Issue December 2008

category image Volume 26
No. 3 (p 273-402)
December 2008
ISSN 0739-110

Nucleotide Triplet Based Molecular Phylogeny of Class I and Class II Aminoacyl t-RNA Synthetase in Three Domain of Life Process: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya (p. 321-328)

The aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases are one of the major protein components in the translation machinery. These essential proteins are found in all forms of life and are responsible for charging their cognate tRNAs with the correct amino acid. These important enzymes have been the subject of intense scientific inquiry for nearly half a century, but their complete evolutionary history has yet to emerge. Amino acids sequence based phylogeny has some limitation due to very low sequence similarity amongst the different tRNA synthetases and structure based phylogeny has also its limitation. In our study, tRNA nucleotide sequences of E. coli K12 (Bacteria), Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Eukarya), Thermococcus kodakaraensis KOD1, and Archaeoglobus fulgidus DSM 4304 (Archaea) were used for phylogenetic analysis. Our results complement the observation with the earlier studies based on multiple sequence alignment and structural alignment. We observed that relationship between archaeal tRNA synthetases are different that of bacteria and eucarya. Violation of Class rule of LysRS is observed here also. The uniqueness of this method is that it does not employ sequence alignment of complete nucleotide sequence of the corresponding gene.

Key words: t-RNA synthetase; Condensed matrix method; Eigenvalue; and Phylogram.

Uttam Kr. Mondal1
Biswajit Das1
T. C. Ghosh2
Arnab Sen3
Asim K. Bothra1,*

1Cheminformatics Bioinformatics Laboratory
Department of Chemistry
Raiganj College (University College)
Raiganj-733134, Uttar Dinajpur
West Bengal, India
2Bio-informatices Centre
Bose Institute
A. J. C. Bose Centenary Building
P-1/12, C.I.T Scheme VII M
Kolkata - 700054
3Molecular Genetics Laboratory
Department of Botany
University of North Bengal
Siliguri-734430, India
*asimbothra@gmail.com

Purchase Downloadable Full Text PDF of Articles

Corporate User

$100.00

University/Academic User

$50.00

Subscription is more cost effective than purchasing PDFs on-the-fly.  Click here for details.