Abstract
The relative role of drift versus selection underlying the evolution of bacterial species within the gut microbiota remains poorly understood. The large sizes of bacterial populations in this environment suggest that even adaptive mutations with weak effects, thought to be the most frequently occurring, could substantially contribute to a rapid pace of evolutionary change in the gut. We followed the emergence of intra-species diversity in a commensal Escherichia coli strain that previously acquired an adaptive mutation with strong effect during one week of colonization of the mouse gut. Following this first step, which consisted of inactivating a metabolic operon, one third of the subsequent adaptive mutations were found to have a selective effect as high as the first. Nevertheless, the order of the adaptive steps was strongly affected by a mutational hotspot with an exceptionally high mutation rate of 10−5. The pattern of polymorphism emerging in the populations evolving within different hosts was characterized by periodic selection, which reduced diversity, but also frequency-dependent selection, actively maintaining genetic diversity. Furthermore, the continuous emergence of similar phenotypes due to distinct mutations, known as clonal interference, was pervasive. Evolutionary change within the gut is therefore highly repeatable within and across hosts, with adaptive mutations of selection coefficients as strong as 12% accumulating without strong constraints on genetic background. In vivo competitive assays showed that one of the second steps (focA) exhibited positive epistasis with the first, while another (dcuB) exhibited negative epistasis. The data shows that strong effect adaptive mutations continuously recur in gut commensal bacterial species.
Highlights
The composition of the gut microbiota can exert a strong influence on host physiology, behavior and health
While some mutations segregating in natural populations may be neutral, the large size of bacterial communities inhabiting the mammalian gut suggests that here, polymorphism is more likely to result from deterministic forces [6]
By following the evolution of a commensal E. coli strain inhabiting the guts of streptomycin treated mice, we previously observed the emergence and spread of adaptive mutations within only 3 days of colonization [8]
Summary
The composition of the gut microbiota can exert a strong influence on host physiology, behavior and health. Studies providing an understanding on how intraspecific variation in the microbiota emerges and changes over time are lacking [4]. Important questions such as whether the extant intra-species diversity is mainly due to migration and genetic drift or the result of natural selection on new mutations remain unanswered [5]. While some mutations segregating in natural populations may be neutral, the large size of bacterial communities inhabiting the mammalian gut suggests that here, polymorphism is more likely to result from deterministic forces [6]
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