Distribution of introns in fungal histone genes

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Abstract

Saccharomycotina and Taphrinomycotina lack intron in their histone genes, except for an intron in one of histone H4 genes of Yarrowia lipolytica. On the other hand, Basidiomycota and Perizomycotina have introns in their histone genes. We compared the distributions of 81, 47, 79, and 98 introns in the fungal histone H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 genes, respectively. Based on the multiple alignments of the amino acid sequences of histones, we identified 19, 13, 31, and 22 intron insertion sites in the histone H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 genes, respectively. Surprisingly only one hot spot of introns in the histone H2A gene is shared between Basidiomycota and Perizomycotina, suggesting that most of introns of Basidiomycota and Perizomycotina were acquired independently. Our findings suggest that the common ancestor of Ascomycota and Basidiomycota maybe had a few introns in the histone genes. In the course of fungal evolution, Saccharomycotina and Taphrinomycotina lost the histone introns; Basidiomycota and Perizomycotina acquired other introns independently. In addition, most of the introns have sequence similarity among introns of phylogenetically close species, strongly suggesting that horizontal intron transfer events between phylogenetically distant species have not occurred recently in the fungal histone genes. © 2011 Yun, Nishida.

Figures

  • Figure 1. Phylogenetic relationships among the fungal species used in this analysis. Phylogenetic analysis was performed based on 1276 nucleotide sites of 18S rRNA gene without the gap/insertion sites. The neighbor-joining tree was reconstructed using the MEGA software [21]. The bootstrap was performed with 1000 replicates. The rate variation among sites was considered with gamma distributed rate (a= 1). The other default parameters were not changed. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0016548.g001
  • Figure 2. Number of core histone genes and introns in the gene. The numbers in parentheses indicate the number of introns within each gene. The phylogenetic topology is based on Fig. 1. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0016548.g002

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Yun, C. S., & Nishida, H. (2011). Distribution of introns in fungal histone genes. PLoS ONE, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0016548

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