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Parallel Evolution of a Type IV Secretion System in Radiating Lineages of the Host-Restricted Bacterial Pathogen Bartonella

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TLDR
The parallel molecular evolution of the VirB/Bep system displays a striking example of a key innovation involved in independent adaptive processes and the emergence of bacterial pathogens, highlighting the remarkable evolvability of T4SSs and their effector proteins, explaining their broad application in bacterial interactions with the environment.
Abstract
Adaptive radiation is the rapid origination of multiple species from a single ancestor as the result of concurrent adaptation to disparate environments This fundamental evolutionary process is considered to be responsible for the genesis of a great portion of the diversity of life Bacteria have evolved enormous biological diversity by exploiting an exceptional range of environments, yet diversification of bacteria via adaptive radiation has been documented in a few cases only and the underlying molecular mechanisms are largely unknown Here we show a compelling example of adaptive radiation in pathogenic bacteria and reveal their genetic basis Our evolutionary genomic analyses of the α-proteobacterial genus Bartonella uncover two parallel adaptive radiations within these host-restricted mammalian pathogens We identify a horizontally-acquired protein secretion system, which has evolved to target specific bacterial effector proteins into host cells as the evolutionary key innovation triggering these parallel adaptive radiations We show that the functional versatility and adaptive potential of the VirB type IV secretion system (T4SS), and thereby translocated Bartonella effector proteins (Beps), evolved in parallel in the two lineages prior to their radiations Independent chromosomal fixation of the virB operon and consecutive rounds of lineage-specific bep gene duplications followed by their functional diversification characterize these parallel evolutionary trajectories Whereas most Beps maintained their ancestral domain constitution, strikingly, a novel type of effector protein emerged convergently in both lineages This resulted in similar arrays of host cell-targeted effector proteins in the two lineages of Bartonella as the basis of their independent radiation The parallel molecular evolution of the VirB/Bep system displays a striking example of a key innovation involved in independent adaptive processes and the emergence of bacterial pathogens Furthermore, our study highlights the remarkable evolvability of T4SSs and their effector proteins, explaining their broad application in bacterial interactions with the environment

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Repertoire of ICE in Prokaryotes Underscores the Unity, Diversity, and Ubiquity of Conjugation

TL;DR: According to the present results, ICEs are the most abundant conjugative elements in practically all prokaryotic clades and might be far more frequently domesticated into non-conjugative protein transport systems than previously thought.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intruders below the Radar: Molecular Pathogenesis of Bartonella spp.

TL;DR: Current knowledge on the molecular processes underlying both the infection strategy and pathogenesis of Bartonella are compiled and their connection to the clinical presentation of human patients is discussed, which ranges from minor complaints to life-threatening disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution of conjugation and type IV secretion systems

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the phylogeny of key conjugation proteins to infer the evolutionary history of conjugations and type IV secretion systems (T4SS) and showed that single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) and double-strand DNA (dsDNA), while both based on a key AAA + ATPase, diverged before the last common ancestor of bacteria.

Research article Evolution of Conjugation and Type IV Secretion Systems

TL;DR: This analysis provides the first global picture of the evolution of conjugation and shows how a self-transferrable complex multiprotein system has adapted to different taxa and often been recruited by the host.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adenylylation control by intra- or intermolecular active-site obstruction in Fic proteins

TL;DR: Structural homology modelling of all annotated Fic proteins indicates that inhibition by αinh is universal and conserved through evolution, as the inhibitory motif is present in ∼90% of all putatively adenylylation-active FIC domains, including examples from all domains of life and from viruses.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Clustal w: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice

TL;DR: The sensitivity of the commonly used progressive multiple sequence alignment method has been greatly improved and modifications are incorporated into a new program, CLUSTAL W, which is freely available.
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MEGA4: Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis (MEGA) Software Version 4.0

TL;DR: Version 4 of MEGA software expands on the existing facilities for editing DNA sequence data from autosequencers, mining Web-databases, performing automatic and manual sequence alignment, analyzing sequence alignments to estimate evolutionary distances, inferring phylogenetic trees, and testing evolutionary hypotheses.
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MRBAYES: Bayesian inference of phylogenetic trees

TL;DR: The program MRBAYES performs Bayesian inference of phylogeny using a variant of Markov chain Monte Carlo, and an executable is available at http://brahms.rochester.edu/software.html.
Journal ArticleDOI

PAML 4: Phylogenetic Analysis by Maximum Likelihood

TL;DR: PAML, currently in version 4, is a package of programs for phylogenetic analyses of DNA and protein sequences using maximum likelihood (ML), which can be used to estimate parameters in models of sequence evolution and to test interesting biological hypotheses.
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