Richard Jobson - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by Richard Jobson

[Research paper thumbnail of Erratum to “Molecular Rates Parallel Diversification Contrasts between Carnivorous Plant Sister Lineages” [Cladistics 18 (2002) 127–136](https://attachments.academia-assets.com/49305231/thumbnails/1.jpg)

Research paper thumbnail of A Nonflowering Land Plant Phylogeny Inferred from Nucleotide Sequences of Seven Chloroplast, Mitochondrial, and Nuclear Genes

International Journal of Plant Sciences, 2007

Nucleotide sequences of seven chloroplast (atpB and rbcL, SSU and LSU rDNAs), mitochondrial (atp1... more Nucleotide sequences of seven chloroplast (atpB and rbcL, SSU and LSU rDNAs), mitochondrial (atp1, LSU rDNA), and nuclear (18S rDNA) genes from 192 land plants and their algal relatives were analyzed using maximum likelihood and maximum parsimony ...

Research paper thumbnail of Adaptive evolution of cytochrome c oxidase: Infrastructure for a carnivorous plant radiation

Proceedings of The National Academy of Sciences, 2004

Much recent attention in the study of adaptation of organismal form has centered on developmental... more Much recent attention in the study of adaptation of organismal form has centered on developmental regulation. As such, the highly conserved respiratory machinery of eukaryotic cells might seem an unlikely target for selection supporting novel morphologies. We demonstrate that a dramatic molecular evolutionary rate increase in subunit I of cytochrome c oxidase (COX) from an active-trapping lineage of carnivorous plants is caused by positive Darwinian selection. Bladderworts (Utricularia) trap plankton when water-immersed, negatively pressured suction bladders are triggered. The resetting of traps involves active ion transport, requiring considerable energy expenditure. As judged from the quaternary structure of bovine COX, the most profound adaptive substitutions are two contiguous cysteines absent in 99.9% of databased COX I sequences from Eukaryota, Archaea, and Bacteria. This motif lies directly at the docking point of COX I helix 3 and cytochrome c, and modeling of bovine COX I suggests the possibility of an unprecedented helix-terminating disulfide bridge that could alter COX/cytochrome c dissociation kinetics. Thus, the key adaptation in Utricularia likely lies in molecular energetic changes that buttressed the mechanisms responsible for the bladderworts' radical morphological evolution. Along with evidence for COX evolution underlying expansion of the anthropoid neocortex, our findings underscore that important morphological and physiological innovations must often be accompanied by specific adaptations in proteins with basic cellular functions. molecular adaptation | positive selection | cellular energetics | protein structure | developmental regulation

Research paper thumbnail of Feeding ecology of a carnivorous bladderwort (Utricularia uliginosa, Lentibulariaceae

Research paper thumbnail of Molecular Rates Parallel Diversification Contrasts between Carnivorous Plant Sister Lineages

Research paper thumbnail of A New Model for the Evolution of Carnivory in the Bladderwort Plant (Utricularia): Adaptive Changes in Cytochrome c Oxidase (COX) Provide Respiratory Power

Plant Biology, 2006

Abstract: The evolution of carnivorous plants has been modeled as a selective tradeoff between ph... more Abstract: The evolution of carnivorous plants has been modeled as a selective tradeoff between photosynthetic costs and benefits in nutrient-poor habitats. Although possibly applicable for pitfall and flypaper trappers, more variables may be required for active trapping systems. Bladderwort (Utricularia) suction traps react to prey stimuli with an extremely rapid release of elastic instability. Trap setting requires considerable energy to engage an active ion transport process whereby water is pumped out through the thin bladder walls to create negative internal pressure. Accordingly, empirical estimates have shown that respiratory rates in bladders are far greater than in leafy structures. Cytochrome c oxidase (COX) is a multi-subunit enzyme that catalyzes the respiratory reduction of oxygen to water and couples this reaction to translocation of protons, generating a transmembrane electrochemical gradient that is used for the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). We have previously demonstrated that two contiguous cysteine residues in helix 3 of COX subunit I (COX I) have evolved under positive Darwinian selection. This motif, absent in = 99.9 % of databased COX I proteins from eukaryotes, Archaea, and Bacteria, lies directly at the docking point of COX I helix 3 and cytochrome c. Modeling of bovine COX I suggests the possibility that a vicinal disulfide bridge at this position could cause premature helix termination. The helix 3–4 loop makes crucial contacts with the active site of COX, and we postulate that the C–C motif might cause a conformational change that decouples (or partly decouples) electron transport from proton pumping. Such decoupling would permit bladderworts to optimize power output (which equals energy times rate) during times of need, albeit with a 20 % reduction in overall energy efficiency of the respiratory chain. A new model for the evolution of bladderwort carnivory is proposed that includes respiration as an additional tradeoff parameter.

Research paper thumbnail of Molecular Rates Parallel Diversification Contrasts between Carnivorous Plant Sister Lineages1

Cladistics, 2002

In the carnivorous plant family Lentibulariaceae, the bladderwort lineage (Utricularia and Genlis... more In the carnivorous plant family Lentibulariaceae, the bladderwort lineage (Utricularia and Genlisea) is substantially more species-rich and morphologically divergent than its sister lineage, the butterworts (Pinguicula). Bladderworts have a relaxed body plan that has permitted the evolution of terrestrial, epiphytic, and aquatic forms that capture prey in intricately designed suction bladders or corkscrew-shaped lobster-pot traps. In contrast, the flypaper-trapping butterworts maintain vegetative structures typical of angiosperms. We found that bladderwort genomes evolve significantly faster across seven loci (the trnL intron, the second trnL exon, the trnL–F intergenic spacer, the rps16 intron, rbcL, coxI, and 5.8S rDNA) representing all three genomic compartments. Generation time differences did not show a significant association. We relate these findings to the contested speciation rate hypothesis, which postulates a relationship between increased nucleotide substitution and increased cladogenesis.

Research paper thumbnail of The carnivorous bladderwort (Utricularia, Lentibulariaceae): a system inflates

Journal of Experimental Botany, 2010

[Research paper thumbnail of Erratum to “Molecular Rates Parallel Diversification Contrasts between Carnivorous Plant Sister Lineages” [Cladistics 18 (2002) 127–136](https://attachments.academia-assets.com/49305236/thumbnails/1.jpg)

Research paper thumbnail of A phylogenetic study of subgenus Polypompholyx: a parallel radiation of Utricularia (Lentibulariaceae) throughout Australasia

[Research paper thumbnail of Erratum to “Molecular Rates Parallel Diversification Contrasts between Carnivorous Plant Sister Lineages” [Cladistics 18 (2002) 127–136](https://attachments.academia-assets.com/49305231/thumbnails/1.jpg)

Research paper thumbnail of A Nonflowering Land Plant Phylogeny Inferred from Nucleotide Sequences of Seven Chloroplast, Mitochondrial, and Nuclear Genes

International Journal of Plant Sciences, 2007

Nucleotide sequences of seven chloroplast (atpB and rbcL, SSU and LSU rDNAs), mitochondrial (atp1... more Nucleotide sequences of seven chloroplast (atpB and rbcL, SSU and LSU rDNAs), mitochondrial (atp1, LSU rDNA), and nuclear (18S rDNA) genes from 192 land plants and their algal relatives were analyzed using maximum likelihood and maximum parsimony ...

Research paper thumbnail of Adaptive evolution of cytochrome c oxidase: Infrastructure for a carnivorous plant radiation

Proceedings of The National Academy of Sciences, 2004

Much recent attention in the study of adaptation of organismal form has centered on developmental... more Much recent attention in the study of adaptation of organismal form has centered on developmental regulation. As such, the highly conserved respiratory machinery of eukaryotic cells might seem an unlikely target for selection supporting novel morphologies. We demonstrate that a dramatic molecular evolutionary rate increase in subunit I of cytochrome c oxidase (COX) from an active-trapping lineage of carnivorous plants is caused by positive Darwinian selection. Bladderworts (Utricularia) trap plankton when water-immersed, negatively pressured suction bladders are triggered. The resetting of traps involves active ion transport, requiring considerable energy expenditure. As judged from the quaternary structure of bovine COX, the most profound adaptive substitutions are two contiguous cysteines absent in 99.9% of databased COX I sequences from Eukaryota, Archaea, and Bacteria. This motif lies directly at the docking point of COX I helix 3 and cytochrome c, and modeling of bovine COX I suggests the possibility of an unprecedented helix-terminating disulfide bridge that could alter COX/cytochrome c dissociation kinetics. Thus, the key adaptation in Utricularia likely lies in molecular energetic changes that buttressed the mechanisms responsible for the bladderworts' radical morphological evolution. Along with evidence for COX evolution underlying expansion of the anthropoid neocortex, our findings underscore that important morphological and physiological innovations must often be accompanied by specific adaptations in proteins with basic cellular functions. molecular adaptation | positive selection | cellular energetics | protein structure | developmental regulation

Research paper thumbnail of Feeding ecology of a carnivorous bladderwort (Utricularia uliginosa, Lentibulariaceae

Research paper thumbnail of Molecular Rates Parallel Diversification Contrasts between Carnivorous Plant Sister Lineages

Research paper thumbnail of A New Model for the Evolution of Carnivory in the Bladderwort Plant (Utricularia): Adaptive Changes in Cytochrome c Oxidase (COX) Provide Respiratory Power

Plant Biology, 2006

Abstract: The evolution of carnivorous plants has been modeled as a selective tradeoff between ph... more Abstract: The evolution of carnivorous plants has been modeled as a selective tradeoff between photosynthetic costs and benefits in nutrient-poor habitats. Although possibly applicable for pitfall and flypaper trappers, more variables may be required for active trapping systems. Bladderwort (Utricularia) suction traps react to prey stimuli with an extremely rapid release of elastic instability. Trap setting requires considerable energy to engage an active ion transport process whereby water is pumped out through the thin bladder walls to create negative internal pressure. Accordingly, empirical estimates have shown that respiratory rates in bladders are far greater than in leafy structures. Cytochrome c oxidase (COX) is a multi-subunit enzyme that catalyzes the respiratory reduction of oxygen to water and couples this reaction to translocation of protons, generating a transmembrane electrochemical gradient that is used for the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). We have previously demonstrated that two contiguous cysteine residues in helix 3 of COX subunit I (COX I) have evolved under positive Darwinian selection. This motif, absent in = 99.9 % of databased COX I proteins from eukaryotes, Archaea, and Bacteria, lies directly at the docking point of COX I helix 3 and cytochrome c. Modeling of bovine COX I suggests the possibility that a vicinal disulfide bridge at this position could cause premature helix termination. The helix 3–4 loop makes crucial contacts with the active site of COX, and we postulate that the C–C motif might cause a conformational change that decouples (or partly decouples) electron transport from proton pumping. Such decoupling would permit bladderworts to optimize power output (which equals energy times rate) during times of need, albeit with a 20 % reduction in overall energy efficiency of the respiratory chain. A new model for the evolution of bladderwort carnivory is proposed that includes respiration as an additional tradeoff parameter.

Research paper thumbnail of Molecular Rates Parallel Diversification Contrasts between Carnivorous Plant Sister Lineages1

Cladistics, 2002

In the carnivorous plant family Lentibulariaceae, the bladderwort lineage (Utricularia and Genlis... more In the carnivorous plant family Lentibulariaceae, the bladderwort lineage (Utricularia and Genlisea) is substantially more species-rich and morphologically divergent than its sister lineage, the butterworts (Pinguicula). Bladderworts have a relaxed body plan that has permitted the evolution of terrestrial, epiphytic, and aquatic forms that capture prey in intricately designed suction bladders or corkscrew-shaped lobster-pot traps. In contrast, the flypaper-trapping butterworts maintain vegetative structures typical of angiosperms. We found that bladderwort genomes evolve significantly faster across seven loci (the trnL intron, the second trnL exon, the trnL–F intergenic spacer, the rps16 intron, rbcL, coxI, and 5.8S rDNA) representing all three genomic compartments. Generation time differences did not show a significant association. We relate these findings to the contested speciation rate hypothesis, which postulates a relationship between increased nucleotide substitution and increased cladogenesis.

Research paper thumbnail of The carnivorous bladderwort (Utricularia, Lentibulariaceae): a system inflates

Journal of Experimental Botany, 2010

[Research paper thumbnail of Erratum to “Molecular Rates Parallel Diversification Contrasts between Carnivorous Plant Sister Lineages” [Cladistics 18 (2002) 127–136](https://attachments.academia-assets.com/49305236/thumbnails/1.jpg)

Research paper thumbnail of A phylogenetic study of subgenus Polypompholyx: a parallel radiation of Utricularia (Lentibulariaceae) throughout Australasia