López-Pérez Mario, Ramon-Marco Nieves, Rodriguez-Valera Francisco
Evolutionary Genomics Group, Departamento de Producción Vegetal y Microbiología, Universidad Miguel Hernández, San Juan de Alicante, Apartado 18, San Juan, 03550, Alicante, Spain.
BMC Genomics. 2017 Jan 5;18(1):36. doi: 10.1186/s12864-016-3461-0.
To develop evolutionary models for the free living bacterium Alteromonas the genome sequences of isolates of the genus have been extensively analyzed. However, the main genetic exchange drivers in these microbes, conjugative elements (CEs), have not been considered in detail thus far. In this work, CEs have been searched in several complete Alteromonas genomes and their sequence studied to understand their role in the evolution of this genus. Six genomes are reported here for the first time.
We have found nine different plasmids of sizes ranging from 85 to 600 Kb, most of them were found in a single strain. Networks of gene similarity could be established among six of the plasmids that were also connected with another cluster of plasmids found in Shewanella strains. The cargo genes found in these plasmids included cassettes found before in chromosome flexible genomic islands of Alteromonas strains. We describe also the plasmids pAMCP48-600 and pAMCP49-600, the largest found in Alteromonas thus far (ca. 600 Kb) and containing all the hallmarks to be classified as chromids. We found in them some housekeeping genes and a cluster that code for an exocellular polysaccharide. They could represent the transport vectors for the previously described replacement flexible genomic islands. Integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs) were more common than plasmids and showed similar patterns of variation with cargo genes coding for components of additive flexible genomic islands. A nearly identical ICE was found in A. mediterranea MED64 and Vibrio cholera AHV1003 isolated from a human pathogen, indicating the potential exchange of these genes across phylogenetic distances exceeding the family threshold.
We have seen evidence of how CEs can be vectors to transfer gene cassettes acquired in the chromosomal flexible genomic islands, both of the additive and replacement kind. These CEs showed evidence of how genetic material is exchanged among members of the same species but also (albeit less frequently) across genus and family barriers. These gradients of exchange frequency are probably one of the main drivers of species origin and maintenance in prokaryotes and also provide these taxa with large genetic diversity.
为了构建自由生活的交替单胞菌属的进化模型,该属分离株的基因组序列已得到广泛分析。然而,到目前为止,这些微生物中主要的基因交换驱动因素——接合元件(CEs)尚未得到详细研究。在这项工作中,我们在多个完整的交替单胞菌基因组中搜索了CEs,并对其序列进行了研究,以了解它们在该属进化中的作用。本文首次报道了六个基因组。
我们发现了九种大小从85到600 Kb不等的不同质粒,其中大多数存在于单个菌株中。在六个质粒之间可以建立基因相似性网络,这些质粒还与在希瓦氏菌属菌株中发现的另一组质粒相连。这些质粒中的货物基因包括之前在交替单胞菌菌株的染色体柔性基因组岛中发现的盒式结构。我们还描述了质粒pAMCP48 - 600和pAMCP49 - 600,它们是迄今为止在交替单胞菌中发现的最大质粒(约600 Kb),并且具有被归类为染色体外遗传因子的所有特征。我们在其中发现了一些管家基因和一个编码胞外多糖的基因簇。它们可能代表了先前描述的替代柔性基因组岛的运输载体。整合和接合元件(ICEs)比质粒更常见,并且与编码附加柔性基因组岛成分的货物基因表现出相似的变异模式。在从人类病原体中分离出的地中海交替单胞菌MED64和霍乱弧菌AHV1003中发现了几乎相同的ICE,这表明这些基因有可能在超过科阈值的系统发育距离上进行交换。
我们已经看到了证据,证明CEs如何能够作为载体来转移在染色体柔性基因组岛中获得的基因盒式结构,包括附加型和替代型。这些CEs显示了遗传物质如何在同一物种的成员之间进行交换,而且(尽管频率较低)也跨越属和科的界限进行交换。这些交换频率梯度可能是原核生物物种起源和维持的主要驱动因素之一,也为这些分类群提供了巨大的遗传多样性。