Abstract
Escherichia coli is an increasingly antibiotic-resistant opportunistic pathogen. Few data are available on its ecological and evolutionary dynamics in its primary commensal niche, the vertebrate gut. Using Illumina and/or Nanopore technologies, we sequenced whole genomes of 210 E. coli isolates from 22 stools sampled during a 20-year period from a healthy man (ED) living in Paris, France. All phylogroups, except C, were represented, with a predominance of B2 (34.3%), followed by A and F (19% each) phylogroups. Thirty-five clones were identified based on their haplogroup and pairwise genomic single nucleotide polymorphism distance and classified in three phenotypes according to their abundance and residence time: 25 sub-dominant/transient (52 isolates), five dominant/transient (48 isolates) and five dominant/resident (110 isolates). Four over five dominant/resident clones belonged to B2 and closely related F phylogroups, whereas sub-dominant/transient clones belonged mainly to B1, A and D phylogroups. The long residence times of B2 clones seemed to be counterbalanced by lower colonization abilities. Clones with larger within-host frequency persisted for longer. By comparing ED strain genomes to a collection of commensal E. coli genomes from 359 French individuals, we identified ED-specific genomic properties including an enrichment in genes involved in a metabolic pathway (mhp cluster) and the presence of a very rare antiviral defense island. The E. coli colonization within the gut microbiota was shaped by both the intrinsic properties of the strain lineages, in particular longer residence of phylogroup B2, and the environmental constraints such as diet or phages.
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