Publication: Recombination produces coherent bacterial species clusters in both core and accessory genomes
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Date
2015
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Microbiology Society
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Citation
Marttinen, Pekka, Nicholas J. Croucher, Michael U. Gutmann, Jukka Corander, and William P. Hanage. 2015. “Recombination produces coherent bacterial species clusters in both core and accessory genomes.” Microbial Genomics 1 (5): e000038. doi:10.1099/mgen.0.000038. http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000038.
Research Data
Abstract
Background: Population samples show bacterial genomes can be divided into a core of ubiquitous genes and accessory genes that are present in a fraction of isolates. The ecological significance of this variation in gene content remains unclear. However, microbiologists agree that a bacterial species should be ‘genomically coherent’, even though there is no consensus on how this should be determined. Results: We use a parsimonious model combining diversification in both the core and accessory genome, including mutation, homologous recombination (HR) and horizontal gene transfer (HGT) introducing new loci, to produce a population of interacting clusters of strains with varying genome content. New loci introduced by HGT may then be transferred on by HR. The model fits well to a systematic population sample of 616 pneumococcal genomes, capturing the major features of the population structure with parameter values that agree well with empirical estimates. Conclusions: The model does not include explicit selection on individual genes, suggesting that crude comparisons of gene content may be a poor predictor of ecological function. We identify a clearly divergent subpopulation of pneumococci that are inconsistent with the model and may be considered genomically incoherent with the rest of the population. These strains have a distinct disease tropism and may be rationally defined as a separate species. We also find deviations from the model that may be explained by recent population bottlenecks or spatial structure.
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Keywords
computational modeling, core/accessory genome, evolution, recombination, speciation
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