Bottlenecks reduce the size of the gene pool within populations of all life forms with implications for their subsequent survival. Here, we examine the effects of bottlenecks on bacterial commensal-pathogens during transmission between, and dissemination within, hosts. By reducing genetic diversity, bottlenecks may alter individual or population-wide adaptive potential. A diverse range of hypermutable mechanisms have evolved in infectious agents that allow for rapid generation of genetic diversity in specific genomic loci as opposed to the variability arising from increased genomewide mutation rates. These localised hypermutable mechanisms include multi-gene phase variation (PV) of outer membrane components, multi-allele PV of restriction systems and recombination-driven antigenic variation. We review selected experimental and theoretical (mathematical) models pertaining to the hypothesis that localised hypermutation (LH) compensates for fitness losses caused by bottlenecks and discuss whether bottlenecks have driven the evolution of hypermutable loci.
De Ste Croix M, Holmes J, Wanford JJ, Moxon ER, Oggioni MR, Bayliss CD (2020). Selective and non-selective bottlenecks as drivers of the evolution of hypermutable bacterial loci. MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, 113(3), 672-681 [10.1111/mmi.14453].
Selective and non-selective bottlenecks as drivers of the evolution of hypermutable bacterial loci
Oggioni MR;
2020
Abstract
Bottlenecks reduce the size of the gene pool within populations of all life forms with implications for their subsequent survival. Here, we examine the effects of bottlenecks on bacterial commensal-pathogens during transmission between, and dissemination within, hosts. By reducing genetic diversity, bottlenecks may alter individual or population-wide adaptive potential. A diverse range of hypermutable mechanisms have evolved in infectious agents that allow for rapid generation of genetic diversity in specific genomic loci as opposed to the variability arising from increased genomewide mutation rates. These localised hypermutable mechanisms include multi-gene phase variation (PV) of outer membrane components, multi-allele PV of restriction systems and recombination-driven antigenic variation. We review selected experimental and theoretical (mathematical) models pertaining to the hypothesis that localised hypermutation (LH) compensates for fitness losses caused by bottlenecks and discuss whether bottlenecks have driven the evolution of hypermutable loci.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
2020 De Ste Croix MolMic.pdf
accesso aperto
Tipo:
Versione (PDF) editoriale / Version Of Record
Licenza:
Licenza per Accesso Aperto. Creative Commons Attribuzione (CCBY)
Dimensione
888.41 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
888.41 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.