| Literature DB >> 28480139 |
Thomas J Finn1,2,3, Sonal Shewaramani1,2,4, Sinead C Leahy1, Peter H Janssen1, Christina D Moon1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many bacteria are facultative anaerobes, and can proliferate in both anoxic and oxic environments. Under anaerobic conditions, fermentation is the primary means of energy generation in contrast to respiration. Furthermore, the rates and spectra of spontaneous mutations that arise during anaerobic growth differ to those under aerobic growth. A long-term selection experiment was undertaken to investigate the genetic changes that underpin how the facultative anaerobe, Escherichia coli, adapts to anaerobic environments.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptation; Anaerobic; Escherichia coli; Experimental evolution; Fermentation; Genomics
Year: 2017 PMID: 28480139 PMCID: PMC5419217 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.3244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Growth course of E. coli REL4536 under aerobic and anaerobic conditions in DM25 media at 37°C.
Data points represent mean values from three biological replicates. Error bars represent one standard error of the mean in each direction.
Figure 2Mean relative fitness of lineages over 2,000 generations.
Displayed are the mean relative fitness values of three randomly-selected lineages per treatment (AE2, AE3 and AE7; AN1, AN4 and AN6; and FL2, FL3 and FL7) relative to the Rifr ancestor in (A) the aerobic environment and (B) the anaerobic environment. Error bars represent one standard error of the mean in each direction.
RM ANOVA of fitness of lineages over 2,000 generations in aerobic and anaerobic conditions.
| Source | Degrees of freedom | Aerobic | Anaerobic | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lineage | (2, 12) | 0.31 | 0.747 | 28.58 | <0.001* |
| Generation | (2, 12) | 1.47 | 0.273 | 4.13 | 0.045* |
| Generation × Lineage | (4, 12) | 2.22 | 0.163 | 8.32 | 0.002* |
Notes.
Asterisk indicates statistical significance at P < 0.05.
Fisher’s LSD test of mean fitness of lineages over 1,000 generations relative to initial mean fitness levels in the anaerobic environment.
| Lineages | Mean fitness at generation 0 ( | Mean fitness at generation 1,000 ( | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| AE | 1.054 ± 0.032 | 0.879 ± 0.089 | 0.175* |
| AN | 1.091 ± 0.008 | 1.408 ± 0.043 | 0.317* |
| FL | 1.031 ± 0.006 | 1.182 ± 0.013 | 0.151* |
Notes.
Differences are significant if greater than 0.150, and are indicated with an asterisk.
Figure 3Average number of mutations per genome in lineages propagated under each treatment for 2,000 generations.
Error bars represent one standard error of the mean of seven clones.∗ Significant at the P = 0.05 level, single factor ANOVA.
Figure 4Average number of IS1, IS3 and IS150 insertions per genome in lineages propagated under each treatment for 2,000 generations.
Error bars represent one standard error of the mean of seven clones.
Figure 5Gene ontology (GO) biological processes (A) and GO molecular functions (B) affected by mutations within genomes of evolved lineages, as defined using the PANTHER protein classification system (Mi et al., 2016).
Adaptive mutations reported in AE, AN and FL lineages.
| Predicted mechanism | Category | Gene/Region | Gene function | Treatment | Mutation | Position | Lineage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Altered metabolism | Fermentation pathways | Upregulates fermentation network | Anaerobic | IS150 insertion | 4,581,545 | AN-2K-3, 4, 5 and 6 | |
| Altered metabolism | Fermentation pathways | Disrupts ethanol production | Anaerobic | SNP | 1,438,030 | AN-2K-1, 3, 4 and 5 | |
| Altered metabolism | Fermentation pathways | Disrupts ethanol production | Anaerobic | SNP | 1,439,673 | AN-2K-2 and 7 | |
| Altered metabolism | Fermentation pathways | Induces succinate production | Anaerobic | Deletion | 4,295,377 | AN-2K-1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 | |
| Altered metabolism | Fermentation pathways | Formate production | Anaerobic and fluctuating | IS150 deletion | 1,764,888 | AN-2K-2, 3 and FL-2K-1, 2, 3, 5, 6 and 7 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Toxin-antitoxin system | Anaerobic and fluctuating | IS150 insertion | 16,972 | AN-2K-1, 4 and FL-2K-4 | ||
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Toxin-antitoxin system | Anaerobic and fluctuating | IS150 insertion | 16,989 | FL-2K-7 | ||
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Toxin-antitoxin system | Fluctuating | IS150 insertion | 582,237 | FL-2K-7 | ||
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Toxin-antitoxin system | Anaerobic and fluctuating | IS150 insertion | 1,272,468 | AN-2K-1, 4 and FL-2K- 2, 6 and 7 | ||
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Toxin-antitoxin system | Fluctuating | IS150 insertion | 1,464,061 | FL-2K-7 | ||
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Toxin-antitoxin system | Fluctuating | IS150 insertion | 1,464,678 | FL-2K-2 | ||
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Toxin-antitoxin system | Aerobic | IS150 insertion | 1,464,679 | AE-2K-1 | ||
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Prophage | P22 | – | Anaerobic and fluctuating | 7 gene deletion | FL-2K-7 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Prophage | P22 | – | Anaerobic and fluctuating | 30 gene deletion | AN-2K-7 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Prophage | Qin | – | Aerobic and fluctuating | 5 gene deletion | FL-2K-2 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Prophage | Qin | – | Aerobic and fluctuating | 25 gene deletion | AE-2K-6 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Amino acid transporters | Branched chain amino acid transporter | Fluctuating | IS150 insertion | 388,275 | FL-2K-4 and 6 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Amino acid transporters | Branched chain amino acid transporter | Fluctuating | IS150 insertion | 388,543 | FL-2K-2 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Amino acid transporters | Branched chain amino acid transporter | Fluctuating | Insertion | 388,020 | FL-2K-3 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Amino acid transporters | Branched chain amino acid transporter | Fluctuating | 6 gene deletion | FL-2K-7 | ||
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Amino acid transporters | Glutamate and aspartate transporter | Fluctuating | SNP | 2,069,532 | FL-2K-7 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Amino acid transporters | Glutamate and aspartate transporter | Fluctuating | IS150 insertion | 4,239,784 | FL-2K-7 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Amino acid transporters | Short chain amino acid permease | Anaerobic and fluctuating | IS150 insertion | 4,381,583 | AN-2K-1, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 and FL-2K-1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Virulence genes | Outer membrane auto-transporter | Aerobic and anaerobic | SNP | 2,972,858 | AN-2K-7 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Virulence genes | Outer membrane auto-transporter | Aerobic and anaerobic | SNP | 2,973,574 | AN-2K-3 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Virulence genes | Outer membrane auto-transporter | Aerobic and anaerobic | IS1 insertion | 2,972,936 | AE-2K-5 and 7 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Virulence genes | Inner membrane polysaccharide transport | Aerobic | Deletion | 2,999,898 | AE-2K-6 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Virulence genes | Inner membrane polysaccharide transport | Aerobic | SNP | 3,000,095 | AE-2K-3 and 4 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Virulence genes | Inner membrane polysaccharide transport | Aerobic | SNP | 3,000,161 | AE-2K-1 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Virulence genes | Inner membrane polysaccharide transport | Aerobic | SNP | 3,000,346 | AE-2K-5 and 7 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Virulence genes | Polymer translocation | Aerobic | SNP | 2,987,334 | AE-2K-2 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Virulence genes | Polymer translocation | Aerobic | SNP | 2,988,653 | AE-2K-3 and 4 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Virulence genes | Inner membrane polysaccharide transport | Fluctuating | IS3 insertion | 3,000,519 | FL-2K-3 | |
| Inactivation of redundant functions | Virulence genes | Post translational modification | Anaerobic | IS1 insertion | 2,992,382 | AN-2K-1, 3, 4, 5 and 6 |
Notes.
The predicted mechanism of adaptation.
The category of trait mutated.
The function of the wild type gene.
The treatment under which the mutations arose.
Mutation location using REL4536 reference genome, except for prophage excision mutations which are listed as the genes in which the deletions begin and end.
Lineages are identified by the treatment (AE, FL, or AN), followed by the generation (in all cases, approximately 2,000, designated 2K), and the individual lineage number, 1 to 7.
Gene dcuS is restored by the 5 bp deletion slippage mutation.
Figure 6Schematic (unbalanced) diagram of the anaerobic fermentation pathways and genes involved in glucose fermentation by E. coli.
Thick branching arrows represent cleavage into two smaller products. Where there are two thick arrows from one compound, these represent alternative fates. The grey box contains the pathway of citrate metabolism, and the dashed arrow represents the flow from glucose fermentation to the succinate pathway in mixed acid fermentation. Genes that are disrupted in REL4536 are represented by asterisks. The T symbol represents regulation, Fdred represents ferredoxin, and QH2 represents reduced quinone.
Figure 7Venn diagrams of the distributions of (A) categories (TA, TA systems; vir, virulence genes; aa, amino acid transporters; pro, prophage excision; ferm, fermentation network) and (B) adaptive mutations, with corresponding categories affected in parenthesis, as reported among the AE, AN and FL genomes after 2,000 generations.