TY - JOUR
T1 - Epidemic clones, oceanic gene pools, and eco-LD in the free living marine pathogen vibrio parahaemolyticus
AU - Cui, Yujun
AU - Yang, Xianwei
AU - Didelot, Xavier
AU - Guo, Chenyi
AU - Li, Dongfang
AU - Yan, Yanfeng
AU - Zhang, Yiquan
AU - Yuan, Yanting
AU - Yang, Huanming
AU - Wang, Jian
AU - Wang, Jun
AU - Song, Yajun
AU - Zhou, Dongsheng
AU - Falush, Daniel
AU - Yang, Ruifu
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 The Author 2015.
PY - 2015/6/1
Y1 - 2015/6/1
N2 - We investigated global patterns of variation in 157 whole-genome sequences of Vibrio parahaemolyticus, a free-living and seafood associated marine bacterium. Pandemic clones, responsible for recent outbreaks of gastroenteritis in humans, have spread globally. However, there are oceanic gene pools, one located in the oceans surrounding Asia and another in the Mexican Gulf. Frequent recombination means that most isolates have acquired the genetic profile of their current location. We investigated the genetic structure in the Asian gene pool by calculating the effective population size in two different ways. Under standard neutral models, the two estimates should give similar answers but we found a 27-fold difference. We propose that this discrepancy is caused by the subdivision of the species into a hundred or more ecotypes which are maintained stably in the population. To investigate the genetic factors involved, we used 51 unrelated isolates to conduct a genome-wide scan for epistatically interacting loci. We found a single example of strong epistasis between distant genome regions. A majority of strains had a type VI secretion system associated with bacterial killing. The remaining strains had genes associated with biofilm formation and regulated by cyclic dimeric GMP signaling. All strains had one or other of the two systems and none of isolate had complete complements of both systems, although several strains had remnants. Further "top down" analysis of patterns of linkage disequilibrium within frequently recombining species will allow a detailed understanding of how selection acts to structure the pattern of variation within natural bacterial populations.
AB - We investigated global patterns of variation in 157 whole-genome sequences of Vibrio parahaemolyticus, a free-living and seafood associated marine bacterium. Pandemic clones, responsible for recent outbreaks of gastroenteritis in humans, have spread globally. However, there are oceanic gene pools, one located in the oceans surrounding Asia and another in the Mexican Gulf. Frequent recombination means that most isolates have acquired the genetic profile of their current location. We investigated the genetic structure in the Asian gene pool by calculating the effective population size in two different ways. Under standard neutral models, the two estimates should give similar answers but we found a 27-fold difference. We propose that this discrepancy is caused by the subdivision of the species into a hundred or more ecotypes which are maintained stably in the population. To investigate the genetic factors involved, we used 51 unrelated isolates to conduct a genome-wide scan for epistatically interacting loci. We found a single example of strong epistasis between distant genome regions. A majority of strains had a type VI secretion system associated with bacterial killing. The remaining strains had genes associated with biofilm formation and regulated by cyclic dimeric GMP signaling. All strains had one or other of the two systems and none of isolate had complete complements of both systems, although several strains had remnants. Further "top down" analysis of patterns of linkage disequilibrium within frequently recombining species will allow a detailed understanding of how selection acts to structure the pattern of variation within natural bacterial populations.
KW - coalescent theory
KW - molecular epidemiology
KW - population genetics
KW - population structure
KW - whole-genome sequencing
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84930728804
U2 - 10.1093/molbev/msv009
DO - 10.1093/molbev/msv009
M3 - 文章
C2 - 25605790
AN - SCOPUS:84930728804
SN - 0737-4038
VL - 32
SP - 1396
EP - 1410
JO - Molecular Biology and Evolution
JF - Molecular Biology and Evolution
IS - 6
ER -