Affiliation:
1. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering and School of Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Whether or not bacteria form coherent evolutionary groups via means of genetic exchange and, hence, elicit distinct species boundaries remains an unsettled issue. A recent report implied that not only may the former be true but also, in fact, the clearly distinct
Campylobacter jejuni
and
Campylobacter coli
species may be converging as a consequence of increased interspecies gene flow fostered, presumably, by the recent invasion of an overlapping ecological niche (S. K. Sheppard, N. D. McCarthy, D. Falush, and M. C. Maiden, Science 320:237-239, 2008). We have reanalyzed the
Campylobacter
multilocus sequence typing database used in the previous study and found that the number of interspecies gene transfer events may actually be too infrequent to account, unequivocally, for species convergence. For instance, only 1 to 2% of the 4,507
Campylobacter
isolates examined appeared to have imported gene alleles from another
Campylobacter
species. Furthermore, by analyzing the available
Campylobacter
genomic sequences, we show that although there seems to be a slightly higher number of exchanged genes between
C. jejuni
and
C. coli
relative to other comparable species (∼10% versus 2 to 3% of the total genes in the genome, respectively), the function and spatial distribution in the genome of the exchanged genes are far from random, and hence, inconsistent with the species convergence hypothesis. In fact, the exchanged genes appear to be limited to a few environmentally selected cellular functions. Accordingly, these genes may represent important pathogenic determinants of pathogenic
Campylobacter
, and convergence of (any) two bacterial species remains to be seen.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology