Radical Genome Remodelling Accompanied The Emergence Of A Novel Host-Restricted Bacterial Pathogen

PLOS PATHOGENS(2021)

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摘要
The emergence of new pathogens is a major threat to public and veterinary health. Changes in bacterial habitat such as a switch in host or disease tropism are typically accompanied by genetic diversification. Staphylococcus aureus is a multi-host bacterial species associated with human and livestock infections. A microaerophilic subspecies, Staphylococcus aureus subsp. anaerobius, is responsible for Morel's disease, a lymphadenitis restricted to sheep and goats. However, the evolutionary history of S. aureus subsp. anaerobius and its relatedness to S. aureus are unknown. Population genomic analyses of clinical S. aureus subsp. anaerobius isolates revealed a highly conserved clone that descended from a S. aureus progenitor about 1000 years ago before differentiating into distinct lineages that contain African and European isolates. S. aureus subsp. anaerobius has undergone limited clonal expansion, with a restricted population size, and an evolutionary rate 10-fold slower than S. aureus. The transition to its current restricted ecological niche involved acquisition of a pathogenicity island encoding a ruminant host-specific effector of abscess formation, large chromosomal re-arrangements, and the accumulation of at least 205 pseudogenes, resulting in a highly fastidious metabolism. Importantly, expansion of similar to 87 insertion sequences (IS) located largely in intergenic regions provided distinct mechanisms for the control of expression of flanking genes, including a novel mechanism associated with IS-mediated anti-anti-sense decoupling of ancestral gene repression. Our findings reveal the remarkable evolutionary trajectory of a host-restricted bacterial pathogen that resulted from extensive remodelling of the S. aureus genome through an array of diverse mechanisms in parallel.Author summary The emergence of new pathogens is a major threat to public and veterinary health. Some bacteria such as Staphylococcus aureus, have the capacity to infect many different host species including humans and livestock while others such as the closely-related S. aureus subsp. anaerobius, associated with a single type of pathology called Morel's disease in small ruminants, are highly niche-restricted. However, our understanding of the genetic basis for such differences in bacterial host-tropism is very limited. Here, we discovered that S. aureus subsp. anaerobius evolved from an S. aureus ancestor and underwent an array of extensive changes to its genome that accompanied the transition to its current restricted lifestyle. We observed genome decay involving loss of function of hundreds of genes, large intra-chromosomal rearrangements affecting most of the genome, acquisition of a pathogenicity island, and expansion of large numbers of insertion sequences that are inserted at intergenic sites around the genome. Importantly, we found that IS elements affect the expression of neighbouring genes in different ways including a novel mechanism of IS-enabled disruption of ancestral gene repression. Taken together, we provide a remarkable example of radical genomic changes associated with evolutionary transition from a multi-host to highly restricted host ecology.
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