Symbiosis genes show a unique pattern of introgression and selection within a Rhizobium leguminosarum species complex

Author:

Cavassim Maria Izabel A.12ORCID,Moeskjær Sara1ORCID,Moslemi Camous1ORCID,Fields Bryden3ORCID,Bachmann Asger2ORCID,Vilhjálmsson Bjarni J.4ORCID,Schierup Mikkel Heide2ORCID,W. Young J. Peter3ORCID,Andersen Stig U.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark

2. Bioinformatics Research Centre, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark

3. Department of Biology, University of York, York, UK

4. National Center for Register-based Research (NCRR), Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark

Abstract

Rhizobia supply legumes with fixed nitrogen using a set of symbiosis genes. These can cross rhizobium species boundaries, but it is unclear how many other genes show similar mobility. Here, we investigate inter-species introgression using de novo assembly of 196 Rhizobium leguminosarum sv. trifolii genomes. The 196 strains constituted a five-species complex, and we calculated introgression scores based on gene-tree traversal to identify 171 genes that frequently cross species boundaries. Rather than relying on the gene order of a single reference strain, we clustered the introgressing genes into four blocks based on population structure-corrected linkage disequilibrium patterns. The two largest blocks comprised 125 genes and included the symbiosis genes, a smaller block contained 43 mainly chromosomal genes, and the last block consisted of three genes with variable genomic location. All introgression events were likely mediated by conjugation, but only the genes in the symbiosis linkage blocks displayed overrepresentation of distinct, high-frequency haplotypes. The three genes in the last block were core genes essential for symbiosis that had, in some cases, been mobilized on symbiosis plasmids. Inter-species introgression is thus not limited to symbiosis genes and plasmids, but other cases are infrequent and show distinct selection signatures.

Funder

Innovationsfonden

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

General Medicine

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