Genome evolution following an ecological shift in nectar-dwelling Acinetobacter.

IF 3.7 2区 生物学 Q2 MICROBIOLOGY mSphere Pub Date : 2025-01-28 Epub Date: 2024-12-26 DOI:10.1128/msphere.01010-24
Vivianna A Sanchez, Tanya Renner, Lydia J Baker, Tory A Hendry
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Abstract

The bacterial genus Acinetobacter includes species found in environmental habitats like soil and water, as well as taxa adapted to be host-associated or pathogenic. High genetic diversity may allow for this habitat flexibility, but the specific genes underlying switches between habitats are poorly understood. One lineage of Acinetobacter has undergone a substantial habitat change by evolving from a presumed soil-dwelling ancestral state to thrive in floral nectar. Here, we compared the genomes of floral-dwelling and pollinator-associated Acinetobacter, including newly described species, with genomes from relatives found in other environments to determine the genomic changes associated with this ecological shift. Following one evolutionary origin of floral nectar adaptation, nectar-dwelling Acinetobacter taxa have undergone reduction in genome size compared with relatives and have experienced dynamic gene gains and losses as they diversified. Gene content changes suggest a shift to metabolism of monosaccharides rather than diverse carbohydrates, and scavenging of nitrogen sources, which we predict to be beneficial in nectar environments. Gene gains appear to result from duplication events, evolutionary divergence, and horizontal gene transfer. Most notably, nectar-dwelling Acinetobacter acquired the ability to degrade pectin from plant pathogens, and the genes underlying this ability have duplicated and are under selection within the clade. We hypothesize that this ability was a key trait for adaptation to floral nectar, as it could improve access to nutrients in the nutritionally unbalanced habitat of nectar. These results identify the genomic changes and traits coinciding with a dramatic habitat switch from soil to floral nectar.

Importance: Many bacteria, including the genus Acinetobacter, commonly evolve to exploit new habitats. However, the genetic changes that underlie habitat switches are often unknown. Floral nectar is home to specialized microbes that can grow in this nutritionally unbalanced habitat. Several specialized Acinetobacter species evolved from soil-dwelling relatives to become common and abundant in floral nectar. Here, we investigate the genomic adaptations required to successfully colonize a novel habitat like floral nectar. We performed comparative genomics analyses between nectar-dwelling Acinetobacter and Acinetobacter species from other environments, like soil and water. We find that although gene loss coincided with the switch to living in nectar, gains of specific genes from other bacteria may have been particularly important for this ecological change. Acinetobacter living in nectar gained genes for degrading pectin, a plant polysaccharide, which may improve access to nutrients in their environment. These findings shed light on how evolutionary novelty evolves in bacteria.

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居住在花蜜中的不动杆菌的生态转变后的基因组进化。
不动杆菌属细菌包括在土壤和水等环境栖息地中发现的物种,以及适应与宿主相关或致病的分类群。高遗传多样性可能允许这种栖息地的灵活性,但在栖息地之间切换的特定基因知之甚少。不动杆菌的一个谱系经历了巨大的栖息地变化,从一个假定的居住在土壤中的祖先状态进化到在花蜜中茁壮成长。在这里,我们比较了花栖不动杆菌和传粉相关不动杆菌的基因组,包括新描述的物种,与在其他环境中发现的近亲的基因组,以确定与这种生态转变相关的基因组变化。根据花蜜适应的进化起源,居住在花蜜中的不动杆菌类群在其多样化过程中经历了基因组大小的减少和动态的基因增益和损失。基因含量的变化表明单糖代谢的转变,而不是多种碳水化合物,并清除氮源,我们预测这在花蜜环境中是有益的。基因增益似乎是复制事件、进化分化和水平基因转移的结果。最值得注意的是,居住在花蜜中的不动杆菌获得了从植物病原体中降解果胶的能力,并且这种能力的基因已经复制并在进化支系中进行了选择。我们假设这种能力是适应花蜜的关键特征,因为它可以改善营养不平衡的花蜜栖息地对营养的获取。这些结果确定了基因组的变化和特征与从土壤到花蜜的戏剧性栖息地转换相吻合。重要性:许多细菌,包括不动杆菌属,通常会进化以开发新的栖息地。然而,栖息地转换背后的基因变化往往是未知的。花蜜是特殊微生物的家园,这些微生物可以在这种营养不平衡的栖息地生长。一些特殊的不动杆菌物种从居住在土壤中的亲戚进化而来,在花蜜中变得常见和丰富。在这里,我们研究了成功地在花蜜等新栖息地定居所需的基因组适应。我们对生活在花蜜中的不动杆菌和来自其他环境(如土壤和水)的不动杆菌进行了比较基因组学分析。我们发现,虽然基因丢失与生活在花蜜中的转变同时发生,但从其他细菌那里获得的特定基因可能对这种生态变化尤为重要。生活在花蜜中的不动杆菌获得了降解果胶(一种植物多糖)的基因,这可能会改善它们在环境中获取营养的途径。这些发现揭示了细菌的进化新颖性是如何进化的。
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来源期刊
mSphere
mSphere Immunology and Microbiology-Microbiology
CiteScore
8.50
自引率
2.10%
发文量
192
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: mSphere™ is a multi-disciplinary open-access journal that will focus on rapid publication of fundamental contributions to our understanding of microbiology. Its scope will reflect the immense range of fields within the microbial sciences, creating new opportunities for researchers to share findings that are transforming our understanding of human health and disease, ecosystems, neuroscience, agriculture, energy production, climate change, evolution, biogeochemical cycling, and food and drug production. Submissions will be encouraged of all high-quality work that makes fundamental contributions to our understanding of microbiology. mSphere™ will provide streamlined decisions, while carrying on ASM''s tradition for rigorous peer review.
期刊最新文献
Prospective comparison of the digestive tract resistome and microbiota in cattle raised in grass-fed versus grain-fed production systems. Prophages are infrequently associated with antibiotic resistance in Pseudomonas aeruginosa clinical isolates. Virus-induced perturbations in the mouse microbiome are impacted by microbial experience. Abundance of clinically relevant antimicrobial resistance genes in the golden jackal (Canis aureus) gut. Characterization of diet-linked amino acid pool influence on Fusobacterium spp. growth and metabolism.
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