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Progressive genome-wide introgression in agricultural Campylobacter coli
- Source :
- Molecular Ecology
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- Hybridization between distantly related organisms can facilitate rapid adaptation to novel environments, but is potentially constrained by epistatic fitness interactions among cell components. The zoonotic pathogens Campylobacter coli and C. jejuni differ from each other by around 15% at the nucleotide level, corresponding to an average of nearly 40 amino acids per protein-coding gene. Using whole genome sequencing, we show that a single C. coli lineage, which has successfully colonized an agricultural niche, has been progressively accumulating C. jejuni DNA. Members of this lineage belong to two groups, the ST-828 and ST-1150 clonal complexes. The ST-1150 complex is less frequently isolated and has undergone a substantially greater amount of introgression leading to replacement of up to 23% of the C. coli core genome as well as import of novel DNA. By contrast, the more commonly isolated ST-828 complex bacteria have 10-11% introgressed DNA, and C. jejuni and nonagricultural C. coli lineages each have
- Subjects :
- DNA, Bacterial
epistasis
introgression
Introgression
Genomics
Campylobacter coli
adaptation
medicine.disease_cause
Campylobacter jejuni
Genome
Evolution, Molecular
03 medical and health sciences
Genetics
medicine
genomics
Gene
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
030304 developmental biology
2. Zero hunger
Whole genome sequencing
0303 health sciences
Evolutionary Biology
Likelihood Functions
biology
Models, Genetic
030306 microbiology
Campylobacter
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Original Articles
biology.organism_classification
Hybridization, Genetic
Genome, Bacterial
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Molecular Ecology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....8011c3a96b886002a44a8a57322b47b7