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PROTEIN BASED PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONS OF THE FIVE KINGDOMS Name: ___________________________ Background Since humans have been cognizant of the life around them, they have been classifying and trying to determine our relationship to other life forms. In Aristotle’s time, we were only aware of two categories of organisms: animals and plants. In the 1950’s, after the advent of the microscope and a more thorough analysis and synthesis of the information regarding the life on Earth, Whittaker introduced the five Kingdom system of classification. Twenty years later, Carl Woese used rRNA to reevaluate the relations of the organisms in the five kingdoms and proposed a higher level of classification: the Domain. More specifically, he concluded that the Kingdom Monera (bacteria) should be split into the Eubacteria and Archeabacteria while the remaining organisms should be classified as the Eukaryota. In the following activity, you will use sequences of the protein “glutamate synthase” from a number of different species to analyze the evolutionary relationship between the five kingdoms. Procedure A. Acquiring Protein Sequences & Converting to FASTA format Given the accession numbers associated with the glutamate synthase protein for the twelve species listed below, proceed to the National Center for Biotechnology Information website at: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ Accession Numbers Species Kingdom A38596 Zea mays Plantae CAC05496 Arabidopsis thaliana Plantae AAC08261 Porphyra purpurea Protista - algae CAA76602 Plasmodium falciparum Protista - protozoa AAF49409 Drosophila melanogasater Animal CAB92626 Neurospora crassas Fungi CAA61505 Saccharomyces cerevisiae Fungi BAB05447 Bacillus halodurans Bacteria AAA58014 Eschericia coli Bacteria AAK94787 Klebsiella areogenes Bacteria CAB64595 Nostoc sp. Bacteria AAG44102 Staphylococcus aureus Bacteria 1. In the “Search” window select “protein” from the pull down menu, and then copy and paste the first species accession number into the “for” window. Then, select “go” or type the return key. A record for a particular protein should show up in the main screen area. 2. Select the accession number, which is now a hyperlink, in the record displayed. In a few seconds a complete page of information about the protein for Zea mays should be displayed. At the bottom of the page, you should recognize a series of letters in rows. Each row is separated into 6 segments of ten letters each. 3. Using your mouse, highlight and copy the entire protein sequence including the numbers used to help one quickly identify particular amino acids. Then, proceed to the BCM Search Launcher at the Baylor College of Medicine at: http://searchlauncher.bcm.tmc.edu/seq-util/seq-util.html 4. Paste your copied protein sequence into the window above which it says “cut and paste formatted sequences here, etc...” (make sure the ReadSeq is selected from the bullets at the bottom), and select the “submit” button. This will convert the copied protein sequence into FASTA format, removing all the spaces and row numbers. 5. Open a word document and type “>” and then immediately following type the species name for the protein sequence (in this first case, Zea mays). Then, return to the Baylor website and “copy” just the protein sequence from the converted data, and “paste” it on the line following the “>Zea mays” identifier. 6. After you have finished this species, complete steps 1 through 5 for each of the remaining eleven species. You should paste all of the protein sequences into the same word document, making sure that there are no spaces between each species entry. For example, the line after the final letters in the Zea mays sequence should be followed by “>Arabidopsis thaliana” and its sequence. B. Multiple Sequence Alignment & Tree Diagrams 1. Once you have the word document complete having all twelve species protein sequences in FASTA format, open the Clustal W Multiple Sequence Aligment online software at (select the multiple alignment link): http://align.genome.jp/ 2. Open the word document and “highlight” and “copy” the entire file. Then, “paste” the file into the sequence window below where it says “Enter your sequences, etc...” Also, make sure to select the “slow/accurate” and “protein” selections above the window. Then, select the “Execute Multiple Alignment” button. 3. In a few seconds, your Clustal W Results should appear. Print this document for later analysis (if it doesn’t print accurately then save the html file in your server folder too). 4. Next, select “N-J Tree” at the bottom of the screen. In a few seconds, a phylogenetic tree showing the possible evolutionary relations for the species being compared. Right click and save this picture as a bitmap file in your server folder. Also, select and save the “Unrooted N-J Tree” as well. Questions 1. What is the function of “glutamate synthase”? Why would this protein make a good choice in analyzing the relationship of organisms from each of the five kingdoms (as opposed to a protein like hemoglobin found in red blood cells)? 2. Using the Clustal W results, what does it appear an “alignment” is? How could such data be used to determine the possible evolutionary relationship between difference species? 3. Define the following terms. Prokaryote Eukaryote Unicellular Multicellular Autotroph Heterotroph 4. What morphological (physical) characteristic are known to define the organisms in the Kingdoms Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia? Use the terms prokaryote, eukaryote, unicellular, multicellular, autotrophic, heterotrophic, and cell wall in your answer. K. Monera K. Protista K. Fungi K. Plantae K. Animalia 5. Based on the characteristics of the five kingdoms, a. Which kingdom is most likely the oldest? Explain. b. Which kingdom is most likely the second to have evolved? Explain. c. How are the remaining three kingdoms similar? d. Of the three remaining kingdoms, which two are most alike? Explain. 6. Copy the N-J Tree diagram (making sure to label the kingdom for each species represented). 7. a. Give at least three specific examples of how the tree supports the conclusions that you have previously made about the relationships between the five kingdoms. 1. 2. 3. b. Then, give one specific example of how the tree does not support the conclusions that you have previously made about the relationships between the five kingdoms. 1.