Abstract

BackgroundSymbiotic relationships between animals and bacteria have profound impacts on the evolutionary trajectories of each partner. Animals and gut bacteria engage in a variety of relationships, occasionally persisting over evolutionary timescales. Ants are a diverse group of animals that engage in many types of associations with taxonomically distinct groups of bacterial associates. Here, we bring into culture and characterize two closely-related strains of gut associated Acetobacteraceae (AAB) of the red carpenter ant, Camponotus chromaiodes.ResultsGenome sequencing, assembly, and annotation of both strains delineate stark patterns of genomic erosion and sequence divergence in gut associated AAB. We found widespread horizontal gene transfer (HGT) in these bacterial associates and report elevated gene acquisition associated with energy production and conversion, amino acid and coenzyme transport and metabolism, defense mechanisms, and lysine export. Both strains have acquired the complete NADH-quinone oxidoreductase complex, plausibly from an Enterobacteriaceae origin, likely facilitating energy production under diverse conditions. Conservation of several lysine biosynthetic and salvage pathways and accumulation of lysine export genes via HGT implicate L-lysine supplementation by both strains as a potential functional benefit for the host. These trends are contrasted by genome-wide erosion of several amino acid biosynthetic pathways and pathways in central metabolism. We perform phylogenomic analyses on both strains as well as several free living and host associated AAB. Based on their monophyly and deep divergence from other AAB, these C. chromaiodes gut associates may represent a novel genus. Together, our results demonstrate how extensive horizontal transfer between gut associates along with genome-wide deletions leads to mosaic metabolic pathways. More broadly, these patterns demonstrate that HGT and genomic erosion shape metabolic capabilities of persistent gut associates and influence their genomic evolution.ConclusionsUsing comparative genomics, our study reveals substantial changes in genomic content in persistent associates of the insect gastrointestinal tract and provides evidence for the evolutionary pressures inherent to this environment. We describe patterns of genomic erosion and horizontal acquisition that result in mosaic metabolic pathways. Accordingly, the phylogenetic position of both strains of these associates form a divergent, monophyletic clade sister to gut associates of honey bees and more distantly to Gluconobacter.

Highlights

  • Symbiotic relationships between animals and bacteria have profound impacts on the evolutionary trajectories of each partner

  • Using comparative genomics, our study reveals substantial changes in genomic content in persistent associates of the insect gastrointestinal tract and provides evidence for the evolutionary pressures inherent to this environment

  • We describe patterns of genomic erosion and horizontal acquisition that result in mosaic metabolic pathways

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Symbiotic relationships between animals and bacteria have profound impacts on the evolutionary trajectories of each partner. More recent associations, including with gut microbiota, represent an attractive system for studying the genomic consequences of symbiosis, due to their persistence across a diverse range of hosts species, and their variable level of intimacy with a given host [7]. Comparative analyses of gut associates have revealed varied levels of host specialization and diverse genomic outcomes. Gut associates of social bees possess specialized genomes adapted to their specific host species [7] and contribute to pectin degradation in the gastrointestinal tract [9]. In vertebrate hosts, persistent gut symbionts show patterns of host specialization evident by monophyletic clades associated with distinct species [10], though their genomes have retained moderate base compositions and show considerable strain-level variation in gene content between host populations [11]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call