (C) starvation hypothesis ' (McDowell et al., 2008). Their viewpoint is invaluable for stimulating our field to explicitly refine our definitions and identify the key experiments needed to understand mechanisms of vegetation survival and mortality. Two important conclusions of their paper were that mortality can occur at nonzero carbohydrate levels and that careful experiments focused on the explicit mechanisms of C starvation, as well as on partitioning the roles of hydraulic failure and C starvation, are needed to understand the physiological underpinnings of how plants die. We applaud these conclusions, and agree that hasty acceptance of any hypothesis before adequate testing is foolish. In this commentary, we highlight some of the valuable ideas from Sala et al. and provide additional comments that we hope will prompt careful future tests on the mechanisms of plant mortality.When the C-starvation hypothesis was proposed (McDowell et al., 2008), it represented an attempt to summarize and interpret the existing literature on vegetation mortality, of which there was a wealth of indirect studies, but a paucity of true, mechanistic tests. The original formulation of the hypothesis suggested that stomatal closure minimizes hydraulic failure during drought, causing photosynthetic C uptake to decline to low levels, thereby promoting carbon starvation as carbohydrate demand continues for maintenance of metabolism and defense. The plant either starves outright, or succumbs to attack by insects or pathogens, whichever occurs first. By contrast, failure to maintain xylem water tension lower than its cavitation threshold results in embolisms, which, if unrepaired, can eventually lead to widespread hydraulic failure, desiccation and mortality. We hoped that the C-starvation and hydraulic failure hypotheses would generate discussion and new ideas; and 'The paucity of studies that quantified mortality forces scientists to use data from nonmortality studies to develop hypotheses … we do this at the risk of confusing stress responses with mortality mechanisms.' , as summarized by Sala et al., active discussion is taking place. A primary conclusion from the discussion is that we need clarification of the various mechanisms by which C starvation can occur, if it occurs at all.Plants maintain metabolism through respiratory processes that consume carbohydrates, and in doing so their C budgets must obey the law of conservation of energ...
Summary• Identification of ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi is often achieved through comparisons of ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences with accessioned sequences deposited in public databases. A major problem encountered is that annotation of the sequences in these databases is not always complete or trustworthy. In order to overcome this deficiency, we report on UNITE, an open-access database.• UNITE comprises well annotated fungal ITS sequences from well defined herbarium specimens that include full herbarium reference identification data, collector/source and ecological data. At present UNITE contains 758 ITS sequences from 455 species and 67 genera of ECM fungi.• UNITE can be searched by taxon name, via sequence similarity using BLAST n, and via phylogenetic sequence identification using galaxie. Following implementation, galaxie performs a phylogenetic analysis of the query sequence after alignment either to pre-existing generic alignments, or to matches retrieved from a BLAST search on the UNITE data. It should be noted that the current version of UNITE is dedicated to the reliable identification of ECM fungi.• The UNITE database is accessible through the URL http://unite.zbi.ee
The complete mitochondrial genome sequence of the pig, Sus scrofa, was determined. The length of the sequence presented is 16,679 nucleotides. This figure is not absolute, however, due to pronounced heteroplasmy caused by variable numbers of the motif GTACACGTGC in the control region of different molecules. A phylogenetic study was performed on the concatenated amino acid and nucleotide sequences of 12 protein-coding genes of the mitochondrial genome. The analysis identified the pig (Suiformes) as a sister group of a cow/whale clade, making Artiodactyla paraphyletic. The split between pig and cow/whale was molecularly dated at 65 million years before present.
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