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Community-wide plasmid gene mobilization and selection

Plasmids have long been recognized as an important driver of DNA exchange and genetic innovation in prokaryotes. The success of plasmids has been attributed to their independent replication from the host's chromosome and their frequent self-transfer. It is thought that plasmids accumulate, rear...

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Autores principales: Sentchilo, Vladimir, Mayer, Antonia P, Guy, Lionel, Miyazaki, Ryo, Green Tringe, Susannah, Barry, Kerrie, Malfatti, Stephanie, Goessmann, Alexander, Robinson-Rechavi, Marc, van der Meer, Jan R
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3660673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23407308
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ismej.2013.13
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author Sentchilo, Vladimir
Mayer, Antonia P
Guy, Lionel
Miyazaki, Ryo
Green Tringe, Susannah
Barry, Kerrie
Malfatti, Stephanie
Goessmann, Alexander
Robinson-Rechavi, Marc
van der Meer, Jan R
author_facet Sentchilo, Vladimir
Mayer, Antonia P
Guy, Lionel
Miyazaki, Ryo
Green Tringe, Susannah
Barry, Kerrie
Malfatti, Stephanie
Goessmann, Alexander
Robinson-Rechavi, Marc
van der Meer, Jan R
author_sort Sentchilo, Vladimir
collection PubMed
description Plasmids have long been recognized as an important driver of DNA exchange and genetic innovation in prokaryotes. The success of plasmids has been attributed to their independent replication from the host's chromosome and their frequent self-transfer. It is thought that plasmids accumulate, rearrange and distribute nonessential genes, which may provide an advantage for host proliferation under selective conditions. In order to test this hypothesis independently of biases from culture selection, we study the plasmid metagenome from microbial communities in two activated sludge systems, one of which receives mostly household and the other chemical industry wastewater. We find that plasmids from activated sludge microbial communities carry among the largest proportion of unknown gene pools so far detected in metagenomic DNA, confirming their presumed role of DNA innovators. At a system level both plasmid metagenomes were dominated by functions associated with replication and transposition, and contained a wide variety of antibiotic and heavy metal resistances. Plasmid families were very different in the two metagenomes and grouped in deep-branching new families compared with known plasmid replicons. A number of abundant plasmid replicons could be completely assembled directly from the metagenome, providing insight in plasmid composition without culturing bias. Functionally, the two metagenomes strongly differed in several ways, including a greater abundance of genes for carbohydrate metabolism in the industrial and of general defense factors in the household activated sludge plasmid metagenome. This suggests that plasmids not only contribute to the adaptation of single individual prokaryotic species, but of the prokaryotic community as a whole under local selective conditions.
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spelling pubmed-36606732013-06-01 Community-wide plasmid gene mobilization and selection Sentchilo, Vladimir Mayer, Antonia P Guy, Lionel Miyazaki, Ryo Green Tringe, Susannah Barry, Kerrie Malfatti, Stephanie Goessmann, Alexander Robinson-Rechavi, Marc van der Meer, Jan R ISME J Original Article Plasmids have long been recognized as an important driver of DNA exchange and genetic innovation in prokaryotes. The success of plasmids has been attributed to their independent replication from the host's chromosome and their frequent self-transfer. It is thought that plasmids accumulate, rearrange and distribute nonessential genes, which may provide an advantage for host proliferation under selective conditions. In order to test this hypothesis independently of biases from culture selection, we study the plasmid metagenome from microbial communities in two activated sludge systems, one of which receives mostly household and the other chemical industry wastewater. We find that plasmids from activated sludge microbial communities carry among the largest proportion of unknown gene pools so far detected in metagenomic DNA, confirming their presumed role of DNA innovators. At a system level both plasmid metagenomes were dominated by functions associated with replication and transposition, and contained a wide variety of antibiotic and heavy metal resistances. Plasmid families were very different in the two metagenomes and grouped in deep-branching new families compared with known plasmid replicons. A number of abundant plasmid replicons could be completely assembled directly from the metagenome, providing insight in plasmid composition without culturing bias. Functionally, the two metagenomes strongly differed in several ways, including a greater abundance of genes for carbohydrate metabolism in the industrial and of general defense factors in the household activated sludge plasmid metagenome. This suggests that plasmids not only contribute to the adaptation of single individual prokaryotic species, but of the prokaryotic community as a whole under local selective conditions. Nature Publishing Group 2013-06 2013-02-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3660673/ /pubmed/23407308 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ismej.2013.13 Text en Copyright © 2013 International Society for Microbial Ecology http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
spellingShingle Original Article
Sentchilo, Vladimir
Mayer, Antonia P
Guy, Lionel
Miyazaki, Ryo
Green Tringe, Susannah
Barry, Kerrie
Malfatti, Stephanie
Goessmann, Alexander
Robinson-Rechavi, Marc
van der Meer, Jan R
Community-wide plasmid gene mobilization and selection
title Community-wide plasmid gene mobilization and selection
title_full Community-wide plasmid gene mobilization and selection
title_fullStr Community-wide plasmid gene mobilization and selection
title_full_unstemmed Community-wide plasmid gene mobilization and selection
title_short Community-wide plasmid gene mobilization and selection
title_sort community-wide plasmid gene mobilization and selection
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3660673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23407308
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ismej.2013.13
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