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The evolutionary origin of host association in an ancient bacterial clade

Schon, M. E.; Martijn, J.; Vosseberg, J.; Kostlbacher, S.; Ettema, T. J. G.

2021-08-31 microbiology
10.1101/2021.08.31.458344 bioRxiv
Show abstract

The evolution of obligate host-association of bacterial symbionts and pathogens remains poorly understood. The Rickettsiales represent an order of obligate alphaproteobacterial endosymbionts and parasites that infect a wide variety of eukaryotic hosts, including humans, livestock, insects and protists. Induced by their host-associated lifestyle, Rickettsiales genomes have undergone reductive evolution, leading to small, AT-rich genomes with limited metabolic capacities. We describe several genomes of deep-branching, environmental alphaproteobacteria that branch basal to previously sampled Rickettsiales, and whose genome content are reminiscent of free-living and biofilm-associated lifestyles. Ancestral genome content reconstruction across the Rickettsiales tree revealed that the free-living to host-association transition of this group occurred more recently than previously anticipated, and likely involved the repurposing of a type IV secretion system. One-Sentence SummaryDeep-branching Rickettsiales provide insights into the evolution of obligate host-associated lifestyle

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