Evolution of Microbial Systems Dr. Shun Adachi
Transcription
Evolution of Microbial Systems Dr. Shun Adachi
Evolution of Microbial Systems Dr. Shun Adachi Assistant Professor Institute of Biomedical Sciences Tokushima University Time: 2015. 04. 20 Mon. 15:00 Venue: Auditorium, 1st Floor Interdisciplinary Research Building 跨領域科技研究大樓1 樓演講廳 Host: Dr. Sen-Lin Tang 湯森林副研究員 Abstract In molecular biology, microbial systems are useful for their handiness in experimental techniques and have had major roles on systems biology. However, relatively little is known about their actual ecology and evolution. I am interested in study for evolution of microbial systems, especially for species problem that is distinguishable concept from ordinary ideas in physics or chemistry, by utilizing molecular techniques such as genetics and imaging available. In this seminar, I first present understanding systemic bases of a model organism Escherichia coli by faithful positioning and segregation of the sex factor F plasmid and an adaptive transportation mechanism for chromosome segregation without microfilaments. Previously we studied chromosome and plasmid segregation machineries of E. coli by molecular biological methods and bioimaging, resulting in explanation of F plasmid positioning activity by Turing’s reaction-diffusion system (J Mol Biol 356: 850.). The question was how the equidistant positioning of plasmid DNA molecules is achieved for proper segregation of the plasmid. We speculated the mechanism as a reaction-diffusion system, and by bioimaging and modeling, we proposed the model. The scheme was proved by a different group in homologous Min system later, at least in vitro (Science 320: 789.). We have also elucidated intracellular protein-protein interaction network of E. coli chromosome segregation acting as molecular ‘tether’ for adaptive transportations of the chromosomes (Microbiology 160: 1648.; Front Microbiol 6: 75.). The chromosome segregation mechanism in bacteria without microfilaments is a long-held mystery. However, Fisher et al. (2013) Cell 153: 882. proposed a new model that described a hypothetical molecular ‘tether’, which undergoes stressing and releasing cycles against chromosomal DNA, could mediate such a process. We searched for actual molecules that could be the ‘tether’ and found out a Sectranslocon interacting molecular network could be such a tether. After the notes for molecular biology, I expand the study to the scaling difference of adaptive species and neutral populations in Dictyostelia community in wild (Evol Biol doi: 10.1007/s11692-015-9312-0.). I distinguish the distributions of populations and species, and the phenomenon might be due to different time scale of the two criteria, characterized by ecological neutrality and adaptation to the environments. This might be a starting point to understand what species is, from ecological aspects. From now on I would like to focus on evolutionary biology based on molecular/genomic biology, bioimaging and modeling. My future themes for studying evolution are (i) postzygotic reproductive isolation by chromosome dynamics of Malaysian Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and (ii) social biology and newly proposed ‘size matter’ hypothesis in Dictyostelium discoideum. The questions for (i) are what are the factors related to postzygotic reproductive isolation in budding yeast, and whether the factors are universal among eukaryotes or not. I speculate and show some evidence that chromosome dynamics plays a prominent role in the isolation, together with future plans to expand the study. The study is an approach toward species problem from molecular biology. The question for (ii) is whether there is a particular size limit of populations related to social requirements. I speculate that DNA repair, ageing and reproductive isolation play prominent roles, and by evolutionary experiments with D. discoideum I try to propose how social games affects hierarchical structures of the living organism as observed. The study is an approach toward biological hierarchies, not restricted to species, from social biology.