Whole genome sequence of Desulfovibrio magneticus strain RS-1 revealed common gene clusters in magnetotactic bacteria
- Hidekazu Nakazawa1,
- Atsushi Arakaki2,
- Sachiko Narita-Yamada1,
- Isao Yashiro1,
- Koji Jinno1,
- Natsuko Aoki1,
- Ai Tsuruyama2,
- Yoshiko Okamura2,
- Satoshi Tanikawa1,
- Nobuyuki Fujita1,
- Haruko Takeyama2 and
- Tadashi Matsunaga2,3
- 1 NITE Genome Analysis Center, Department of Biotechnology, National Institute of Technology and Evaluation, 2-49-10 Nishihara, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo 151-0066, Japan;
- 2 Department of Biotechnology, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, 2-24-16 Naka-cho, Koganei, Tokyo 184-8588, Japan
Abstract
Magnetotactic bacteria are ubiquitous microorganisms that synthesize intracellular magnetite particles (magnetosomes) by accumulating Fe ions from aquatic environments. Recent molecular studies, including comprehensive proteomic, transcriptomic, and genomic analyses, have considerably improved our hypotheses of the magnetosome-formation mechanism. However, most of these studies have been conducted using pure-cultured bacterial strains of α-proteobacteria. Here, we report the whole-genome sequence of Desulfovibrio magneticus strain RS-1, the only isolate of magnetotactic microorganisms classified under δ-proteobacteria. Comparative genomics of the RS-1 and four α-proteobacterial strains revealed the presence of three separate gene regions (nuo and mamAB-like gene clusters, and gene region of a cryptic plasmid) conserved in all magnetotactic bacteria. The nuo gene cluster, encoding NADH dehydrogenase (complex I), was also common to the genomes of three iron-reducing bacteria exhibiting uncontrolled extracellular and/or intracellular magnetite synthesis. A cryptic plasmid, pDMC1, encodes three homologous genes that exhibit high similarities with those of other magnetotactic bacterial strains. In addition, the mamAB-like gene cluster, encoding the key components for magnetosome formation such as iron transport and magnetosome alignment, was conserved only in the genomes of magnetotactic bacteria as a similar genomic island-like structure. Our findings suggest the presence of core genetic components for magnetosome biosynthesis; these genes may have been acquired into the magnetotactic bacterial genomes by multiple gene-transfer events during proteobacterial evolution.
Footnotes
-
↵3 Corresponding author.
E-mail tmatsuna{at}cc.tuat.ac.jp; fax 81-42-385-7713.
-
[Supplemental material is available online at http://www.genome.org. The sequence for Desulfovibrio magneticus strain RS-1 has been submitted to the DNA Data Bank of Japan (http://www.ddbj.nig.ac.jp) under accession nos. AP010904–AP010906.]
-
Article published online before print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.088906.108.
-
- Received November 7, 2008.
- Accepted June 4, 2009.
- Copyright © 2009 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press











