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Natural Chromosome-Chromid Fusion across rRNA Operons in a Burkholderiaceae Bacterium

Chromids (secondary chromosomes) in bacterial genomes that are present in addition to the main chromosome appear to be evolutionarily conserved in some specific bacterial groups. In rare cases among these groups, a small number of strains from Rhizobiales and Vibrionales were shown to possess a natu...

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Autores principales: Mori, Jiro F., Kanaly, Robert A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8729776/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34985328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02225-21
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author Mori, Jiro F.
Kanaly, Robert A.
author_facet Mori, Jiro F.
Kanaly, Robert A.
author_sort Mori, Jiro F.
collection PubMed
description Chromids (secondary chromosomes) in bacterial genomes that are present in addition to the main chromosome appear to be evolutionarily conserved in some specific bacterial groups. In rare cases among these groups, a small number of strains from Rhizobiales and Vibrionales were shown to possess a naturally fused single chromosome that was reported to have been generated through intragenomic homologous recombination between repeated sequences on the chromosome and chromid. Similar examples have never been reported in the family Burkholderiaceae, a well-documented group that conserves chromids. Here, an in-depth genomic characterization was performed on a Burkholderiaceae bacterium that was isolated from a soil bacterial consortium maintained on diesel fuel and mutagenic benzo[a]pyrene. This organism, Cupriavidus necator strain KK10, was revealed to carry a single chromosome with unexpectedly large size (>6.6 Mb), and results of comparative genomics with the genome of C. necator N-1(T) indicated that the single chromosome of KK10 was generated through fusion of the prototypical chromosome and chromid at the rRNA operons. This fusion hypothetically occurred through homologous recombination with a crossover between repeated rRNA operons on the chromosome and chromid. Some metabolic functions that were likely expressed from genes on the prototypical chromid region were indicated to be retained. If this phenomenon—the bacterial chromosome-chromid fusion across the rRNA operons through homologous recombination—occurs universally in prokaryotes, the multiple rRNA operons in bacterial genomes may not only contribute to the robustness of ribosome function, but also provide more opportunities for genomic rearrangements through frequent recombination. IMPORTANCE A bacterial chromosome that was naturally fused with the secondary chromosome, or “chromid,” and presented as an unexpectedly large single replicon was discovered in the genome of Cupriavidus necator strain KK10, a biotechnologically useful member of the family Burkholderiaceae. Although Burkholderiaceae is a well-documented group that conserves chromids in their genomes, this chromosomal fusion event has not been previously reported for this family. This fusion has hypothetically occurred through intragenomic homologous recombination between repeated rRNA operons and, if so, provides novel insight into the potential of multiple rRNA operons in bacterial genomes to lead to chromosome-chromid fusion. The harsh conditions under which strain KK10 was maintained—a genotoxic hydrocarbon-enriched milieu—may have provided this genotype with a niche in which to survive.
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spelling pubmed-87297762022-01-06 Natural Chromosome-Chromid Fusion across rRNA Operons in a Burkholderiaceae Bacterium Mori, Jiro F. Kanaly, Robert A. Microbiol Spectr Research Article Chromids (secondary chromosomes) in bacterial genomes that are present in addition to the main chromosome appear to be evolutionarily conserved in some specific bacterial groups. In rare cases among these groups, a small number of strains from Rhizobiales and Vibrionales were shown to possess a naturally fused single chromosome that was reported to have been generated through intragenomic homologous recombination between repeated sequences on the chromosome and chromid. Similar examples have never been reported in the family Burkholderiaceae, a well-documented group that conserves chromids. Here, an in-depth genomic characterization was performed on a Burkholderiaceae bacterium that was isolated from a soil bacterial consortium maintained on diesel fuel and mutagenic benzo[a]pyrene. This organism, Cupriavidus necator strain KK10, was revealed to carry a single chromosome with unexpectedly large size (>6.6 Mb), and results of comparative genomics with the genome of C. necator N-1(T) indicated that the single chromosome of KK10 was generated through fusion of the prototypical chromosome and chromid at the rRNA operons. This fusion hypothetically occurred through homologous recombination with a crossover between repeated rRNA operons on the chromosome and chromid. Some metabolic functions that were likely expressed from genes on the prototypical chromid region were indicated to be retained. If this phenomenon—the bacterial chromosome-chromid fusion across the rRNA operons through homologous recombination—occurs universally in prokaryotes, the multiple rRNA operons in bacterial genomes may not only contribute to the robustness of ribosome function, but also provide more opportunities for genomic rearrangements through frequent recombination. IMPORTANCE A bacterial chromosome that was naturally fused with the secondary chromosome, or “chromid,” and presented as an unexpectedly large single replicon was discovered in the genome of Cupriavidus necator strain KK10, a biotechnologically useful member of the family Burkholderiaceae. Although Burkholderiaceae is a well-documented group that conserves chromids in their genomes, this chromosomal fusion event has not been previously reported for this family. This fusion has hypothetically occurred through intragenomic homologous recombination between repeated rRNA operons and, if so, provides novel insight into the potential of multiple rRNA operons in bacterial genomes to lead to chromosome-chromid fusion. The harsh conditions under which strain KK10 was maintained—a genotoxic hydrocarbon-enriched milieu—may have provided this genotype with a niche in which to survive. American Society for Microbiology 2022-01-05 /pmc/articles/PMC8729776/ /pubmed/34985328 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02225-21 Text en Copyright © 2022 Mori and Kanaly. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Mori, Jiro F.
Kanaly, Robert A.
Natural Chromosome-Chromid Fusion across rRNA Operons in a Burkholderiaceae Bacterium
title Natural Chromosome-Chromid Fusion across rRNA Operons in a Burkholderiaceae Bacterium
title_full Natural Chromosome-Chromid Fusion across rRNA Operons in a Burkholderiaceae Bacterium
title_fullStr Natural Chromosome-Chromid Fusion across rRNA Operons in a Burkholderiaceae Bacterium
title_full_unstemmed Natural Chromosome-Chromid Fusion across rRNA Operons in a Burkholderiaceae Bacterium
title_short Natural Chromosome-Chromid Fusion across rRNA Operons in a Burkholderiaceae Bacterium
title_sort natural chromosome-chromid fusion across rrna operons in a burkholderiaceae bacterium
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8729776/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34985328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02225-21
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