Abstract

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is one of the most important processes in prokaryote evolution. The sharing of DNA can spread neutral or beneficial genes, as well as genetic parasites across populations and communities, creating a large proportion of the variability acted on by natural selection. Here, we highlight the role of HGT in enhancing the opportunities for conflict and cooperation within and between prokaryote genomes. We discuss how horizontally acquired genes can cooperate or conflict both with each other and with a recipient genome, resulting in signature patterns of gene co-occurrence, avoidance, and dependence. We then describe how interactions involving horizontally transferred genes may influence cooperation and conflict at higher levels (populations, communities, and symbioses). Finally, we consider the benefits and drawbacks of HGT for prokaryotes and its fundamental role in understanding conflict and cooperation from the gene-gene to the microbiome level.

Highlights

  • Organisms typically transmit genetic information vertically to their offspring, but occasionally DNA is acquired horizontally from other sources

  • We describe how interactions involving horizontally transferred genes may influence cooperation and conflict at higher levels

  • horizontal gene transfer (HGT) can occur by transformation, transduction, and conjugation (DNA transfer via cell-cell contact; Lederberg and Tatum, 1946), as well as other mechanisms (García-Aljaro et al, 2017)

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Summary

Introduction

Organisms typically transmit genetic information vertically to their offspring, but occasionally DNA is acquired horizontally from other sources. We describe how interactions involving horizontally transferred genes may influence cooperation and conflict at higher levels (populations, communities, and symbioses). We consider the benefits and drawbacks of HGT for prokaryotes and its fundamental role in understanding conflict and cooperation from the gene-gene to the microbiome level.

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