TY - JOUR
T1 - Evidence for vertical inheritance and loss of the leukotoxin operon in genus Mannheimia
AU - Larsen, Jesper
AU - Pedersen, Anders G.
AU - Christensen, Henrik
AU - Bisgaard, Magne
AU - Angen, Øystein
AU - Ahrens, Peter
AU - Olsen, John Elmerdahl
PY - 2007
Y1 - 2007
N2 - The Mannheimia subclades belong to the same bacterial genus but have taken divergent paths toward their distinct lifestyles. M. haemolytica + M. glucosida are potential pathogens of the respiratory tract in the mammalian suborder Ruminantia, whereas M. ruminalis, the supposed sister group, lives as a commensal in the ovine rumen. We have tested the hypothesis that horizontal gene transfer of the leukotoxin operon has catalyzed pathogenic adaptation and speciation of M. haemolytica + M. glucosida, or other major subclades, by using a strategy that combines compositional and phylogenetic methods. We show that it has been vertically inherited from the last common ancestor of the diverging Mannheimia subclades, although several strains belonging to M. ruminalis have lost the operon. Our analyses support that divergence within M. ruminalis following colonization of the ovine rumen was very rapid and that functional decay of most of the leukotoxin operons occurred early when the adaptation to the rumen was fastest, suggesting that antagonistic pleiotropy was the main contributor to losses in the radiating lineages of M. ruminalis. To sum up, the scenario derived from these analyses reflects two aspects. On one hand, it opposes the hypothesis of horizontal gene transfer as a catalyst of pathogenic adaptation and speciation. On the other hand, it indicates that losses of the leukotoxin operons in the radiating lineages of M. ruminalis have catalyzed their adaptation to a commensal environment and reproductive isolation (speciation).
AB - The Mannheimia subclades belong to the same bacterial genus but have taken divergent paths toward their distinct lifestyles. M. haemolytica + M. glucosida are potential pathogens of the respiratory tract in the mammalian suborder Ruminantia, whereas M. ruminalis, the supposed sister group, lives as a commensal in the ovine rumen. We have tested the hypothesis that horizontal gene transfer of the leukotoxin operon has catalyzed pathogenic adaptation and speciation of M. haemolytica + M. glucosida, or other major subclades, by using a strategy that combines compositional and phylogenetic methods. We show that it has been vertically inherited from the last common ancestor of the diverging Mannheimia subclades, although several strains belonging to M. ruminalis have lost the operon. Our analyses support that divergence within M. ruminalis following colonization of the ovine rumen was very rapid and that functional decay of most of the leukotoxin operons occurred early when the adaptation to the rumen was fastest, suggesting that antagonistic pleiotropy was the main contributor to losses in the radiating lineages of M. ruminalis. To sum up, the scenario derived from these analyses reflects two aspects. On one hand, it opposes the hypothesis of horizontal gene transfer as a catalyst of pathogenic adaptation and speciation. On the other hand, it indicates that losses of the leukotoxin operons in the radiating lineages of M. ruminalis have catalyzed their adaptation to a commensal environment and reproductive isolation (speciation).
KW - Former LIFE faculty
KW - Mannheimia
KW - Leukotoxin
KW - Vertical inheritance
KW - Gene loss
U2 - 10.1007/s00239-006-0065-3
DO - 10.1007/s00239-006-0065-3
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 17437147
SN - 0022-2844
VL - 64
SP - 423
EP - 437
JO - Journal of Molecular Evolution
JF - Journal of Molecular Evolution
IS - 4
ER -