Interactions between horizontally acquired genes create a fitness cost in Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Alvaro San MillanMacarena Toll-RieraQin QiR Craig MacLeanPublished in: Nature communications (2015)
Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) plays a key role in bacterial evolution, especially with respect to antibiotic resistance. Fitness costs associated with mobile genetic elements (MGEs) are thought to constrain HGT, but our understanding of these costs remains fragmentary, making it difficult to predict the success of HGT events. Here we use the interaction between P. aeruginosa and a costly plasmid (pNUK73) to investigate the molecular basis of the cost of HGT. Using RNA-Seq, we show that the acquisition of pNUK73 results in a profound alteration of the transcriptional profile of chromosomal genes. Mutations that inactivate two genes encoded on chromosomally integrated MGEs recover these fitness costs and transcriptional changes by decreasing the expression of the pNUK73 replication gene. Our study demonstrates that interactions between MGEs can compromise bacterial fitness via altered gene expression, and we argue that conflicts between mobile elements impose a general constraint on evolution by HGT.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- genome wide identification
- gene expression
- rna seq
- body composition
- dna methylation
- physical activity
- copy number
- transcription factor
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- single cell
- genome wide analysis
- bioinformatics analysis
- escherichia coli
- cystic fibrosis
- biofilm formation
- heat shock
- binding protein
- oxidative stress
- multidrug resistant
- acinetobacter baumannii