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Evidence for diversifying selection of genetic regions of encoding putative collagen-like host-adhesive fibers in Pasteuria penetrans
Authors
Anderson
Andrews
+69 more
Arohi Srivastava
Arslan
Atibalentja
Aziz
Carver
Charles
Cohan
Colson
Davies
Davies
Davies
Davies
Davies
Davies
Degnan
DePristo
Duan
Dutta
Eardly
Espanol
Felsenstein
Filée
Gascuel
Giblin-Davis
Giblin-Davis
Huynen
Jones
Kanehisa
Kaufman
Keith G Davies
Kumar
Legendre
Luijckx
Luijckx
Maddison
Mauchline
McElroy
Metchnikoff
Mohan
Mohan
Mouton
Murtagh
Noel
Philippe
R Developement Core Team
Radó-Trilla
Rajendhran
Romero
Rutherford
Sayre
Sayre
Schouls
Sharad Mohan
Sharma
Stackebrandt
Starr
Steichen
Stirling
Stirling
Sturhan
Sylvestre
Sylvestre
Tamura
Tim H Mauchline
Todd
Wiedenbeck
Woese
Yap
Zilversmit
Publication date
1 January 2019
Publisher
'Oxford University Press (OUP)'
Doi
Abstract
© FEMS 2018. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Pasteuria spp. belong to a group of genetically diverse endospore-forming bacteria (phylum: Firmicutes) that are known to parasitize plant-parasitic nematodes and water fleas (Daphnia spp.). Collagen-like fibres form the nap on the surface of endospores and the genes encoding these sequences have been hypothesised to be involved in the adhesion of the endospores of Pasteuria spp. to their hosts. We report a group of 17 unique collagen-like genes putatively encoded by Pasteuria penetrans (strain: Res148) that formed five different phylogenetic clusters and suggest that collagen-like proteins are an important source of genetic diversity in animal pathogenic Firmicutes including Pasteuria. Additionally, and unexpectedly, we identified a putative collagen-like sequence which had a very different sequence structure to the other collagen-like proteins but was similar to the protein sequences in Megaviruses that are involved in host-parasite interactions. We, therefore, suggest that these diverse endospore surface proteins in Pasteuria are involved in biological functions, such as cellular adhesion; however, they are not of monophyletic origin and were possibly obtained de novo by mutation or possibly through selection acting upon several historic horizontal gene transfer events.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
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Rothamsted Repository
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