Abstract

BackgroundAlvinella pompejana is an annelid worm that inhabits deep-sea hydrothermal vent sites in the Pacific Ocean. Living at a depth of approximately 2500 meters, these worms experience extreme environmental conditions, including high temperature and pressure as well as high levels of sulfide and heavy metals. A. pompejana is one of the most thermotolerant metazoans, making this animal a subject of great interest for studies of eukaryotic thermoadaptation.ResultsIn order to complement existing EST resources we performed deep sequencing of the A. pompejana transcriptome. We identified several thousand novel protein-coding transcripts, nearly doubling the sequence data for this annelid. We then performed an extensive survey of previously established prokaryotic thermoadaptation measures to search for global signals of thermoadaptation in A. pompejana in comparison with mesophilic eukaryotes. In an orthologous set of 457 proteins, we found that the best indicator of thermoadaptation was the difference in frequency of charged versus polar residues (CvP-bias), which was highest in A. pompejana. CvP-bias robustly distinguished prokaryotic thermophiles from prokaryotic mesophiles, as well as the thermophilic fungus Chaetomium thermophilum from mesophilic eukaryotes. Experimental values for thermophilic proteins supported higher CvP-bias as a measure of thermal stability when compared to their mesophilic orthologs. Proteome-wide mean CvP-bias also correlated with the body temperatures of homeothermic birds and mammals.ConclusionsOur work extends the transcriptome resources for A. pompejana and identifies the CvP-bias as a robust and widely applicable measure of eukaryotic thermoadaptation.ReviewerThis article was reviewed by Sándor Pongor, L. Aravind and Anthony M. Poole.

Highlights

  • Alvinella pompejana is an annelid worm that inhabits deep-sea hydrothermal vent sites in the Pacific Ocean

  • This annelid worm inhabits deep-sea hydrothermal vent chimney walls in self-made glycoprotein tubes [2], where it is exposed to extreme environmental conditions

  • Our analyses identified the CvP-bias as the best measure to discriminate A. pompejana from mesophilic eukaryotes

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Summary

Introduction

Alvinella pompejana is an annelid worm that inhabits deep-sea hydrothermal vent sites in the Pacific Ocean. Alvinella pompejana is one of the most heat tolerant of all animals known to date [1]. This annelid worm inhabits deep-sea hydrothermal vent chimney walls in self-made glycoprotein tubes [2], where it is exposed to extreme environmental conditions (high pressure, high temperature, low pH, anoxia, heavy metals). Proteins from thermophiles are more stable and less flexible than their mesophilic counterparts. These proteins are more amenable for expression, purification and crystallization experiments, and have often been used to solve the structure of large macromolecular complexes. A. pompejana potentially represents a promising source of thermostable proteins and complexes

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