生物
干酪乳杆菌
基因组
适应(眼睛)
生态位
利基
进化生物学
基因组大小
比较基因组学
基因组进化
遗传学
基因
遗传多样性
基因组学
计算生物学
生态学
栖息地
细菌
人口
社会学
人口学
神经科学
作者
Jeffery R. Broadbent,Eric C Neeno-Eckwall,Buffy Stahl,Kanokwan Tandee,Hui Cai,Wesley Morovic,Philippe Horvath,J. Heidenreich,Nicole T. Perna,Rodolphe Barrangou,J. L. Steele
出处
期刊:BMC Genomics
[BioMed Central]
日期:2012-01-01
卷期号:13 (1): 533-533
被引量:145
标识
DOI:10.1186/1471-2164-13-533
摘要
The broad ecological distribution of L. casei makes it an insightful subject for research on genome evolution and lifestyle adaptation. To explore evolutionary mechanisms that determine genomic diversity of L. casei, we performed comparative analysis of 17 L. casei genomes representing strains collected from dairy, plant, and human sources. Differences in L. casei genome inventory revealed an open pan-genome comprised of 1,715 core and 4,220 accessory genes. Extrapolation of pan-genome data indicates L. casei has a supragenome approximately 3.2 times larger than the average genome of individual strains. Evidence suggests horizontal gene transfer from other bacterial species, particularly lactobacilli, has been important in adaptation of L. casei to new habitats and lifestyles, but evolution of dairy niche specialists also appears to involve gene decay. Genome diversity in L. casei has evolved through gene acquisition and decay. Acquisition of foreign genomic islands likely confers a fitness benefit in specific habitats, notably plant-associated niches. Loss of unnecessary ancestral traits in strains collected from bacterial-ripened cheeses supports the hypothesis that gene decay contributes to enhanced fitness in that niche. This study gives the first evidence for a L. casei supragenome and provides valuable insights into mechanisms for genome evolution and lifestyle adaptation of this ecologically flexible and industrially important lactic acid bacterium. Additionally, our data confirm the Distributed Genome Hypothesis extends to non-pathogenic, ecologically flexible species like L. casei.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI