Figure 1.
Principles of Phylometabolic Analysis.
Panel A shows how phylogenetic distributions of pathways helps interpret the curation of individual metabolic networks. In this case comparison of metabolic gene profiles suggests the orange pathway represents the correct completion. Panel B in turn shows how pathway distributions in turn also suggest evolutionary sequences. Imposing continuity of metabolite production at the ecosystem level allows us to represent those sequences as phylometabolic trees, in which each node represents a functional phenotype with an explicit internal chemical structure.
Figure 2.
Carbon-fixation in Aquifex aeolicus.
The main fixation pathway is the reductive citric acid (rTCA) cycle, from which most anabolic pathways are initiated. Reductive folate chemistry is a secondary fixation pathway from which an additional small set of anabolic pathways is initiated (R = aminobenzoate-derived side chain). Whether formate attachment occurs at the or
position of THF remains to be elucidated (see text). Relative to the reconstructed root of carbon-fixation, in which the rTCA cycle and Wood-Ljungdahl pathway are fully integrated [2], this hybrid strategy employed by A. aeolicus lacks only the grey-dashed reaction (acetyl-CoA synthesis). Molecules highlighted in blue represent the “pillars of anabolism”, TCA intermediates from which the vast majority of anabolic pathways have been initiated throughout evolution [42]. Highlighted in green is succinyl-CoA, which forms a precursor to pyrroles through a later derived pathway in some organisms (but not A. aeolicus). Highlighted in red are reaction sequences involving the same local functional group transformation that in A. aeolicus are catalyzed by closely related enzymes in both halves of the rTCA cycle. Green dashed arrows highlight alternate pathway sequences catalyzed by a single enzyme in other clades.
Table 1.
Distribution of entry sequences to pyrrole biosynthesis.
Table 2.
Distribution of rTCA enzymes in Aquificales.
Figure 3.
Phylometabolic tree showing the evolution of the rTCA cycle.
A combination of improving kinetics (which increases growth rate) and improving thermodynamics (which increases growth efficiency) explains both divergences. For the first divergence, duplication and divergence toward higher substrate specificity of enzymes improves kinetics. For the second divergence, replacing enzymes 3′ +4′ by a higher specificity version of enzyme 4 removes a cost of 1 ATP hydrolysis in fixing , while fusion of one sub-unit of enzyme 1 with enzyme for the subsequent cleavage reaction improves kinetics. Green boxes represent homologous reactions catalyzed by enzymes with high sequence similarity, while purple boxes represent homologous reactions catalyzed by members of the same enzyme families. Reactions 5′ and 5* are catalyzed by the same enzyme. Differences in sequence divergence between green and purple enzymes may reflect differences in complexity of the reactions, see text for further discussion. The yellow node represents acetyl-CoA, the blue node represents oxaloacetate, and the red node represents succinyl-CoA. Dark blue arrows indicate the direction of mass through pathways.
Figure 4.
Branched chain amino acid biosynthesis.
The chemical sequences show the parallels in terms of local functional group chemistry within the reconstructed ancestral pathways to valine, leucine and isoleucine. The blue box highlight the citramalate pathway of -ketobutyrate synthesis, reconstructed here to represent the ancestral sequence to this compound. The molecules highlighted in orange and green in turn show the compact interconnectedness of the ancestral pathways to the branched chain amino acids. Parallels to substrate sequences within the oxidative TCA are also highlighted, as well as the alternate route to
-ketobutyrate from threonine.
Table 3.
Distribution of Isoleucine biosynthesis pathways.
Figure 5.
Lipoic acid biosynthesis and lipoyl-protein assembly.
In E. coli (green sequence), octanoate is transfered from ACP to the E2 subunit of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) by LipB, followed by sulfuration to lipoic acid by LipA. In E. coli mutants lacking LipB, octanoate is transfered through an alternate route with an AMP-bound intermediate by LplA, normally used for incorporation of free lipoic acid. In B. subtillis (blue sequence), octanoate is transfered from ACP first to the H-protein of GCS by LipM, followed by a second transfer to the E2 subunit of PDH by LipL. B. subtillis also uses LplJ instead of LplA for incorporation of free lipoic acid. In red is the suggested ancestral biosynthesis of lipoic acid (see main text).
Table 4.
Distribution of lipoic acid biosynthesis genes.
Table 5.
Distribution of pyroxidal phosphate synthesis genes.