Department of Clinical Infection, Microbiology and Immunology, Institute of Infection, Veterinary and Ecological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Parasites and Microbes Programme, Wellcome Sanger Institute, Wellcome Genome Campus, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Mol Biol Evol. 2021 May 19;38(6):2209-2226. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msab018.
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a commensal of the human nasopharynx and a major cause of respiratory and invasive disease. We examined adaptation and evolution of pneumococcus, within nasopharynx and lungs, in an experimental system where the selective pressures associated with transmission were removed. This was achieved by serial passage of pneumococci, separately, in mouse models of nasopharyngeal carriage or pneumonia. Passaged pneumococci became more effective colonizers of the respiratory tract and we observed several examples of potential parallel evolution. The cell wall-modifying glycosyltransferase LafA was under strong selection during lung passage, whereas the surface expressed pneumococcal vaccine antigen gene pvaA and the glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase gene gpsA were frequent targets of mutation in nasopharynx-passaged pneumococci. These mutations were not identified in pneumococci that were separately evolved by serial passage on laboratory agar. We focused on gpsA, in which the same single nucleotide polymorphism arose in two independently evolved nasopharynx-passaged lineages. We describe a new role for this gene in nasopharyngeal carriage and show that the identified single nucleotide change confers resistance to oxidative stress and enhanced nasopharyngeal colonization potential. We demonstrate that polymorphisms in gpsA arise and are retained during human colonization. These findings highlight how within-host environmental conditions can determine trajectories of bacterial evolution. Relative invasiveness or attack rate of pneumococcal lineages may be defined by genes that make niche-specific contributions to bacterial fitness. Experimental evolution in animal infection models is a powerful tool to investigate the relative roles played by pathogen virulence and colonization factors within different host niches.
肺炎链球菌是人体鼻咽部的共生菌,也是呼吸道和侵袭性疾病的主要病因。我们在一个去除了与传播相关的选择压力的实验系统中,研究了鼻咽部和肺部肺炎链球菌的适应和进化。这是通过分别在鼻咽部携带或肺炎的小鼠模型中对肺炎链球菌进行连续传代来实现的。传代后的肺炎链球菌成为呼吸道更有效的定植者,我们观察到了几个潜在平行进化的例子。细胞壁修饰糖基转移酶 LafA 在肺部传代过程中受到强烈选择,而表面表达的肺炎球菌疫苗抗原基因 pvaA 和甘油-3-磷酸脱氢酶基因 gpsA 则是鼻咽部传代肺炎链球菌突变的频繁靶点。这些突变未在分别通过实验室琼脂连续传代进化的肺炎链球菌中发现。我们专注于 gpsA,在两个独立进化的鼻咽部传代谱系中,相同的单核苷酸多态性出现。我们描述了该基因在鼻咽部定植中的新作用,并表明鉴定出的单核苷酸变化赋予了对氧化应激的抗性和增强的鼻咽部定植潜力。我们证明了 gpsA 中的多态性在人类定植过程中出现并被保留。这些发现强调了宿主内环境条件如何决定细菌进化的轨迹。肺炎链球菌谱系的相对侵袭性或攻击率可能由对细菌适应性做出特定生态位贡献的基因来定义。在动物感染模型中的实验进化是研究不同宿主生态位中病原体毒力和定植因子相对作用的有力工具。