Affiliation:
1. School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia
2. Diagnostic and Laboratory Services (DDLS), Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD), 3 Baron-Hay Court, South Perth, Western Australia 6151, Australia
3. Future Fisheries Veterinary Services, East Ballina, New South Wales 2478, Australia
Abstract
Despite the recent advances in sequencing technologies, the complete assembly of multi-chromosome genomes of the
Vibrionaceae
, often containing several plasmids, remains challenging. Using a combination of Oxford Nanopore MinION long reads and short Illumina reads, we fully sequenced, closed and curated the genomes of two strains of a primary aquatic pathogen
Photobacterium damselae
subsp.
piscicida
isolated in Australia. These are also the first genome sequences of
P. damselae
subsp.
piscicida
isolated in Oceania and, to our knowledge, in the Southern hemisphere. We also investigated the phylogenetic relationships between Australian and overseas isolates, revealing that Australian
P. damselae
subsp.
piscicida
are more closely related to the Asian and American strains rather than to the European ones. We investigated the mobilome and present new evidence showing that a host specialization process and progressive adaptive evolution to fish are ongoing in
P. damselae
subsp.
piscicida
, and are largely mediated by transposable elements, predominantly in chromosome 2, and by plasmids. Finally, we identified two novel potential virulence determinants in
P. damselae
subsp.
piscicida
– a chorismate mutase gene, which is ubiquitously retained and co-localized with the AIP56 apoptogenic toxin-encoding gene on the pPHDP10 plasmid, and transfer-messenger RNA gene ssrA located on the main chromosome, homologous to a critical-to-virulence determinant in
Yersinia pseudotuberculosis
. Our study describes, to our knowledge, the only fully closed and manually curated genomes of
P. damselae
subsp.
piscicida
available to date, offering new insights into this important fish pathogen and its evolution.
Funder
Fisheries Research and Development Corporation
Cited by
6 articles.
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