Found and lost: The fates of horizontally acquired genes in arthropod-Symbiotic Spiroplasma

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Abstract

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is an important mechanism that contributed to biological diversity, particularly in bacteria. Through acquisition of novel genes, the recipient cell may change its ecological preference and the process could promote speciation. In this study,wedetermined the complete genome sequence of twoSpiroplasma species for comparative analyses andinferred the putative gene gains and losses. Althoughmost Spiroplasma species are symbionts of terrestrial insects, Spiroplasma eriocheiris has evolved to be a lethal pathogen of freshwater crustaceans. We found that approximately 7%of the genes in this genomemay have originated from HGT and these genes expanded the metabolic capacity of this organism. Through comparison with the closely related Spiroplasma atrichopogonis, as well as other more divergent lineages, our results indicated that these HGT events could be traced back to the most recent common ancestor of these two species. However, most of these horizontally acquired genes have been pseudogenized in S. atrichopogonis, suggesting that they did not contribute to the fitness of this lineage that maintained the association with terrestrial insects. Thus, accumulation of small deletions that disrupted these foreign genes was not countered by natural selection. On the other hand, the long-term survival of these horizontally acquired genes in the S. eriocheiris genome hinted that they might play a role in the ecological shift of this species. Finally, the implications of these findings and the conflictsamonggene content, 16S rRNA gene sequencing, and serological typing, are discussed in light of defining bacterial species.

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Lo, W. S., Gasparich, G. E., & Kuo, C. H. (2015). Found and lost: The fates of horizontally acquired genes in arthropod-Symbiotic Spiroplasma. Genome Biology and Evolution, 7(9), 2458–2472. https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evv160

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