Extended Data Fig. 10: Phylogenetic affiliation of ‘Ca. A. ciliaticola’ ATP and ADP translocase and related nucleotide transporters. | Nature

Extended Data Fig. 10: Phylogenetic affiliation of ‘Ca. A. ciliaticola’ ATP and ADP translocase and related nucleotide transporters.

From: Anaerobic endosymbiont generates energy for ciliate host by denitrification

Extended Data Fig. 10: Phylogenetic affiliation of ‘Ca. A. ciliaticola’ ATP and ADP translocase and related nucleotide transporters.

Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree based on amino acid sequences of bacterial and plastidic ATP/ADP translocases and related nucleotide transporters. ‘Ca. A. ciliaticola’ ATP/ADP translocase (red arrow) clusters with environmental sequences related to the Holosporales and Caedibacter. The colours of groups reflect the predominant phylogenetic affiliation of taxa within a group. Sequences that have been shown to translocate ATP and ADP are marked with grey dots (Supplementary Table 7). Pam, Protochlamydia amoebophila; Ct, Chlamydia trachomatis; Sn, Simkania negevensis; Li, Lawsonia intracellularis; Rp, Rickettsia prowazekii; La, Liberibacter asiaticus; Ec, Encephalitozoon cuniculi; Cv, Caedimonas varicaedens; Ho, Holospora obtusa; St, Solanum tuberosum; Gs, Galdieria sulphuraria; At, Arabidopsis thaliana. ATP/ADP translocases of E. cuniculi served as outgroup and are shown with truncated branch length, which is indicated as a break.

Source data

Back to article page