1. The speciation and hybridization history of the genus Salmonella
- Author
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Kaisa Thorell, Xavier Didelot, James Hale, Daniel Falush, Sylvie Issenhuth-Jeanjean, Nicholas R. Thomson, Alexis Criscuolo, François-Xavier Weill, Sylvain Brisse, Julian Parkhill, Hub Bioinformatique et Biostatistique - Bioinformatics and Biostatistics HUB, Institut Pasteur [Paris]-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre National de Référence - National Reference Center Escherichia coli, Shigella et Salmonella (CNR-ESS), Institut Pasteur [Paris], University of Warwick [Coventry], University of Gothenburg (GU), University College Cork (UCC), The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute [Cambridge], University of Bath [Bath], Biodiversité et Epidémiologie des Bactéries pathogènes - Biodiversity and Epidemiology of Bacterial Pathogens, This work was supported financially by a grant from Region Ile-de-France to A. C. and by a Walton Visiting Scientist grant from the Science Foundation of Ireland to S. B., Parkhill, Julian [0000-0002-7069-5958], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, Institut Pasteur [Paris] (IP)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Institut Pasteur [Paris] (IP)
- Subjects
Salmonella ,Genetic Speciation ,Lineage (evolution) ,Genomics ,Biology ,Subspecies ,medicine.disease_cause ,DNA sequencing ,Evolution, Molecular ,03 medical and health sciences ,taxonomy ,Genus ,Polyphyly ,Genetic algorithm ,evolution ,medicine ,genomics ,hybridization ,Phylogeny ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,Nucleic Acid Hybridization ,Salmonella enterica ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Classification ,Biological Evolution ,[SDV.MP.BAC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Bacteriology ,Bacterial Typing Techniques ,QR ,speciation ,Evolutionary biology ,Multilocus sequence typing ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Archaea ,Multilocus Sequence Typing - Abstract
Bacteria and archaea make up most of natural diversity but the mechanisms that underlie the origin and maintenance of prokaryotic species are poorly understood. We investigated the speciation history of the genusSalmonella, an ecologically diverse bacterial lineage, within whichS. entericasubsp.entericais responsible for important human food-borne infections. We performed a survey of diversity across a large reference collection using multilocus sequence typing, followed by genome sequencing of distinct lineages. We identified eleven distinct phylogroups, three of which were previously undescribed. Strains assigned toS. entericasubsp.salamaeare polyphyletic, with two distinct lineages that we designate Salamae A and Salamae B. Strains of subspecieshoutenaeare subdivided into two groups, Houtenae A and B and are both related to Selander’s group VII. A phylogroup we designate VIII was previously unknown. A simple binary fission model of speciation cannot explain observed patterns of sequence diversity. In the recent past, there have been large scale hybridization events involving an unsampled ancestral lineage and three distantly related lineages of the genus that have given rise to Houtenae A, Houtenae B and VII. We found no evidence for ongoing hybridization in the other eight lineages but detected more subtle signals of ancient recombination events. We are unable to fully resolve the speciation history of the genus, which might have involved additional speciation-by-hybridization or multi-way speciation events. Our results imply that traditional models of speciation by binary fission and divergence may not apply inSalmonella.Data summaryIllumina sequence data were submitted to the European Nucleotide Archive under project number PRJEB2099 and are available from INSDC (NCBI/ENA/DDBJ) under accession numbers ERS011101 to ERS011146. The MLST sequence and profile data generated in this study have been publicly available on theSalmonellaMLST web site between 2010 and the migration of theSalmonellaMLST website to EnteroBase (https://enterobase.warwick.ac.uk/), and subsequently from there.
- Published
- 2019
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