Diverse mobile genetic elements shaped the evolution of Streptomyces virulence

Author:

Weisberg Alexandra J.1,Pearce Emma1,Kramer Charles G.2,Chang Jeff H.1,Clarke Christopher R.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA

2. USDA Agricultural Research Service, USDA Agricultural Research Service, Genetic Improvement for Fruits and Vegetables Lab, Beltsville, MD, USA

Abstract

Mobile genetic elements can innovate bacteria with new traits. In plant pathogenic Streptomyces, frequent and recent acquisition of integrative and conjugative or mobilizable genetic elements is predicted to lead to the emergence of new lineages that gained the capacity to synthesize Thaxtomin, a phytotoxin neccesary for induction of common scab disease on tuber and root crops. Here, we identified components of the Streptomyces -potato pathosystem implicated in virulence and investigated them as a nested and interacting system to reevaluate evolutionary models. We sequenced and analysed genomes of 166 strains isolated from over six decades of sampling primarily from field-grown potatoes. Virulence genes were associated to multiple subtypes of genetic elements differing in mechanisms of transmission and evolutionary histories. Evidence is consistent with few ancient acquisition events followed by recurrent loss or swaps of elements carrying Thaxtomin A-associated genes. Subtypes of another genetic element implicated in virulence are more distributed across Streptomyces . However, neither the subtype classification of genetic elements containing virulence genes nor taxonomic identity was predictive of pathogenicity on potato. Last, findings suggested that phytopathogenic strains are generally endemic to potato fields and some lineages were established by historical spread and further dispersed by few recent transmission events. Results from a hierarchical and system-wide characterization refine our understanding by revealing multiple mechanisms that gene and bacterial dispersion have had on shaping the evolution of a Gram-positive pathogen in agricultural settings.

Funder

Agricultural Research Service

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

General Medicine

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