Distribution and Evolutionary History of Sialic Acid Catabolism in the Phylum Actinobacteria

MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM(2022)

引用 5|浏览4
暂无评分
摘要
Sialic adds are present in humans and other metazoans, playing essential roles in physiological and pathological processes. Commensal and pathogenic bacteria have evolved the capacity to utilize sialic acids as nutrient and energy sources. However, in some actinobacteria, sialic acid catabolism (SAC) is associated with free-living populations. To unravel the distribution and evolutionary history of SAC in the phylum Actinobacteria, we analyzed the presence and diversity of the putative SAC gene duster (non) in 7,180 high-quality, nonredundant actinobacterial genomes that covered 1,969 species. The results showed that similar to 13% of actinobacterial species had the potential to utilize sialic acids, with 45 species capable of anhydro-SAC, all except two of them through the canonical pathway. These species belonged to 20 orders and 81 genera, with similar to 36% of them from four genera, Actinomyces, Bifidobacterium, Corynebacterium, and Streptomyces. Moreover, similar to 40% of the nan-positive species are free living. Phylogenetic analysis of the key nan genes, nanA, nanK, and nanE, revealed a strong signal of horizontal gene transfer (HGT), accompanied with vertical inheritance and gene loss. This evolutionary pattern led to high diversity and differential distribution of nan among actinobacterial taxa and might cause the cluster to spread to some free-living species while losing in some host-associated species. The evolution of SAC in actinobacteria probably represents the evolution of certain kinds of noncore bacterial functions for environmental adaptation and lifestyle switch, in which HGT plays a dominant role. IMPORTANCE Sialic acids play essential roles in the physiology of humans and other metazoan animals, and microbial sialic acid catabolism (SAC) is one of the processes critical for pathogenesis. To date, microbial SAC is studied mainly in commensals and pathogens, while its distribution in free-living microbes and evolutionary pathway remain largely unexplored. Here, by examining all actinobacterial genomes available, we demonstrate that putative SAC is present in a small proportion of actinobacterial species, of which, however, similar to 40% are free-living species. We also reveal remarkable difference in the distribution of SAC among actinobacterial taxa and high diversity of the putative SAC gene clusters. HGT plays a significant role in the evolution of SAC, accompanied with vertical inheritance and gene loss. Our results provide a comprehensive and systematic picture of the distribution and evolutionary history of SAC in actinobacteria, expanding the current knowledge on bacterial adaptation and diversification.
更多
查看译文
关键词
sialic acid catabolism, Actinobacteria, evolution, distribution, horizontal gene transfer, free-living species, environmental adaptation
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要