26 research outputs found

    Mitochondrial genome of an Atlantic white shark (Carcharodon carcharias)

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    Here we report the first full mitochondrial genome sequence for a white shark caught in the Atlantic Ocean. The mitochondrial genome is 16,745 bp in length and contains 13 protein-coding genes, 22 tRNA genes, 2 rRNA genes, and a non-coding control region. The base composition of this mtDNA lineage is A: 30.7%, C: 26.9%, G: 13.8%, and T: 28.6%. In concordance with previous population genetic studies, the Atlantic caught individual forms a separate lineage from individuals caught on either side of the Pacific Ocean

    Phylogenomics and the dynamic genome evolution of the genus Streptococcus

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    The genus Streptococcus comprises important pathogens that have a severe impact on human health and are responsible for substantial economic losses to agriculture. Here, we utilize 46 Streptococcus genome sequences (44 species), including eight species sequenced here, to provide the first genomic level insight into the evolutionary history and genetic basis underlying the functional diversity of all major groups of this genus. Gene gain/loss analysis revealed a dynamic pattern of genome evolution characterized by an initial period of gene gain followed by a period of loss, as the major groups within the genus diversified. This was followed by a period of genome expansion associated with the origins of the present extant species. The pattern is concordant with an emerging view that genomes evolve through a dynamic process of expansion and streamlining. A large proportion of the pan-genome has experienced lateral gene transfer (LGT) with causative factors, such as relatedness and shared environment, operating over different evolutionary scales. Multiple gene ontology terms were significantly enriched for each group, and mapping terms onto the phylogeny showed that those corresponding to genes born on branches leading to the major groups represented approximately one-fifth of those enriched. Furthermore, despite the extensive LGT, several biochemical characteristics have been retained since group formation, suggesting genomic cohesiveness through time, and that these characteristics may be fundamental to each group. For example, proteolysis: mitis group; urea metabolism: salivarius group; carbohydrate metabolism: pyogenic group; and transcription regulation: bovis group

    White Shark Genome Reveals Ancient Elasmobranch Adaptations Associated with Wound Healing and the Maintenance of Genome Stability

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    The white shark (Carcharodon carcharias; Chondrichthyes, Elasmobranchii) is one of the most publicly recognized marine animals. Here we report the genome sequence of the white shark and comparative evolutionary genomic analyses to the chondrichthyans, whale shark (Elasmobranchii) and elephant shark (Holocephali), as well as various vertebrates. The 4.63-Gbp white shark genome contains 24,520 predicted genes, and has a repeat content of 58.5%. We provide evidence for a history of positive selection and gene-content enrichments regarding important genome stability-related genes and functional categories, particularly so for the two elasmobranchs. We hypothesize that the molecular adaptive emphasis on genome stability in white and whale sharks may reflect the combined selective pressure of large genome sizes, high repeat content, high long-interspersed element retrotransposon representation, large body size, and long lifespans, represented across these two species. Molecular adaptation for wound healing was also evident, with positive selection in key genes involved in the wound-healing process, as well as Gene Ontology enrichments in fundamental wound-healing pathways. Sharks, particularly apex predators such as the white shark, are believed to have an acute sense of smell. However, we found very few olfactory receptor genes, very few trace amine-associated receptors, and extremely low numbers of G protein-coupled receptors. We did however, identify 13 copies of vomeronasal type 2 (V2R) genes in white shark and 10 in whale shark; this, combined with the over 30 V2Rs reported previously for elephant shark, suggests this gene family may underlie the keen odorant reception of chondrichthyans

    Population gene introgression and high genome plasticity for the zoonotic pathogen Streptococcus agalactiae

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    The influence that bacterial adaptation (or niche partitioning) within species has on gene spillover and transmission among bacteria populations occupying different niches is not well understood. Streptococcus agalactiae is an important bacterial pathogen that has a taxonomically diverse host range making it an excellent model system to study these processes. Here we analyze a global set of 901 genome sequences from nine diverse host species to advance our understanding of these processes. Bayesian clustering analysis delineated twelve major populations that closely aligned with niches. Comparative genomics revealed extensive gene gain/loss among populations and a large pan-genome of 9,527 genes, which remained open and was strongly partitioned among niches. As a result, the biochemical characteristics of eleven populations were highly distinctive (significantly enriched). Positive selection was detected and biochemical characteristics of the dispensable genes under selection were enriched in ten populations. Despite the strong gene partitioning, phylogenomics detected gene spillover. In particular, tetracycline resistance (which likely evolved in the human-associated population) from humans to bovine, canines, seals, and fish, demonstrating how a gene selected in one host can ultimately be transmitted into another, and biased transmission from humans to bovines was confirmed with a Bayesian migration analysis. Our findings show high bacterial genome plasticity acting in balance with selection pressure from distinct functional requirements of niches that is associated with an extensive and highly partitioned dispensable genome, likely facilitating continued and expansive adaptation

    Evolutionary Dynamics of Complete Campylobacter Pan-Genomes and the Bacterial Species Concept

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    Defining bacterial species and understanding the relative cohesiveness of different components of their genomes remains a fundamental problem in microbiology. Bacterial species tend to be comprised of both a set of core and dispensable genes, with the sum of these two components forming the species pan-genome. The role of the core and dispensable genes in defining bacterial species and the question of whether pan-genomes are finite or infinite remain unclear. Here we demonstrate, through the analysis of 96 genome sequences derived from two closely related sympatric sister species of pathogenic bacteria (Campylobacter coli and C. jejuni), that their pan-genome is indeed finite and that there are unique and cohesive features to each of their genomes defining their genomic identity. The two species have a similar pan-genome size; however, C. coli has acquired a larger core genome and each species has evolved a number of species-specific core genes, possibly reflecting different adaptive strategies. Genome-wide assessment of the level of lateral gene transfer within and between the two sister species, as well as within the core and non-core genes, demonstrates a resistance to interspecies recombination in the core genome of the two species and therefore provides persuasive support for the core genome hypothesis for bacterial species

    Recombinant production of a diffusible signal factor inhibits Salmonella invasion and animal carriage

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    ABSTRACTThe complex chemical environment of the intestine is defined largely by the metabolic products of the resident microbiota. Enteric pathogens, elegantly evolved to thrive in the gut, use these chemical products as signals to recognize specific niches and to promote their survival and virulence. Our previous work has shown that a specific class of quorum-sensing molecules found within the gut, termed diffusible signal factors (DSF), signals the repression of Salmonella tissue invasion, thus defining a means by which this pathogen recognizes its location and modulates virulence to optimize its survival. Here, we determined whether the recombinant production of a DSF could reduce Salmonella virulence in vitro and in vivo. We found that the most potent repressor of Salmonella invasion, cis-2-hexadecenoic acid (c2-HDA), could be recombinantly produced in E. coli by the addition of a single exogenous gene encoding a fatty acid enoyl-CoA dehydratase/thioesterase and that co-culture of the recombinant strain with Salmonella potently inhibited tissue invasion by repressing Salmonella genes required for this essential virulence function. Using the well characterized E. coli Nissle 1917 strain and a chicken infection model, we found that the recombinant DSF-producing strain could be stably maintained in the large intestine. Further, challenge studies demonstrated that this recombinant organism could significantly reduce Salmonella colonization of the cecum, the site of carriage in this animal species. These findings thus describe a plausible means by which Salmonella virulence may be affected in animals by in situ chemical manipulation of functions essential for colonization and virulence

    Shigella flexneri utilizes intestinal signals to control its virulence

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    ABSTRACTThe enteric pathogens have evolved to utilize elements from their surroundings to optimize their infection strategies. A common mechanism to achieve this is to employ intestinal compounds as signals to control the activity of a master regulator of virulence. Shigella flexneri (S. flexneri) is a highly infectious entero-invasive pathogen which requires very few organisms to cause invasion of the colonic mucosa. The invasion program is controlled by the virulence master regulator VirF. Here, we show that the fatty acids commonly found in the colon can be exploited by S. flexneri to repress its virulence, allowing it to energetically finance its proliferation, thus increasing its pathogenicity. Colonic fatty acids such as oleic, palmitoleic and cis-2-hexadecenoic acid were shown to directly bind to VirF and mediate its prompt degradation. These fatty acids also disrupted the ability of VirF to bind to its target DNA, suppressing the transcription of the downstream virulence genes and significantly reducing the invasion of S. flexneri to colonic epithelial cells. Treatment with colonic fatty acids significantly increased the growth rate of the pathogen only under invasion-inducing conditions, showing that the reduction in the burden of virulence promotes a growth advantage. These results demonstrate the process by which S. flexneri can employ intestinal compounds as signals to increase its numbers at its preferred site of invasion, highlighting the mechanism by which the full spectrum of shigellosis is achieved despite a miniscule infectious dose. This highlights an elegant model of environmental adaption by S. flexneri to maximize the pathogenic benefit

    A diffusible signal factor of the intestine dictates Salmonella invasion through its direct control of the virulence activator HilD.

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    Successful intestinal infection by Salmonella requires optimized invasion of the gut epithelium, a function that is energetically costly. Salmonella have therefore evolved to intricately regulate the expression of their virulence determinants by utilizing specific environmental cues. Here we show that a powerful repressor of Salmonella invasion, a cis-2 unsaturated long chain fatty acid, is present in the murine large intestine. Originally identified in Xylella fastidiosa as a diffusible signal factor for quorum sensing, this fatty acid directly interacts with HilD, the master transcriptional regulator of Salmonella, and prevents hilA activation, thus inhibiting Salmonella invasion. We further identify the fatty acid binding region of HilD and show it to be selective and biased in favour of signal factors with a cis-2 unsaturation over other intestinal fatty acids. Single mutation of specific HilD amino acids to alanine prevented fatty acid binding, thereby alleviating their repressive effect on invasion. Together, these results highlight an exceedingly sensitive mechanism used by Salmonella to colonize its host by detecting and exploiting specific molecules present within the complex intestinal environment

    Who infects whom?-Reconstructing infection chains of Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculosis in an endemically infected dairy herd by use of genomic data.

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    Recent evidence of circulation of multiple strains within herds and mixed infections of cows marks the beginning of a rethink of our knowledge on Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculosis (MAP) epidemiology. Strain typing opens new ways to investigate MAP transmission. This work presents a method for reconstructing infection chains in a setting of endemic Johne's disease on a well-managed dairy farm. By linking genomic data with demographic field data, strain-specific differences in spreading patterns could be quantified for a densely sampled dairy herd. Mixed infections of dairy cows with MAP are common, and some strains spread more successfully. Infected cows remain susceptible for co-infections with other MAP genotypes. The model suggested that cows acquired infection from 1-4 other cows and spread infection to 0-17 individuals. Reconstructed infection chains supported the hypothesis that high shedding animals that started to shed at an early age and showed a progressive infection pattern represented a greater risk for spreading MAP. Transmission of more than one genotype between animals was recorded. In this farm with a good MAP control management program, adult-to-adult contact was proposed as the most important transmission route to explain the reconstructed networks. For each isolate, at least one more likely ancestor could be inferred. Our study results help to capture underlying transmission processes and to understand the challenges of tracing MAP spread within a herd. Only the combination of precise longitudinal field data and bacterial strain type information made it possible to trace infection in such detail
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