Abstract

BackgroundOxidative phosphorylation is central to the energy metabolism of the cell. Due to adaptation to different life-styles and environments, fungal species have shaped their respiratory pathways in the course of evolution. To identify the main mechanisms behind the evolution of respiratory pathways, we conducted a phylogenomics survey of oxidative phosphorylation components in the genomes of sixty fungal species.ResultsBesides clarifying orthology and paralogy relationships among respiratory proteins, our results reveal three parallel losses of the entire complex I, two of which are coupled to duplications in alternative dehydrogenases. Duplications in respiratory proteins have been common, affecting 76% of the protein families surveyed. We detect several instances of paralogs of genes coding for subunits of respiratory complexes that have been recruited to other multi-protein complexes inside and outside the mitochondrion, emphasizing the role of evolutionary tinkering.ConclusionsProcesses of gene loss and gene duplication followed by functional divergence have been rampant in the evolution of fungal respiration. Overall, the core proteins of the respiratory pathways are conserved in most lineages, with major changes affecting the lineages of microsporidia, Schizosaccaromyces and Saccharomyces/Kluyveromyces due to adaptation to anaerobic life-styles. We did not observe specific adaptations of the respiratory metabolism common to all pathogenic species.

Highlights

  • Oxidative phosphorylation is central to the energy metabolism of the cell

  • Besides clarifying orthology and paralogy relationships among respiratory proteins, our results reveal three parallel losses of the entire complex I, two of which are coupled to duplications in alternative dehydrogenases

  • Processes of gene loss and gene duplication followed by functional divergence have been rampant in the evolution of fungal respiration

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Summary

Introduction

Oxidative phosphorylation is central to the energy metabolism of the cell. Due to adaptation to different life-styles and environments, fungal species have shaped their respiratory pathways in the course of evolution. Oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) is the primary energy-producing pathway in aerobic organisms [1]. It functions by coupling the energy obtained from the oxidation of certain metabolic substrates to the phosphorylation of adenosine biphosphate (ADP) to produce ATP. This is achieved by a process of electronic transference through an intricate assembly of more than 20 discrete carriers. These carriers are mainly grouped into four membrane-embedded protein complexes, named Complex I through Complex IV, which form the electron transport chain (ETC). The energy obtained from the dissipation of this gradient is used by a fifth protein complex, ATP-synthase or Complex V, to synthesize ATP

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