Pervasive Recombination and Sympatric Genome Diversification Driven by Frequency-Dependent Selection in Borrelia burgdorferi, the Lyme Disease Bacterium

Author:

Haven James1,Vargas Levy C2,Mongodin Emmanuel F3,Xue Vincent4,Hernandez Yozen2,Pagan Pedro2,Fraser-Liggett Claire M3,Schutzer Steven E5,Luft Benjamin J6,Casjens Sherwood R7,Qiu Wei-Gang128

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, The Graduate Center, City University of New York, New York, New York 10016

2. Department of Biological Sciences and The Center for Gene Structure and Function and

3. Institute for Genome Sciences, University of Maryland BioPark, Baltimore, Maryland 21201

4. Department of Computer Science, Hunter College, City University of New York, New York, New York 10065

5. Department of Medicine, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey–New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey 07103

6. Department of Medicine, Health Science Center, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York 11794

7. Department of Pathology, Division of Molecular Cell Biology and Immunology, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112

8. National Evolutionary Synthesis Center, Durham, North Carolina 27705

Abstract

Abstract How genomic diversity within bacterial populations originates and is maintained in the presence of frequent recombination is a central problem in understanding bacterial evolution. Natural populations of Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacterial agent of Lyme disease, consist of diverse genomic groups co-infecting single individual vertebrate hosts and tick vectors. To understand mechanisms of sympatric genome differentiation in B. burgdorferi, we sequenced and compared 23 genomes representing major genomic groups in North America and Europe. Linkage analysis of >13,500 single-nucleotide polymorphisms revealed pervasive horizontal DNA exchanges. Although three times more frequent than point mutation, recombination is localized and weakly affects genome-wide linkage disequilibrium. We show by computer simulations that, while enhancing population fitness, recombination constrains neutral and adaptive divergence among sympatric genomes through periodic selective sweeps. In contrast, simulations of frequency-dependent selection with recombination produced the observed pattern of a large number of sympatric genomic groups associated with major sequence variations at the selected locus. We conclude that negative frequency-dependent selection targeting a small number of surface-antigen loci (ospC in particular) sufficiently explains the maintenance of sympatric genome diversity in B. burgdorferi without adaptive divergence. We suggest that pervasive recombination makes it less likely for local B. burgdorferi genomic groups to achieve host specialization. B. burgdorferi genomic groups in the northeastern United States are thus best viewed as constituting a single bacterial species, whose generalist nature is a key to its rapid spread and human virulence.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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