Department of Microbiology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA
Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography, Nova Southeastern University, Dania Beach, Florida, USA.
mBio. 2018 Jun 26;9(3):e01033-18. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01033-18.
Diverse marine fish and squid form symbiotic associations with extracellular bioluminescent bacteria. These symbionts are typically free-living bacteria with large genomes, but one known lineage of symbionts has undergone genomic reduction and evolution of host dependence. It is not known why distinct evolutionary trajectories have occurred among different luminous symbionts, and not all known lineages previously had genome sequences available. In order to better understand patterns of evolution across diverse bioluminescent symbionts, we sequenced the genomes of bacteria from a poorly studied interaction, the extracellular symbionts from the "lures" of deep-sea ceratioid anglerfishes. Deep-sea anglerfish symbiont genomes are reduced in size by about 50% compared to free-living relatives. They show a striking convergence of genome reduction and loss of metabolic capabilities with a distinct lineage of obligately host-dependent luminous symbionts. These losses include reductions in amino acid synthesis pathways and abilities to utilize diverse sugars. However, the symbiont genomes have retained a number of categories of genes predicted to be useful only outside the host, such as those involved in chemotaxis and motility, suggesting that they may persist in the environment. These genomes contain very high numbers of pseudogenes and show massive expansions of transposable elements, with transposases accounting for 28 and 31% of coding sequences in the symbiont genomes. Transposon expansions appear to have occurred at different times in each symbiont lineage, indicating either independent evolutions of reduction or symbiont replacement. These results suggest ongoing genomic reduction in extracellular luminous symbionts that is facilitated by transposon proliferations. Many female deep-sea anglerfishes possess a "lure" containing luminous bacterial symbionts. Here we show that unlike most luminous symbionts, these bacteria are undergoing an evolutionary transition toward small genomes with limited metabolic capabilities. Comparative analyses of the symbiont genomes indicate that this transition is ongoing and facilitated by transposon expansions. This transition may have occurred independently in different symbiont lineages, although it is unclear why. Genomic reduction is common in bacteria that only live within host cells but less common in bacteria that, like anglerfish symbionts, live outside host cells. Since multiple evolutions of genomic reduction have occurred convergently in luminous bacteria, they make a useful system with which to understand patterns of genome evolution in extracellular symbionts. This work demonstrates that ecological factors other than an intracellular lifestyle can lead to dramatic gene loss and evolutionary changes and that transposon expansions may play important roles in this process.
多种海洋鱼类和鱿鱼与细胞外发光细菌形成共生关系。这些共生体通常是基因组较大的自由生活细菌,但有一种已知的共生体谱系经历了基因组的减少和对宿主的依赖的进化。目前尚不清楚为什么不同的发光共生体出现了不同的进化轨迹,也不是所有已知的谱系以前都有基因组序列。为了更好地了解不同发光共生体的进化模式,我们对来自深海 Ceratioid 鮟鱇鱼“诱饵”的细胞外共生体的细菌进行了基因组测序。与自由生活的近亲相比,深海鮟鱇鱼共生体的基因组大小减少了约 50%。它们表现出与一种特定的、严格依赖宿主的发光共生体谱系显著相似的基因组减少和代谢能力丧失。这些缺失包括氨基酸合成途径的减少和利用多种糖的能力丧失。然而,共生体基因组保留了许多仅在宿主之外有用的基因类别,例如那些参与趋化性和运动性的基因,这表明它们可能在环境中存在。这些基因组包含非常多的假基因,并表现出转座元件的大规模扩张,转座酶占共生体基因组编码序列的 28%和 31%。转座子的扩张似乎在每个共生体谱系中都发生在不同的时间,表明减少或共生体替代的独立进化。这些结果表明,在细胞外发光共生体中,转座子的增殖正在促进基因组的持续减少。许多深海鮟鱇鱼的雌性都拥有一个含有发光细菌共生体的“诱饵”。在这里,我们表明与大多数发光共生体不同,这些细菌正在向具有有限代谢能力的小基因组进化。对共生体基因组的比较分析表明,这种转变正在进行,并受到转座子扩张的促进。虽然目前尚不清楚原因,但这种转变可能在不同的共生体谱系中独立发生。基因组减少在只生活在宿主细胞内的细菌中很常见,但在像鮟鱇鱼共生体这样生活在宿主细胞外的细菌中则较少见。由于发光细菌的基因组减少已经多次趋同进化,它们成为了一个了解细胞外共生体基因组进化模式的有用系统。这项工作表明,除了细胞内生活方式之外,生态因素也可能导致基因的大量丢失和进化变化,并且转座子的扩张可能在这个过程中发挥重要作用。