Patterns and Implications of Gene Gain and Loss In The Evolution of Prochlorococcus
Kettler GC, Martiny AC, Huang K, Zucker J, Coleman ML, Rodrigue S, Chen F, Lapidus A, Ferriera S, Johnson J, Steglich C, Church GM, Richardson P, Chisholm SW
PLoS Genet. 2007 Dec;3(12):e231.
Abstract:
Prochlorococcus is a marine cyanobacterium that numerically dominates the
mid-latitude oceans and is the smallest known oxygenic phototroph.
Numerous isolates from diverse areas of the world's oceans have been
studied and shown to be physiologically and genetically distinct. All
isolates described thus far can be assigned to either a tightly clustered
high-light (HL)-adapted clade, or a more divergent low-light (LL)-adapted
group. The 16S rRNA sequences of the entire
Prochlorococcus group differ
by at most 3%, and the four initially published genomes revealed patterns
of genetic differentiation that help explain physiological differences
among the isolates. Here we describe the genomes of eight newly sequenced
isolates and combine them with the first four genomes for a comprehensive
analysis of the core (shared by all isolates) and flexible genes of the
Prochlorococcus group, and the patterns of loss and gain of the flexible
genes over the course of evolution. There are 1,273 genes that represent
the core shared by all 12 genomes. They are apparently sufficient,
according to metabolic reconstruction, to encode a functional cell. We
describe a phylogeny for all 12 isolates by subjecting their complete
proteomes to three different phylogenetic analyses. For each non-core
gene, we used a maximum parsimony method to estimate which ancestor likely
first acquired or lost each gene. Many of the genetic differences among
isolates, especially for genes involved in outer membrane synthesis and
nutrient transport, are found within the same clade. Nevertheless, we
identified some genes defining HL and LL ecotypes, and clades within these
broad ecotypes, helping to demonstrate the basis of HL and LL adaptations
in
Prochlorococcus. Furthermore, our estimates of gene gain events allow
us to identify highly variable genomic islands that are not apparent
through simple pairwise comparisons. These results emphasize the
functional roles, especially those connected to outer membrane synthesis
and transport that dominate the flexible genome and set it apart from the
core. Besides identifying islands and demonstrating their role throughout
the history of
Prochlorococcus, reconstruction of past gene gains and
losses shows that much of the variability exists at the "leaves of the
tree," between the most closely related strains. Finally, the
identification of core and flexible genes from this 12-genome comparison
is largely consistent with the relative frequency of
Prochlorococcus genes
found in global ocean metagenomic databases, further closing the gap
between our understanding of these organisms in the lab and the wild.
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