tRNA modification profiles in obligate and moderate thermophilic bacilli

Transfer RNAs (tRNAs) are the most ancient RNA molecules in the cell, modification pattern of which is linked to phylogeny. The aim of this study was to determine the tRNA modification profiles of obligate (Anoxybacillus, Geobacillus, Paragebacillus) and moderate (Bacillus, Brevibacillus, Ureibacillus, Paenibacillus) thermophilic aerobic bacilli strains to find out its linkage to phylogenetic variations between species. LC-MS was applied for the quantification of modified nucleosides using both natural and isotopically labeled standards. The presence of m2A and m7G modifications at high levels was determined in all species. Relatively high level of i6A and m5C modification was observed for Paenibacillus and Ureibacillus, respectively. The lowest level of Cm modification was found in Bacillus. The modification ms2i6A and m1G were absent in Brevibacillus and Ureibacillus, respectively, while modifications Am and m22G were observed only for Ureibacillus. While both obligate and moderate thermophilic species contain Gm, m1G and ms2i6A modifications, large quantities of them (especially Gm and ms2i6A modification) were detected in obligate thermophilic ones (Geobacillus, Paragebacillus and Anoxybacillus). The collective set of modified tRNA bases is genus-specific and linked to the phylogeny of bacilli. In addition, the dataset could be applied to distinguish obligate thermophilic bacilli from moderate ones.


Introduction
In current taxonomy, to reveal evolutionary relationships between prokaryotes several global (evolutionary chronometers) like rRNA molecules, as well as alternative markers (elongation and initiation factors, RNA polymerase subunits, DNA gyrases, heat shock and recA protein) are used (Das et al. 2014). Transfer RNAs (tRNAs) are thought to be among the oldest biological sequences, present at the dawn of life in the last universal common ancestor (Widmann et al. 2010;O'Donoghue et al. 2018;Lei and Burton 2020). tRNAs play an important role in translation, enforcing the genetic code by linking anticodon to amino acid. In addition to their primary role in translation, many bacteria also require aminoacylated-tRNA species to enter the peptidoglycan, antibiotic resistance, antibiotic synthesis and membrane phospholipid modification pathways (Shepherd and Ibba 2015;O'Donoghue et al. 2018). The tRNA genes play also an important role in bacterial conjugation, particularly the integrases recognize the anticodon stem loop region in the tRNA gene for active and site-specific recombination (Shepherd and Ibba 2015).
Due to some reasons (short sequences, involvement in horizontal gene transfer processes, specificity changeable by single point mutation in an anticodon, extensive paralogy through gene duplication) traditionally tRNA sequences are considered as poor candidates for phylogenetic studies (Widmann et al. 2010). However, the question whether more closely related organisms tend to have more similar tRNA modifications remains open.
tRNAs are by far the most extensively modified RNAs. Modifications are post-transcriptionally introduced at Communicated by M. Moracci.

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11 Page 2 of 10 precise positions by specific enzymes, and play important roles in folding, stability, identity, in translation fidelity and reading frame maintenance, translational and signaling functions of tRNAs (Shepherd and Ibba 2015). Mature tRNAs are rich in post-transcriptional nucleotide base modifications (O'Donoghue et al. 2018). To date, more than 100 modified nucleosides have been found in tRNA from the three domains of life bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes (Boccaletto et al. 2018). All post-transcriptional tRNA modifications generate various derivatives of the four common nucleosides adenosine, guanosine, cytidine and uridine, but the exact type of information added by base modification is largely unknown (Globisch et al. 2011;Hori et al. 2018;de Crécy-Lagard et al. 2020).
It was shown also that the collective set of modified tRNA nucleosides is a regulated component of stress response (Chan et al. 2011). Posttranscriptional modification in tRNA is known to play a multiplicity of functional roles, including maintenance of tertiary structure and cellular adaptation to environmental factors such as temperature (Dalluge et al. 1997;Dutta and Chaudhuri 2011;Edwards et al. 2020). The modifications maintaining the conformational flexibility of RNA have been observed in psychrophilic organisms growing under conditions where the dynamics of thermal motion are severely compromised (Dalluge et al. 1997;Lorenz et al. 2017). The role of post-transcriptionally modified nucleosides in the RNA of thermophilic bacteria and archaea in enforcing conformational stability of RNA has been documented (Watanabe et al. 1979;Kowalak et al. 1994).
Recently it was shown some similarities and differences of modified nucleosides in tRNA between moderate thermophiles, thermophiles and mesophiles. Previous studies have shown that the modified nucleosides in tRNA from moderate thermophiles are typically common to those in tRNA from mesophiles. In contrast to mesophilic analogs, the degree of 2'-O-methylation in tRNA from thermophilic Geobacillus stearothermophilus is increased at high temperatures (Agris et al. 1973). The studies of tRNA modifications of Thermus acidophilum have shown that several modifications (G + 13 and m 7 G49) stabilize the structure of tRNA and are essential for survival of the organism at high temperatures (Tomikawa et al. 2013). The m 5 s 2 U54 modification has been identified in all T. thermophiles (Hori 2019). Although these differences are present, thermophile-specific modified nucleosides (m 5 s 2 U, m 5 Cm, m 1 Im, m 2 2 Gm, m 2 7 Gm) have not been found in tRNA from moderate thermophiles (Hori et al. 2018).
Using a parallel systems-type approach Globisch and coauthors (Globisch et al. 2011) shown that the collective set of modified bases is highly species-specific and linked to phylogeny. Authors confirmed also that tRNA modification profiles can be used to differentiate between species, and even pathogenic from non-pathogenic bacteria (Globisch et al. 2011;Koh and Sarin 2018). It was shown also that some tRNA modifications are species-specific (Antoine et al. 2021).
The present study has examined the tRNA modification profiles from a number of bacilli strains at their optimal growth temperatures to clarify of its possibility to differentiate genera of bacilli or distinguish thermophilic and moderate thermophilic bacilli ones. The aim of this study was also to investigate the tRNA modification of different thermophilic bacilli strains to reveal, if the tRNA modification pattern reflects phylogenetic relationships on species level.
To investigate how the set of nucleoside modifications can be used to find out relationships between species the quantified the tRNA modifications by an isotope-dilutionbased LC-MS method was used.
All isolates are maintained in the culture collection database of extremophilic microbes at the Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Biotechnology of Yerevan State University, Armenia. Glycerol stokes of bacteria were stored at -80 ºC before usage. During investigation isolates were kept on solid nutrient broth at 4 ºC and were continuously subcultured. Batch cultivation of thermophilic bacilli was carried out using nutrient broth (Difco) under aerobic conditions with shaking at 240 rpm, at pH 7.2 and at optimum growth temperature up to late exponential phase. 1 L nutrient broth was inoculated with 50 mL overnight culture in 5 L wide-mouth Erlenmeyer flasks and incubated at the appropriate conditions until an optical density at λ = 600 nm of 0.8 to 1.0 was attained (late exponential phase of growth).
Bacterial culture was transferred to precooled 500 mL centrifugal tubes. The cells were then harvested by centrifugation at 4 ºC temperature, 10,816 g for 10 min, and were immediately suspended in cold buffer 1 containing 0.01 M magnesium acetate, 0.05 M sodium acetate, 0.15 M sodium chloride (pH 4.5).
The suspensions were combined in a 50 mL Falcon tubes and centrifuged at 4 ºC temperature, 3220 g for 30 min. Obtained pellets was kept in at − 80 ºC prior to extraction of tRNA.

tRNA extraction from bacilli strains
The bacterial pellets were suspended in 15 mL buffer 1 and after addition of 10 mL 80% aq. phenol the suspension was shaken vigorously for 30 min. After centrifugation (4000 g, 30 min) of the obtained mixture, the aquatic layer was collected and treated again with 10 mL 80% aq. phenol. The mixture again was shaken intensively by hands, centrifuged (4000 g, 20 min) and the phenol layers were separated and extracted with 5 mL buffer 1. After vigorous shaking layers were separated by centrifugation (4000 g, 20 min), all aqueous layers were collected and mixed with 10 mL 80% aq. phenol. The mixture was shaken vigorously and centrifuged (4000 g, 20 min) and obtained aqueous layers were treated by 10 mL chloroform. The layers were separated again by shaking and by centrifugation (4000 g, 10 min). After repeating extraction by chloroform, aqueous layers were collected and 20% potassium acetate, pH 4.5 (0.1 vol.) and 12 M lithium chloride were added to a 2 M final lithium chloride concentration.
The mixture was kept on ice for 4 h to precipitate DNA and long chains of RNAs, then centrifuged (20,000 g, 20 min) and absolute ethanol (3 vol.) was added to the supernatant. Mixture was kept at -20 ºC overnight and centrifuged (24,336 g, 60 min) afterwards to obtain crude tRNA. The pellets were dried and kept at -80 ºC until anion exchange chromatography was performed.

Anion exchange chromatography
All steps on anion exchange chromatography were performed on ice or at 4 ºC. The crude tRNA pellet was dissolved in 10 mL buffer A containing 0.1 M Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 0.01 M MgCl 2 ·6H 2 O. Crude fractions were purified by anion exchange chromatography (DEAE Sepharose fast Flow 5 mL, column volume (CV): 5 mL) utilizing an ÄKTA purifier. Buffer B containing 0.1 M Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 0.01 M MgCl 2 ·6H 2 O, 1 M NaCl was used to create a gradient. The gradient was 5 CV, 0% buffer B; 10 CV, 0% → 40% buffer B; 5 CV, 100% buffer B; 3 CV, 0% buffer B. The fractions eluting at about 20% to 40% buffer B and showing approximately a 2:1 ratio for absorption at λ = 254 nm and λ = 280 nm, respectively, were collected. Absolute ethanol (3 vol.) was added to combined fractions and after keeping at -20 ºC overnight the mixture was centrifuged (12,000 rpm, 60 min). The obtained pellets were dissolved in ddH 2 O.

Enzymatic digestion of tRNA
To denature tRNA, the aqueous solution of bulk tRNA (12 µg in 100 µL final volume) was heated to 100 ºC for 30 min and immediately cooled on ice. Afterwards the labeled nucleoside solutions, buffer 2 (300 mM ammonium acetate, 100 mM CaCl 2 , 1 mM ZnSO 4 , pH 5.7) and nuclease S1 (80 units, Aspergillus oryzae Sigma Aldrich) were added. After incubation of the mixture for 3 h at 37 ºC the buffer 3 (12 µL, 500 mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM EDTA, pH 8.0), Antarctic phosphatase (10 units), snake venom phosphodiesterase I (0.2 units, Crotalus adamanteus venom Sigma Aldrich) were added and incubated for 3 h at 37 ºC to digest completely. DMSO-containing labeled nucleosides were added, followed by centrifugation of the samples (15 min 12,100 g). The supernatant was removed, the volume reduced to 100 μL.

Liquid chromatography electrospray ionization Tandem mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS)
The samples (100 μL injection volume) were analyzed by HPLC-ESI-MS on a Thermo Finnigan LTQ FT-ICR and were eluted by a Surveyor MS pump with a flow of 0.15 mL/ min over an Uptisphere120-3HDO column from Interchim. The column temperature was maintained at 30 ºC. The buffer C (2 mM ammonium acetate in water, pH 5.5) and buffer D (2 mM ammonium acetate in H 2 O/MeCN 20/80, pH 5.5) were used for eluting. The gradient was 0 → 55 min; 0% → 8% buffer D; 55 → 100 min; 8% → 60% buffer D; 100 → 102 min; 60% → 100% buffer D; 102 → 120 min; 100% buffer D; 120 → 125 min; 100 → 0% buffer D; 125 → 135 min; 0% buffer D. The elution was monitored at λ = 260 nm. The chromatographic eluent was directly injected into the ion source without prior splitting. Ions were scanned by use of a positive polarity mode over a full-scan range of m/z 200-1000 with a resolution of 30.000. Parameters of the mass spectrometer were tuned with a freshly mixed solution of adenosine (5 mM) in buffer C. The parameters used in this section were sheath gas flow rate, 25 arb; auxiliary gas flow rate, 5 arb; sweep gas flow rate, 5 arb; spray voltage, 5.0 kV; capillary temperature, 200 ºC; capillary voltage, 47 V, tube lens 115 V.

tRNA modifications used in this study
In total 16 tRNA modifications in both natural and isotopically labeled forms were used in this study (Fig. 1). All modified nucleosides have been synthesized at the Center for Integrated Protein Science, Department of Chemistry, Ludwig Maximilian University Munich, Germany and kindly provided by Prof. T. Carell. Fig. 1 Modified nucleosides synthesized in both natural and isotopically labeled forms for parallel quantification study. The modified nucleosides, ms 2 i 6 A, m 6 A, m 1 G, t 6 A, i 6 A, m 2 A are present at position 37; m 2 G is present at position 9; m 2 2 G is present at positions 24 and 25; Am present at position 4; Q is present at the wobble position as well as Gm, which is additionally present at position 18; m 1 A is present at positions 14 and 58 (mainly); Cm is present at position 32; m 5 C is present at position 38; m 7 G is present at position 46; m 6 2 A is present at position 37 (Brandmayr et al. 2012;Duechler et al. 2016)

Calibration curves
Mass calibration curves of the labeled and corresponding unlabeled synthesized nucleosides were obtained at five different concentration ratios. For each concentration an average value of three independent measurements was determined. Each labeled nucleoside solution was mixed with three different concentrations of the corresponding unlabeled nucleosides. The areas of labeled and unlabeled nucleosides from LC-MS measurements were determined using the Qualbrowser (Xcalibur) program by extraction of the accurate mass range with a mass filter out of the total ion count. The linear fits of the determined area ratios with the amount ratios gave R 2 -values of minimum 0.9992. The linear fit equations were used for calculation of the exact nucleoside contents in bulk tRNA samples. Synthetic labeled nucleosides were added to the digest solutions and the areas of labeled and unlabeled nucleosides were determined as described above. The amount of each nucleoside was calculated from the obtained area ratios and the linear fit equations of the calibration curves. The level of tRNA modification has been quantified by ratio of mols (modification) / mols (A nucleoside) per 1000 tRNAs.

Phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rRNA genes
Total bacterial genomic DNA was extracted, PCR using by universal primer pairs 27f (5'-GAG TTT GAT CCT GGC TCA -3') and 1525r (5'-GAA AGG AGG AGA TCC AGC C-3') (Escherichia coli numbering) to amplify of 16S rRNA genes and sequencing of bacterial 16S rDNA amplicons were performed as described by Panosyan et al. (2020). Alignment of sequences for phylogenetic analysis was made using ClustalW (Thompson et al. 1994). A phylogenetic tree of the strains was constructed using the neighbor-joining method (Saitou and Nei 1987) with the MEGA X software (Kumar et al. 2018). The evolutionary distances were computed using the Maximum Composite Likelihood method (Tamura et al. 2004) and are in the units of the number of base substitutions per site. Confidence in branching points was determined by bootstrap analysis (1000 replicates) (Felsenstein 1985).

Species clustering based on quantitative tRNA modification data
Hierarchical clustering was performed in Perseus (version 1.6.14.0) (Tyanova et al. 2016) on the quantified RNA modifications. First, the RNA modifications were normalized using the Z-Score function (rows = bacterial strain, column = RNA modification; matrix access column).
Then hierarchical clustering (columns and rows) was performed using Euclidian distance, average linkage, no constraints with maximal 10 iterations and 300 clusters as set parameters.

tRNA modification pattern of studied thermophilic bacilli
We analyzed the post-transcriptional tRNA modification pattern of 13 bacilli species belonged to genera Anoxybacillus, Geobacillus, Paragebacillus, Bacillus, Brevibacillus Ureibacillus and Paenibacillus. Bulk tRNA was extracted from bacilli grown in complex media under optimum conditions. This was followed by digestion and subsequent analysis of the resulting nucleoside mixture using quantitative LC-MS.
The results for all investigated species are presented in Table 2.
The first key result from this data is that the modifications vary dramatically between species. For example, i 6 A varies from 0.09 in the Geobacillus thermodenitrificans Arz-6 to 5.96 in the Paenibacillus xylanilyticus Arz-3, and t 6 A varies from 4.55 in the B. thermoruber H-65 to 12.88 in G. stearothermophilus ArzA-3/1. m 2 A and m 7 G modifications were presented at high levels in all the species studied. High amounts of certain modifications characterize particular groups of bacilli. Thus, relatively high amount of m 1 G modification were found for representatives of Geobacillus, while Q was generally high in Anoxybacillus. Gm was generally high in representatives of genera Geobacillus, Parageobacillus and Anoxybacillus. Particularly, representatives of the genus Geobacillus were characterized by highest level of Gm modifications. Relatively high level of i 6 A and m 5 C modifications were observed for Paenibacillus and Ureibacillus, respectively. m 5 C was absent only in B. psychrosaccharolyticus AkhA-14A. Relatively high amount of m 2 G was found for Geobacillus sp. Arz-7 and Paenibacillus sp. ArzA-5.
High amount of m 1 A modification was observed for representatives of Geobacillus, Anoxybacillus, Paenibacillus and Bacillus, while it was lower in Ureibacillus and Brevibacillus. Cm modification was highest in U. thermosphaericus B-119. Large quantities of ms 2 i 6 A modification were also detected in the representatives of genera mainly belonging to Geobacillus and Anoxybacillus.
According obtained data the m 6 A, i 6 A, m 6 2 A, m 5 C and Cm modifications are present at low quantities (≤ 7.59) in all the species studied. Low amounts of some modifications were typical for particular groups of bacilli. Thus i 6 A modification was presented at low levels in representatives of Anoxybacillus, Parageobacillus, Brevibacillus, as well as of G. thermodenitrificans Arz-6 and Bacillus sp. B-123a. For Ureibacillus lowest level was observed in case of m 6 A modification, while the lowest level of remained species belonged to genera Geobacillus and Bacillus was observed for m 6 2 A modification.
Lowest level of m 5 C modification was determined only for Paenibacillus. Gm was generally low in representatives of genera Bacillus, Paenibacillus, Ureibacillus and Brevibacillus. Our data show that m 6 A, m 1 G, t 6 A, ms 2 i 6 A, m 2 A and m 7 G modifications were present at low levels in Ureibacillus and Brevibacillus species. The lowest level of Q modification was observed for Brevibacillus. Moreover, m 1 G and ms 2 i 6 A modifications were present in all bacteria except Brevibacillus and Ureibacillus, respectively. In contrast to this, m 6 2 A and m 5 C modifications were more distributed among Ureibacillus and Brevibacillus.
Among N 6 -isopentenyladenosine derivatives (i 6 A and ms 2 i 6 A), i 6 A itself is present in all the species investigated. The ms 2 i 6 A modification was absent only in Ureibacillus sp. B-119. On the other hand, only in U. thermosphaericus B-119 the modifications Am and m 2 2 G were exclusively observed. Additionally, m 1 G is present in all bacteria, except in Brevibacillus sp. H-65.
Based on absolute calculation high quantities of m 1 A, m 6 A, m 1 G, t 6 A, i 6 A, ms 2 i 6 A, Q, m 2 G, Gm, m 2 A and m 7 G modifications were more typical for obligate thermophiles. Highest values of m 1 A, m 6 A, m 1 G, t 6 A, ms 2 i 6 A, m 2 G, Gm, m 2 A and m 7 G were observed for Geobacillus, while Q was highest for Anoxybacillus. In contrast to this, lowest quantities of m 1 A, m 6 A, m 1 G, t 6 A, ms 2 i 6 A, Q, m 6 2 A, m 2 G, Cm, Gm, m 2 A m 7 G and m 5 C modifications were observed for moderate (Bacillus, Brevibacillus, Ureibacillus and Paenibacillus) bacilli. Lowest amount of i 6 A modification was found only for Parageobacillus. Modifications Cm, m 5 C, Am and m 2 2 G with highest and m 1 A, m 1 G, t 6 A and m 2 A with lowest quantities and absence of ms 2 i 6 A were observed for Ureibacillus. Highest level of i 6 A and m 6 2 A, modifications were observed for Paenibacillus and Brevibacillus, respectively. m 6 A, ms 2 i 6 A, Q and m 7 G modifications were presented at lowest level in Brevibacillus, while Gm was the lowest modification obtained for Paenibacillus.

Species clustering based on 16S rRNA gene sequences and quantitative tRNA modification data
In this study a hierarchical clustering algorithm to the data was applied to statistically analyze the differences in modification levels between species (Fig. 2). According to the obtained results bacilli genera are clearly separated from each other and even species from the same genus can clearly be differentiated.
To compare obtained data from clustering of tRNA modifications, the phylogenetic tree based on orthologous 16S rRNA genes for all species present in our study was constructed (Fig. 3). The phylogenetic tree confirmed that representatives of genera Geobacillus and Parageobacillus are part of the same cluster, indicating their close relationship. Each genus composes a separate cluster and is clearly distinct from others. Obviously, clusters including obligate thermophilic species (Geobacillus, Parageobacillus and Anoxybacillus are distinctly separated from clusters with moderate thermophilic species. Fig. 2 Hierarchical clustering of species and tRNA modifications. The Heat map was calculated using Euclidian distance for species and tRNA modifications based on Z-score normalized tRNA modification levels. Z-score ranges from − 1.91 (dark blue) to 3.33 (bright magenta)

Discussion
It was shown earlier that some modifications (m 1 G and t 6 A) are present in organisms of all three domains of life and probably have evolved early (Grosjean et al. 1995;Globisch et al. 2011). Therefore, they had to develop early during the evolution of life. Moreover, t 6 A seems to be more abundant in Gram-positive than in Gram-negative bacteria (Globisch et al. 2011). Our data show that the m 2 A and m 7 G modifications are present at high levels in all bacilli species studied. Other modifications like m 1 A, Q and Gm are also presented at relatively high level. These modified nucleosides along with t 6 A and some others (m 6 A, i 6 A, m 6 2 A, m 2 G, Cm), are the tRNA nucleosides present in all seven genera studied. m 1 G modification was missed only for B. thermoruber H-65. We conclude the mentioned modifications with high level presence in all the species studied belong to the oldest RNA modifications which probably contributed to the very early development of endospore-forming bacteria. These initial observations show evolutionary relationships related not only to the presence, but also to the abundance of each tRNA modification.
In contrast to Geobacillus, and Anoxybacillus level of m 1 A and m 1 G modifications for P. toebii Arz-33 is lower. The lowest level of i 6 A modification was registered again for P. toebii Arz-33, while m 6 2 A modification is comparably higher in it.
Paenibacillus sp. ArzA-5 by highest content of i 6 A and by lowest content of Gm modifications easily can be differentiated from all studies species. Only the Bacillus species were not significantly distinguishable by their modifications pattern.
The presented results offer a deeper insight into the evolution of tRNA modifications, and shows that they characterize genus/species at a very fine level and are linked to phylogenetic variation of endospore-forming bacteria.
Inspired from these differences between genera/species we applied a hierarchical clustering algorithm which helped to group together species with similar modification patterns (Fig. 2). Results were compared with data of clustering of species based on orthologous 16S rRNA genes (Fig. 3). We investigated the tRNA modification levels of different bacilli strains in a comparative analysis to reveal, if the tRNA modification patterns are conserved, random, or if the collection mirrors phylogenetic relationships. Surprisingly, the two independent clustering experiments provide almost similar grouping patterns, thus confirming that modified nucleoside levels are closely linked to genetic variation of species. U. thermosphaericus B-119 was clearly separated from other bacilli, and there was also a clear distinction between obligate (Anoxybacillus Geobacillus, Paragebacillus) and moderate (Bacillus, Brevibacillus, Ureibacillus and Paenibacillus) thermophilic bacilli (Fig. 3.). Similarly, the bacilli cluster in correlation with the phylogenetic tree, with a distinction between bacilli species, and even a separation between obligate and moderate thermophilic ones. The obligate thermophilic bacilli clustering also shows similarity to the phylogenetic groupings, with the exception of P. toebii Arz-33, which clusters with moderate thermophiles rather than the more closely related Geobacillus and Anoxybacillus, thus highlighting its ambiguous character. The closely related genera Bacillus, Brevibacillus and Paenibacillus are distinguishable too.
Based on obtained results obligate and moderate thermophilic bacilli are clearly distinguishable. While both obligate and moderate thermophilic species contain Gm, m 1 G and ms 2 i 6 A modifications, large quantities of them (especially Gm and ms 2 i 6 A modification) were detected in obligate thermophilic ones (representatives of genera Geobacillus, Paragebacillus and Anoxybacillus) optimum temperature of which is ≥ 60 °C. Moreover, among obligate thermophilic bacilli, representatives of the genus Geobacillus are characterized by highest Gm modification (1.6 times more). High level of i 6 A modification was found for moderate thermophiles. However, in general this analysis provides a novel possibility for differentiation between obligate and moderate thermophilic bacilli. Earlier it was shown existence of some differences between thermophiles and mesophiles. Thus, Agris and coauthors (Agris et el. 1973) shown that degree of 2'-O-methylation in tRNA from G. stearothermophilus is increased at high temperatures which is in agreement with the data obtained. The tRNA stabilization strategies by modified nucleosides based on thermophile-specific modification such as m 5 s 2 U54 and on 20-O-methylations at multiple positions in tRNA are known among extreme-thermophiles (Thermus thermophiles) and hyper-thermophiles (Pyrococcus horikoshii) (Hori et al. 2018).
In summary, we have measured 16 tRNA modifications in 13 species quantitatively. The presented results offer a deeper insight into the evolution of tRNA modifications, and shows that they characterize species at a very fine level and are linked to phylogenetic variation of endospore-forming aerobic bacteria. Additionally, the data can be used to differentiate between genera of aerobic bacilli, and even to distinguish obligate and moderate thermophilic bacilli species. This work reports, for the first time, a complex study of tRNA modification pattern of bacilli and possibility to distinguish bacilli genera/species based on modification levels.