Gene Expression Analysis of Four Radiation-resistant Bacteria

Author:

Gao Na1,Ma Bin-Guang12,Zhang Yu-Sheng1,Song Qin1,Chen Ling-Ling1,Zhang Hong-Yu1

Affiliation:

1. Shandong Provincial Research Center for Bioinformatic Engineering and Technique, Center for Advanced Study, School of Life Sciences, Shandong University of Technology, Zibo 255049, P.R. China.

2. Computational Biology Unit, Bergen Center for Computational Science, University of Bergen, Bergen 5008, Norway.

Abstract

To investigate the general radiation-resistant mechanisms of bacteria, bioinformatic method was employed to predict highly expressed genes for four radiation-resistant bacteria, i.e. Deinococcus geothermalis ( D. geo), Deinococcus radiodurans ( D. rad), Kineococcus radiotolerans ( K. rad) and Rubrobacter xylanophilus ( R. xyl). It is revealed that most of the three reference gene sets, i.e. ribosomal proteins, transcription factors and major chaperones, are generally highly expressed in the four bacteria. Recombinase A ( recA), a key enzyme in recombinational repair, is predicted to be highly or marginally highly expressed in the four bacteria. However, most proteins associated with other repair systems show low expression levels. Some genes participating in ‘information storage and processing,’ ‘cellular processes and signaling’ and ‘metabolism’ are among the top twenty predicted highly expressed (PHX) genes in the four genomes. Many antioxidant enzymes and proteases are commonly highly expressed in the four bacteria, indicating that these enzymes play important roles in resisting irradiation. Finally, a number of ‘hypothetical genes’ are among the top twenty PHX genes in each genome, some of them might contribute vitally to resist irradiation. Some of the prediction results are supported by experimental evidence. All the above information not only helps to understand the radiation-resistant mechanisms but also provides clues for identifying new radiation-resistant genes from these bacteria.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cell Biology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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