2 Matching Annotations
  1. Jul 2018
    1. On 2015 Mar 16, Donald Forsdyke commented:

      NEUTRAL THEORY NOT SUPPORTED. As a reviewer of this paper I recommended acceptance but was unhappy with the conclusion that it supported neutral theory explanations. On the advice of reviewers, my subsequent Letter to the Editor was declined by the Editor (see http://post.queensu.ca/~forsdyke/bioinfor.htm ). The abstract of the letter read:

      "Galtier and Lobry compared the optimum growth temperatures of various prokaryotes with the G+C content of their genomic DNA and of various non-mRNA RNA species (e.g. ribosomal RNAs). Since GC bonds confer greater stability on nucleic acid secondary structure than AT bonds, their data strongly suggest that an increase of G+C content is needed for the stabilization at high temperature of rRNA secondary structure (stem-loops), but not of DNA secondary structures.

      The authors propose that "any secondary structure that must endure at high temperatures requires a high G+C content", so that "a high proportion" of stem-loop "secondary structures in bacterial genomes is unlikely". Thus, the fact that Chargaff's parity rule (%A=%T, %G=%C) applies to single-stranded DNA (as to single-stranded RNA), is held to be "poorly explained" on the basis of an evolutionary pressure on DNA to form stem-loops (as proposed by Forsdyke 1995; J Mol Evol 41:573-581). Rather the parity rule would be explained by "neutral directional mutational pressure" (Lobry, 1995; J Mol Evol 40:326-330).

      However, "any secondary structure" includes the classical duplex DNA secondary structure. This is likely to exist at high temperatures, and presumably requires "other physiological adaptations" than an increase in G+C content. Such adaptations might also apply to DNA stem-loop secondary structure. Thus, in this context selectionist arguments are no less probable than neutralist arguments."

      Subsequently the Editor himself (2000; Gene 241: 3-17) came to agree:

      "The low GC levels of some thermophilic bacteria do not contradict, as claimed (Galtier and Lobry, 1997), the selectionist interpretation ... . Indeed, different strategies were apparently developed by different organisms to cope with long-term high body temperatures. It is now known that the DNAs of such thermophilic bacteria are very strongly stabilized by particular DNA-binding proteins (Robinson et al., 1998) and that, in turn, their proteins can be stabilized by thermostable chaperoninins (Taguchi et al., 1991)."

      For more please see my textbook Evolutionary Bioinformatics (2nd edition 2011, Springer, New York).


      This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.

  2. Feb 2018
    1. On 2015 Mar 16, Donald Forsdyke commented:

      NEUTRAL THEORY NOT SUPPORTED. As a reviewer of this paper I recommended acceptance but was unhappy with the conclusion that it supported neutral theory explanations. On the advice of reviewers, my subsequent Letter to the Editor was declined by the Editor (see http://post.queensu.ca/~forsdyke/bioinfor.htm ). The abstract of the letter read:

      "Galtier and Lobry compared the optimum growth temperatures of various prokaryotes with the G+C content of their genomic DNA and of various non-mRNA RNA species (e.g. ribosomal RNAs). Since GC bonds confer greater stability on nucleic acid secondary structure than AT bonds, their data strongly suggest that an increase of G+C content is needed for the stabilization at high temperature of rRNA secondary structure (stem-loops), but not of DNA secondary structures.

      The authors propose that "any secondary structure that must endure at high temperatures requires a high G+C content", so that "a high proportion" of stem-loop "secondary structures in bacterial genomes is unlikely". Thus, the fact that Chargaff's parity rule (%A=%T, %G=%C) applies to single-stranded DNA (as to single-stranded RNA), is held to be "poorly explained" on the basis of an evolutionary pressure on DNA to form stem-loops (as proposed by Forsdyke 1995; J Mol Evol 41:573-581). Rather the parity rule would be explained by "neutral directional mutational pressure" (Lobry, 1995; J Mol Evol 40:326-330).

      However, "any secondary structure" includes the classical duplex DNA secondary structure. This is likely to exist at high temperatures, and presumably requires "other physiological adaptations" than an increase in G+C content. Such adaptations might also apply to DNA stem-loop secondary structure. Thus, in this context selectionist arguments are no less probable than neutralist arguments."

      Subsequently the Editor himself (2000; Gene 241: 3-17) came to agree:

      "The low GC levels of some thermophilic bacteria do not contradict, as claimed (Galtier and Lobry, 1997), the selectionist interpretation ... . Indeed, different strategies were apparently developed by different organisms to cope with long-term high body temperatures. It is now known that the DNAs of such thermophilic bacteria are very strongly stabilized by particular DNA-binding proteins (Robinson et al., 1998) and that, in turn, their proteins can be stabilized by thermostable chaperoninins (Taguchi et al., 1991)."

      For more please see my textbook Evolutionary Bioinformatics (2nd edition 2011, Springer, New York).


      This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.