Literature DB >> 34949817

Prochlorococcus have low global mutation rate and small effective population size.

Zhuoyu Chen1, Xiaojun Wang2,3, Yu Song1, Qinglu Zeng4,5, Yao Zhang6, Haiwei Luo7,8,9.   

Abstract

Prochlorococcus are the most abundant free-living photosynthetic carbon-fixing organisms in the ocean. Prochlorococcus show small genome sizes, low genomic G+C content, reduced DNA repair gene pool and fast evolutionary rates, which are typical features of endosymbiotic bacteria. Nevertheless, their evolutionary mechanisms are believed to be different. Evolution of endosymbiotic bacteria is dominated by genetic drift owing to repeated population bottlenecks, whereas Prochlorococcus are postulated to have extremely large effective population sizes (Ne) and thus drift has rarely been considered. However, accurately extrapolating Ne requires measuring an unbiased global mutation rate through mutation accumulation, which is challenging for Prochlorococcus. Here, we managed this experiment over 1,065 days using Prochlorococcus marinus AS9601, sequenced genomes of 141 mutant lines and determined its mutation rate to be 3.50 × 10-10 per site per generation. Extrapolating Ne additionally requires identifying population boundaries, which we defined using PopCOGenT and over 400 genomes related to AS9601. Accordingly, we calculated its Ne to be 1.68 × 107, which is only reasonably greater than that of endosymbiotic bacteria but surprisingly smaller than that of many free-living bacteria extrapolated using the same approach. Our results therefore suggest that genetic drift is a key driver of Prochlorococcus evolution.
© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34949817     DOI: 10.1038/s41559-021-01591-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol        ISSN: 2397-334X            Impact factor:   15.460


  75 in total

1.  Niche partitioning among Prochlorococcus ecotypes along ocean-scale environmental gradients.

Authors:  Zackary I Johnson; Erik R Zinser; Allison Coe; Nathan P McNulty; E Malcolm S Woodward; Sallie W Chisholm
Journal:  Science       Date:  2006-03-24       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  The consequences of genetic drift for bacterial genome complexity.

Authors:  Chih-Horng Kuo; Nancy A Moran; Howard Ochman
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2009-06-05       Impact factor: 9.043

Review 3.  The bacterial species challenge: making sense of genetic and ecological diversity.

Authors:  Christophe Fraser; Eric J Alm; Martin F Polz; Brian G Spratt; William P Hanage
Journal:  Science       Date:  2009-02-06       Impact factor: 47.728

4.  Present and future global distributions of the marine Cyanobacteria Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus.

Authors:  Pedro Flombaum; José L Gallegos; Rodolfo A Gordillo; José Rincón; Lina L Zabala; Nianzhi Jiao; David M Karl; William K W Li; Michael W Lomas; Daniele Veneziano; Carolina S Vera; Jasper A Vrugt; Adam C Martiny
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-05-23       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Genome reduction by deletion of paralogs in the marine cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus.

Authors:  Haiwei Luo; Robert Friedman; Jijun Tang; Austin L Hughes
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2011-04-29       Impact factor: 16.240

Review 6.  Prochlorococcus: the structure and function of collective diversity.

Authors:  Steven J Biller; Paul M Berube; Debbie Lindell; Sallie W Chisholm
Journal:  Nat Rev Microbiol       Date:  2014-12-01       Impact factor: 60.633

Review 7.  Reductive genome evolution at both ends of the bacterial population size spectrum.

Authors:  Bérénice Batut; Carole Knibbe; Gabriel Marais; Vincent Daubin
Journal:  Nat Rev Microbiol       Date:  2014-09-15       Impact factor: 60.633

8.  Comparing effective population sizes of dominant marine alphaproteobacteria lineages.

Authors:  Haiwei Luo; Brandon K Swan; Ramunas Stepanauskas; Austin L Hughes; Mary Ann Moran
Journal:  Environ Microbiol Rep       Date:  2013-12-05       Impact factor: 3.541

9.  The population genetics of dN/dS.

Authors:  Sergey Kryazhimskiy; Joshua B Plotkin
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2008-12-12       Impact factor: 5.917

10.  Factors driving effective population size and pan-genome evolution in bacteria.

Authors:  Louis-Marie Bobay; Howard Ochman
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2018-10-12       Impact factor: 3.260

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  3 in total

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Authors:  Anton E Shikov; Yury V Malovichko; Anton A Nizhnikov; Kirill S Antonets
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2022-06-02       Impact factor: 6.208

2.  Genome size distributions in bacteria and archaea are strongly linked to evolutionary history at broad phylogenetic scales.

Authors:  Carolina A Martinez-Gutierrez; Frank O Aylward
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2022-05-23       Impact factor: 6.020

3.  Coastal Transient Niches Shape the Microdiversity Pattern of a Bacterioplankton Population with Reduced Genomes.

Authors:  Xiao Chu; Xiaojun Wang; Lok Shan Cheung; Xiaoyuan Feng; Put Ang; Shing Yip Lee; Sean A Crowe; Haiwei Luo
Journal:  mBio       Date:  2022-07-26       Impact factor: 7.786

  3 in total

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