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Experimental evolution of gene essentiality in bacteria.

Authors :
Bao L
Zhu Z
Ismail A
Zhu B
Anandan V
Whiteley M
Kitten T
Xu P
Source :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology [bioRxiv] 2024 Sep 02. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Sep 02.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Essential gene products carry out fundamental cellular activities in interaction with other components. However, the lack of essential gene mutants and appropriate methodologies to link essential gene functions with their partners poses significant challenges. Here, we have generated deletion mutants in 32 genes previously identified as essential, with 23 mutants showing extremely slow growth in the SK36 strain of Streptococcus sanguinis . The 23 genes corresponding to these mutants encode components of diverse pathways, are widely conserved among bacteria, and are essential in many other bacterial species. Whole-genome sequencing of 243 independently evolved populations of these mutants has identified >1000 spontaneous suppressor mutations in experimental evolution. Many of these mutations define new gene and pathway relationships, such as F1Fo-ATPase/V1Vo-ATPase/TrkA1-H1 that were demonstrated across multiple Streptococcus species. Patterns of spontaneous mutations occurring in essential gene mutants differed from those found in wildtype. While gene duplications occurred rarely and appeared most often at later stages of evolution, substitutions, deletions, and insertions were prevalent in evolved populations. These essential gene deletion mutants and spontaneous mutations fixed in the mutant populations during evolution establish a foundation for understanding gene essentiality and the interaction of essential genes in networks.<br />Competing Interests: Declaration of interests A patent application has been submitted by P.X. and L.B. and the Virginia Commonwealth University based on these results.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2692-8205
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39071448
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.07.16.600122