Abstract

ABSTRACTHost-adapted microorganisms are generally assumed to have evolved from free-living, environmental microorganisms, as examples of the reverse process are rare. In the phylum Gammaproteobacteria, family Moraxellaceae, the genus Psychrobacter includes strains from a broad ecological distribution including animal bodies as well as sea ice and other nonhost environments. To elucidate the relationship between these ecological niches and Psychrobacter’s evolutionary history, we performed tandem genomic analyses with phenotyping of 85 Psychrobacter accessions. Phylogenomic analysis of the family Moraxellaceae reveals that basal members of the Psychrobacter clade are Moraxella spp., a group of often-pathogenic organisms. Psychrobacter exhibited two broad growth patterns in our phenotypic screen: one group that we called the “flexible ecotype” (FE) had the ability to grow between 4 and 37°C, and the other, which we called the “restricted ecotype” (RE), could grow between 4 and 25°C. The FE group includes phylogenetically basal strains, and FE strains exhibit increased transposon copy numbers, smaller genomes, and a higher likelihood to be bile salt resistant. The RE group contains only phylogenetically derived strains and has increased proportions of lipid metabolism and biofilm formation genes, functions that are adaptive to cold stress. In a 16S rRNA gene survey of polar bear fecal samples, we detect both FE and RE strains, but in in vivo colonizations of gnotobiotic mice, only FE strains persist. Our results indicate the ability to grow at 37°C, seemingly necessary for mammalian gut colonization, is an ancestral trait for Psychrobacter, which likely evolved from a pathobiont.IMPORTANCE Host-associated microbes are generally assumed to have evolved from free-living ones. The evolutionary transition of microbes in the opposite direction, from host associated toward free living, has been predicted based on phylogenetic data but not studied in depth. Here, we provide evidence that the genus Psychrobacter, particularly well known for inhabiting low-temperature, high-salt environments such as sea ice, permafrost soils, and frozen foodstuffs, has evolved from a mammalian-associated ancestor. We show that some Psychrobacter strains retain seemingly ancestral genomic and phenotypic traits that correspond with host association while others have diverged to psychrotrophic or psychrophilic lifestyles.

Highlights

  • Host-adapted microorganisms are generally assumed to have evolved from free-living, environmental microorganisms, as examples of the reverse process are rare

  • The Acinetobacter clade is a sister taxon to the Moraxella (M) clade, consisting entirely of Moraxella species, and to the Psychrobacter (P) clade, which contains all of the Psychrobacter species, as well as 4 Moraxella species—M. boevrei, M. atlantae, M. osloensis, and M. lincolnii—that are basal

  • Polar bear diet significantly impacts the abundance of Psychrobacter spp. (Kruskal-Wallis x 2 = 13.5, df = 3, P value = 0.004); we found that polar bears feeding on mammalian prey, including seals and reindeer, had significantly higher abundances of unclassified Psychrobacter spp. than polar bears feeding on avian prey or mixed diets (Fig. 5B)

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Summary

Introduction

Host-adapted microorganisms are generally assumed to have evolved from free-living, environmental microorganisms, as examples of the reverse process are rare. Our results indicate the ability to grow at 37°C, seemingly necessary for mammalian gut colonization, is an ancestral trait for Psychrobacter, which likely evolved from a pathobiont. Within the Bacteroidetes, the taxa that are mammalian gut associated are derived from phylogenetically basal clades that include free-living and invertebrate-associated taxa [4]. These patterns of distribution imply that specialization to the warm animal host habitat is mostly incompatible with fitness in other environments. One phylogenetic analysis has indicated that the evolutionary transition from a free-living lifestyle to a host-associated (including pathogenic) lifestyle is more common than the opposite [11]

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