| Literature DB >> 24244172 |
Daniel J P Engelmoer1, Ian Donaldson, Daniel E Rozen.
Abstract
Natural transformation has significant effects on bacterial genome evolution, but the evolutionary factors maintaining this mode of bacterial sex remain uncertain. Transformation is hypothesized to have both positive and negative evolutionary effects on bacteria. It can facilitate adaptation by combining beneficial mutations into a single individual, or reduce the mutational load by exposing deleterious alleles to natural selection. Alternatively, it may expose transformed cells to damaged or otherwise mutated environmental DNA and is energetically expensive. Here, we examine the long-term effects of transformation in the naturally competent species Streptococcus pneumoniae by evolving populations of wild-type and competence-deficient strains in chemostats for 1000 generations. Half of these populations were exposed to periodic mild stress to examine context-dependent benefits of transformation. We find that competence reduces fitness gain under benign conditions; however, these costs are reduced in the presence of periodic stress. Using whole genome re-sequencing, we show that competent populations fix fewer new mutations and that competence prevents the emergence of mutators. Our results show that during evolution in benign conditions competence helps maintain genome stability but is evolutionary costly; however, during periods of stress this same conservativism enables cells to retain fitness in the face of new mutations, showing for the first time that the benefits of transformation are context dependent.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24244172 PMCID: PMC3828180 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1003758
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Figure 1Fitness differences between experimental treatments estimated from direct competition assays between evolved populations.
Values represent the mean selection rate constant/hour (± standard error). Ns: non-significant; *: P<0.05; **: P<0.01 compared to the null expectation of 0 (i.e. equal fitness).
Figure 2Number of mutations and mutation rates of evolved populations.
Dark grey are populations evolved in the benign environment and light grey are the populations evolved in the periodic stress environment. A) The average number of mutations found per evolved population in each treatment. B) Mutation rate for each evolved population calculated from the total number of mutations. ¥ indicates populations with a mutation rate of 2–10-fold above average. Error bars are 95% confidence intervals C) Mutations found in genes for DNA repair for non-competent (white) and competent (black) populations. Numbers above each category indicate the number of mutated genes in that category. * Indicates significant difference between competent and non-competent populations. D) Mean of log-transformed relative mutation rates of the evolved lines compared to the ancestor. Error bars are SE of the mean.