AI Article Synopsis

  • Prokaryotes, like Sinorhizobium fredii, benefit from accessory genes, but linking these to core regulatory networks for adaptation to new environments is complex.
  • Researchers analyzed the pangenome of S. fredii by studying twelve Sinorhizobium genomes and examining gene expression in different growth phases and conditions.
  • They discovered that gene expression levels, variability, and connectivity are positively correlated with gene conservation, revealing that transcriptional changes in both core and accessory genes play crucial roles in adapting to specific host environments.

Article Abstract

Prokaryotes benefit from having accessory genes, but it is unclear how accessory genes can be linked with the core regulatory network when developing adaptations to new niches. Here we determined hierarchical core/accessory subsets in the multipartite pangenome (composed of genes from the chromosome, chromid and plasmids) of the soybean microsymbiont Sinorhizobium fredii by comparing twelve Sinorhizobium genomes. Transcriptomes of two S. fredii strains at mid-log and stationary growth phases and in symbiotic conditions were obtained. The average level of gene expression, variation of expression between different conditions, and gene connectivity within the co-expression network were positively correlated with the gene conservation level from strain-specific accessory genes to genus core. Condition-dependent transcriptomes exhibited adaptive transcriptional changes in pangenome subsets shared by the two strains, while strain-dependent transcriptomes were enriched with accessory genes on the chromid. Proportionally more chromid genes than plasmid genes were co-expressed with chromosomal genes, while plasmid genes had a higher within-replicon connectivity in expression than chromid ones. However, key nitrogen fixation genes on the symbiosis plasmid were characterized by high connectivity in both within- and between-replicon analyses. Among those genes with host-specific upregulation patterns, chromosomal znu and mdt operons, encoding a conserved high-affinity zinc transporter and an accessory multi-drug efflux system, respectively, were experimentally demonstrated to be involved in host-specific symbiotic adaptation. These findings highlight the importance of integrative regulation of hierarchical core/accessory components in the multipartite genome of bacteria during niche adaptation and in shaping the prokaryotic pangenome in the long run.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5991415PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007428DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

accessory genes
20
genes
12
multipartite genome
8
sinorhizobium fredii
8
hierarchical core/accessory
8
genes plasmid
8
plasmid genes
8
accessory
6
coordinated regulation
4
regulation core
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!