Abstract
BackgroundBecause prokaryotic genomes experience a rapid flux of genes, selection may act at a higher level than an individual genome. We explore a quantitative model of the distributed genome whereby groups of genomes evolve by acquiring genes from a fixed reservoir which we denote as supergenome. Previous attempts to understand the nature of the supergenome treated genomes as random, independent collections of genes and assumed that the supergenome consists of a small number of homogeneous sub-reservoirs. Here we explore the consequences of relaxing both assumptions.ResultsWe surveyed several methods for estimating the size and composition of the supergenome. The methods assumed that genomes were either random, independent samples of the supergenome or that they evolved from a common ancestor along a known tree via stochastic sampling from the reservoir. The reservoir was assumed to be either a collection of homogeneous sub-reservoirs or alternatively composed of genes with Gamma distributed gain probabilities. Empirical gene frequencies were used to either compute the likelihood of the data directly or first to reconstruct the history of gene gains and then compute the likelihood of the reconstructed numbers of gains.ConclusionsSupergenome size estimates using the empirical gene frequencies directly are not robust with respect to the choice of the model. By contrast, using the gene frequencies and the phylogenetic tree to reconstruct multiple gene gains produces reliable estimates of the supergenome size and indicates that a homogeneous supergenome is more consistent with the data than a supergenome with Gamma distributed gain probabilities.
Highlights
Because prokaryotic genomes experience a rapid flux of genes, selection may act at a higher level than an individual genome
Because new genes predominantly originate by horizontal gene transfer (HGT) [7,8,9], it seems plausible that the unit of evolution in prokaryotes is not the genome but the supergenome, i.e. the collection of all genes available for HGT [10]
Estimates using gene frequencies directly We first present the results of supergenome size estimates using the binomial mixture model (B)
Summary
Because prokaryotic genomes experience a rapid flux of genes, selection may act at a higher level than an individual genome. Because new genes predominantly originate by horizontal gene transfer (HGT) [7,8,9], it seems plausible that the unit of evolution in prokaryotes is not the genome but the supergenome, i.e. the collection of all genes available for HGT [10]. The rationale behind this way of thinking is that a novel gene discovered in one population can be acquired by another population. Note that the supergenome has been alternatively denoted as supragenome in [13]
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