Abstract

Measuring molecular evolution in bacteria typically requires estimation of the rate at which nucleotide changes accumulate in strains sampled at different times that share a common ancestor. This approach has been useful for dating ecological and evolutionary events that coincide with the emergence of important lineages, such as outbreak strains and obligate human pathogens. However, in multi-host (niche) transmission scenarios, where the pathogen is essentially an opportunistic environmental organism, sampling is often sporadic and rarely reflects the overall population, particularly when concentrated on clinical isolates. This means that approaches that assume recent common ancestry are not applicable. Here we present a new approach to estimate the molecular clock rate in Campylobacter that draws on the popular probability conundrum known as the ‘birthday problem’. Using large genomic datasets and comparative genomic approaches, we use isolate pairs that share recent common ancestry to estimate the rate of nucleotide change for the population. Identifying synonymous and non-synonymous nucleotide changes, both within and outside of recombined regions of the genome, we quantify clock-like diversification to estimate synonymous rates of nucleotide change for the common pathogenic bacteria Campylobacter coli (2.4 x 10−6 s/s/y) and Campylobacter jejuni (3.4 x 10−6 s/s/y). Finally, using estimated total rates of nucleotide change, we infer the number of effective lineages within the sample time frame–analogous to a shared birthday–and assess the rate of turnover of lineages in our sample set over short evolutionary timescales. This provides a generalizable approach to calibrating rates in populations of environmental bacteria and shows that multiple lineages are maintained, implying that large-scale clonal sweeps may take hundreds of years or more in these species.

Highlights

  • Theoretical models of a relatively constant rate of molecular change over time [1], the molecular clock, have become fundamental to explaining the evolution in bacteria [2, 3]

  • Along with variation introduced by horizontal gene transfer, it can lead to alterations in the nucleotide sequence

  • If this rate is known, one can estimate the date when two or more lineages diverged. This can be informative for understanding the time-scale of emergence and spread of pathogenic strains

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Summary

Introduction

Theoretical models of a relatively constant rate of molecular change over time [1], the molecular clock, have become fundamental to explaining the evolution in bacteria [2, 3]. It is necessary to determine the rate at which the clock ‘ticks’ and the uniform accumulation of nucleotide change (NC) over time. This is not a reflection of the background point mutation rate (associated with replication error) and the generation time of the bacterium [9, 10], but is influenced by horizontal gene transfer (HGT) that can introduce several NCs in a single event [11]. The rate at which NCs accumulate in the population is influenced by the population size [12] and selection (positive and stabilizing) on different fitness effects [13]

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