Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA
2. Seattle Children’s Research Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA
3. Department of Microbiology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Salmonella
and
Escherichia coli
mannose-binding type 1 fimbriae exhibit highly similar receptor specificities, morphologies, and mechanisms of assembly but are nonorthologous in nature, i.e., not closely related evolutionarily. Their operons differ in chromosomal location, gene arrangement, and regulatory components. In the current study, we performed a comparative genetic and structural analysis of the major structural subunit, FimA, from
Salmonella
and
E. coli
and found that FimA pilins undergo diverse evolutionary adaptation in the different species. Whereas the
E. coli fimA
locus is characterized by high allelic diversity, frequent intragenic recombination, and horizontal movement,
Salmonella fimA
shows structural diversity that is more than 5-fold lower without strong evidence of gene shuffling or homologous recombination. In contrast to
Salmonella
FimA, the amino acid substitutions in the
E. coli
pilin heavily target the protein regions that are predicted to be exposed on the external surface of fimbriae. Altogether, our results suggest that
E. coli
, but not
Salmonella
, type 1 fimbriae display a high level of structural diversity consistent with a strong selection for antigenic variation under immune pressure. Thus, type 1 fimbriae in these closely related bacterial species appear to function in distinctly different physiological environments.
IMPORTANCE
E. coli
and
Salmonella
are enteric bacteria that are closely related from an evolutionary perspective. They are both notorious human pathogens, though with somewhat distinct ecologies and virulence mechanisms. Type 1 fimbriae are rod-shaped surface appendages found in most
E. coli
and
Salmonella
isolates. In both species, they mediate bacterial adhesion to mannose receptors on host cells and share essentially the same morphology and assembly mechanisms. Here we show that despite the strong resemblances in function and structure, they are exposed to very different natural selection environments. Sequence analysis indicates that
E. coli
, but not
Salmonella
, fimbriae are subjected to strong immune pressure, resulting in a high level of major fimbrial protein gene shuffling and interbacterial transfer. Thus, evolutionary analysis tools can provide evidence of divergent physiological roles of functionally similar traits in different bacterial species.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
9 articles.
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