High divergence among Drosophila simulans mitochondrial haplogroups arose in midst of long term purifying selection

2005 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 328-337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew D. Dean ◽  
J. William O. Ballard
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathryn E. Holt ◽  
Florent Lassalle ◽  
Kelly L. Wyres ◽  
Ryan Wick ◽  
Rafal J. Mostowy

Bacterial capsules and lipopolysaccharides are diverse surface polysaccharides (SPs) that serve as the frontline for interactions with the outside world. While SPs can evolve rapidly, their diversity and evolutionary dynamics across different taxonomic scales has not been investigated in detail. Here, we focused on the bacterial order Enterobacteriales (including the medically-relevant Enterobacteriaceae), to carry out comparative genomics of two SP locus synthesis regions, cps and kps, using 27,334 genomes from 45 genera. We identified high-quality cps loci in 22 genera and kps in 11 genera, around 4% of which were detected in multiple species. We found SP loci to be highly dynamic genetic entities: their evolution was driven by high rates of horizontal gene transfer (HGT), both of whole loci and component genes, and relaxed purifying selection, yielding large repertoires of SP diversity. In spite of that, we found the presence of (near-)identical locus structures in distant taxonomic backgrounds that could not be explained by recent exchange, pointing to long-term selective preservation of locus structures in some populations. Our results reveal differences in evolutionary dynamics driving SP diversity within different bacterial species, with lineages of Escherichia coli, Enterobacter hormachei and Klebsiella aerogenes most likely to share SP loci via recent exchange; and lineages of Salmonella enterica, Citrobacter sakazakii and Serratia marcescens most likely to share SP loci via other mechanisms such as long-term preservation. Overall, the evolution of SP loci in Enterobacteriales is driven by a range of evolutionary forces and their dynamics and relative importance varies between different species.


2008 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 623-632 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eduardo Tarazona-Santos ◽  
Toralf Bernig ◽  
Laurie Burdett ◽  
Wagner C.S. Magalhaes ◽  
Cristina Fabbri ◽  
...  

BMC Biology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulfar Bergthorsson ◽  
Caroline J. Sheeba ◽  
Anke Konrad ◽  
Tony Belicard ◽  
Toni Beltran ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Transposable elements (TEs) are an almost universal constituent of eukaryotic genomes. In animals, Piwi-interacting small RNAs (piRNAs) and repressive chromatin often play crucial roles in preventing TE transcription and thus restricting TE activity. Nevertheless, TE content varies widely across eukaryotes and the dynamics of TE activity and TE silencing across evolutionary time is poorly understood. Results Here, we used experimentally evolved populations of C. elegans to study the dynamics of TE expression over 409 generations. The experimental populations were evolved at population sizes of 1, 10 and 100 individuals to manipulate the efficiency of natural selection versus genetic drift. We demonstrate increased TE expression relative to the ancestral population, with the largest increases occurring in the smallest populations. We show that the transcriptional activation of TEs within active regions of the genome is associated with failure of piRNA-mediated silencing, whilst desilenced TEs in repressed chromatin domains retain small RNAs. Additionally, we find that the sequence context of the surrounding region influences the propensity of TEs to lose silencing through failure of small RNA-mediated silencing. Conclusions Our results show that natural selection in C. elegans is responsible for maintaining low levels of TE expression, and provide new insights into the epigenomic features responsible.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.A. Stoffel ◽  
S.E. Johnston ◽  
J.G. Pilkington ◽  
J.M Pemberton

AbstractRuns of homozygosity (ROH) are pervasive in diploid genomes and expose the effects of deleterious recessive mutations, but how exactly these regions contribute to variation in fitness remains unclear. Here, we combined empirical analyses and simulations to explore the deleterious effects of ROH with varying genetic map lengths in wild Soay sheep. Using a long-term dataset of 4,592 individuals genotyped at 417K SNPs, we found that inbreeding depression increases with ROH length. A 1% genomic increase in long ROH (>12.5cM) reduced the odds of first-year survival by 12%, compared to only 7% for medium ROH (1.56-12.5cM), while short ROH (<1.56cM) had no effect on survival. We show by forward genetic simulations that this is predicted: compared with shorter ROH, long ROH will have higher densities of deleterious alleles, with larger average effects on fitness and lower population frequencies. Taken together, our results are consistent with the idea that the mutation load decreases in older haplotypes underlying shorter ROH, where purifying selection has had more time to purge deleterious mutations. Finally, our study demonstrates that strong inbreeding depression can persist despite ongoing purging in a historically small population.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Garcia-Garcera ◽  
Lukas Hafner ◽  
Christophe Burucoa ◽  
Alexandra Moura ◽  
Maxime Pichon ◽  
...  

AbstractListeria genus comprises two opportunistic pathogenic species, L. monocytogenes (Lm) and L. ivanovii, and several non-pathogenic species. All can thrive as saprophytes, whereas only pathogenic species cause systemic infections in human and cattle. Identifying Listeria species’ respective biotopes is critical to understand the ecological contribution of Listeria pathogenic potential. Here, we aimed at detecting Listeria in samples of diverse origins, to highlight ecological differences between pathogenic and non-pathogenic species. We retrieved 16S rDNA datasets from the metagenomics MG-RAST database and determined the prevalence and abundance of Listeria species in various sources. Overall, Listeria was detected in 14% of datasets. Lm was the most prevalent species, most abundant both in soil and host-associated environments, including in 5% of human stools. Lm was also detected in 10% of human stool samples from an independent cohort of 900 healthy asymptomatic donors. A specific microbiota signature was associated with Lm faecal carriage in human, as well as in experimentally inoculated mice, in which it preceded Lm long-term gut colonization, indicating that gut microbiota composition influences Lm faecal carriage. These results suggest that asymptomatic faecal carriage, rather than disease, exerts purifying selection on Lm “virulence genes”.


2019 ◽  
Vol 93 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bora Nam ◽  
Zelalem Mekuria ◽  
Mariano Carossino ◽  
Ganwu Li ◽  
Ying Zheng ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTEquine arteritis virus (EAV) is the causative agent of equine viral arteritis (EVA), a reproductive and respiratory disease of horses. Following natural infection, 10 to 70% of infected stallions can become carriers of EAV and continue to shed virus in the semen. In this study, sequential viruses isolated from nasal secretions, buffy coat cells, and semen of seven experimentally infected and two naturally infected EAV carrier stallions were deep sequenced to elucidate the intrahost microevolutionary process after a single transmission event. Analysis of variants from nasal secretions and buffy coat cells lacked extensive positive selection; however, characteristics of the mutant spectra were different in the two sample types. In contrast, the initial semen virus populations during acute infection have undergone a selective bottleneck, as reflected by the reduction in population size and diversifying selection at multiple sites in the viral genome. Furthermore, during persistent infection, extensive genome-wide purifying selection shaped variant diversity in the stallion reproductive tract. Overall, the nonstochastic nature of EAV evolution during persistent infection was driven by active intrahost selection pressure. Among the open reading frames within the viral genome, ORF3, ORF5, and the nsp2-coding region of ORF1a accumulated the majority of nucleotide substitutions during persistence, with ORF3 and ORF5 having the highest intrahost evolutionary rates. The findings presented here provide a novel insight into the evolutionary mechanisms of EAV and identified critical regions of the viral genome likely associated with the establishment and maintenance of persistent infection in the stallion reproductive tract.IMPORTANCEEAV can persist in the reproductive tract of infected stallions, and consequently, long-term carrier stallions constitute its sole natural reservoir. Previous studies demonstrated that the ampullae of the vas deferens are the primary site of viral persistence in the stallion reproductive tract and the persistence is associated with a significant inflammatory response that is unable to clear the infection. This is the first study that describes EAV full-length genomic evolution during acute and long-term persistent infection in the stallion reproductive tract using next-generation sequencing and contemporary sequence analysis techniques. The data provide novel insight into the intrahost evolution of EAV during acute and persistent infection and demonstrate that persistent infection is characterized by extensive genome-wide purifying selection and a nonstochastic evolutionary pattern mediated by intrahost selective pressure, with important nucleotide substitutions occurring in ORF1a (region encoding nsp2), ORF3, and ORF5.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Brandt ◽  
Ina Schaefer ◽  
Julien Glanz ◽  
Tanja Schwander ◽  
Mark Maraun ◽  
...  

AbstractSex is beneficial in the long-term, because it can prevent mutational meltdown through increased effectiveness of selection. This idea is supported by empirical evidence of deleterious mutation accumulation in species with a recent transition to asexuality. Here, we studied the effectiveness of purifying selection in oribatid mites, which have lost sex millions of years ago and diversified into different families and species while reproducing asexually. We compared the accumulation of deleterious coding and non-coding mutations between three asexual and three sexual lineages using transcriptome data. Contrasting studies of young asexual lineages, we find evidence for strong purifying selection that is more effective in asexual compared to sexual oribatid mite lineages. Our results suggest that large populations likely sustain effective purifying selection and facilitate the escape of mutational meltdown in the absence of sex. Thus, sexper seis not a prerequisite for the long-term persistence of animal lineages.


Genome ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 52 (7) ◽  
pp. 597-607 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo González-Romero ◽  
Juan Ausió ◽  
Josefina Méndez ◽  
José M. Eirín-López

The association of DNA with histones results in a nucleoprotein complex called chromatin that consists of repetitive nucleosomal subunits. Nucleosomes are joined together in the chromatin fiber by short stretches of linker DNA that interact with a wide diversity of linker H1 histones involved in chromatin compaction and dynamics. Although the long-term evolution of the H1 family has been the subject of different studies during the last 5 years, the lack of molecular data on replication-independent (RI) H1 variants from protostomes has been hampering attempts to complete the evolutionary picture of this histone family in eukaryotes, especially as it pertains to the functional specialization they impart to the chromatin structure in members of this bilaterian lineage. In an attempt to fill this gap, the present work characterizes the histone gene complement from the razor clam Solen marginatus . Molecular evolutionary analyses reveal that the H1 gene from this organism represents one of the few protostome RI H1 genes known to date, a notion which is further supported by its location within the monophyletic group encompassing the RI H1 variants in the overall phylogeny of eukaryotic H1 proteins. Although the detailed characterization of the nucleotide substitution patterns in RI H1 variants agrees with the model of birth-and-death evolution under strong purifying selection, maximum-likelihood approaches unveil the presence of adaptive selection during at least part of the evolutionary differentiation between protostomes and deuterostomes. The presence of increased levels of specialization in RI H1 proteins from deuterostomes as well as the significant differences observed in electrostatic properties between protostome and deuterostome RI H1s represent novel and important preliminary results for future studies of the functional differentiation of this histone H1 lineage across bilaterians.


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