| Literature DB >> 27869203 |
Amy McLeman1, Pawel Sierocinski1,2, Elze Hesse2, Angus Buckling2, Gabriel Perron3, Nils Hülter4,5, Pål Jarle Johnsen4, Michiel Vos1.
Abstract
The adaptive benefits of natural transformation, the active uptake of free DNA molecules from the environment followed by incorporation of this DNA into the genome, may be the improved response to selection resulting from increased genetic variation. Drawing analogies with sexual reproduction, transformation may be particularly beneficial when selection rapidly fluctuates during coevolution with virulent parasites ('the Red Queen Hypothesis'). Here we test this hypothesis by experimentally evolving the naturally transformable and recombinogenic species Acinetobacter baylyi with a cocktail of lytic phages. No increased levels of resistance to phage were found in the wild type compared to a recombination deficient ΔdprA strain after five days of evolution. When exposed to A. baylyi DNA and phage, naturally transformable cells show greater levels of phage resistance. However, increased resistance arose regardless of whether they were exposed to DNA from phage-sensitive or -resistant A. baylyi, suggesting resistance was not the result of transformation, but was related to other benefits of competence. Subsequent evolution in the absence of phages did not show that recombination could alleviate the cost of resistance. Within this study system we found no support for transformation-mediated recombination being an advantage to bacteria exposed to parasitic phages.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27869203 PMCID: PMC5116665 DOI: 10.1038/srep37144
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Resistance to phage after five days of evolution of recombinogenic A. baylyi BD413 wild type or non-recombinogenic ΔdrpA mutant in the presence of a phage cocktail.
Resistance against four phage pools (ancestral phage, evolved sympatric phage, phage evolved with all recombinogenic replicate lines and phage evolved with all non-recombinogenic replicate lines, see main text) represented as average percentage clones infected (out of 24 clones for six replicates). (Sympatric phage susceptibility could not be tested for the two control treatments that were not evolved with phages). Bars represent standard error bars.
Figure 2Resistance to phage within the wild type recombinogenic A. baylyi and the non-recombinogenic ΔdrpA strain after overnight incubation in the presence of bacteriophage and DNA isolated from a mixture of six phage-resistant evolved clones, or control DNA isolated from the phage susceptible ancestor.
For each of six replicates of each treatment, 24 clones were assayed for resistance against five phage populations (see main text). Bars represent standard error bars.