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Dryad

Data from: Purifying selection and molecular adaptation in the genome of Verminephrobacter, the heritable symbiotic bacteria of earthworms

Cite this dataset

Bataillon, Thomas et al. (2012). Data from: Purifying selection and molecular adaptation in the genome of Verminephrobacter, the heritable symbiotic bacteria of earthworms [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.9118

Abstract

While genomic erosion is common among intracellular symbionts, patterns of genome evolution in heritable extracellular endosymbionts remain elusive. We study vertically transmitted extracellular endosymbionts (Verminephrobacter, Betaproteobacteria) that form a beneficial, species-specific, and evolutionarily old (60-130 MYA) association with earthworms. We assembled a draft genome of Verminephrobacter aporrectodeae and compared it to the genomes of Verminephrobacter eiseniae and two non-symbiotic close relatives (Acidovorax). Similar to V. eiseniae, the V. aporrectodeae genome was not markedly reduced in size and showed no A-T bias. We characterized the strength of purifying selection (dN/dS) and codon usage bias in 876 orthologous genes. Symbiont genomes exhibited strong purifying selection (dN/dS = 0.09 ± 0.07), although transition to symbiosis entailed relaxation of purifying selection as evidenced by 50% higher values and less codon usage bias in symbiont compared to reference genomes. Relaxation was not evenly distributed among functional gene categories but was overrepresented in genes involved in signal transduction and cell envelope biogenesis. The same gene categories also harbored instances of positive selection in the Verminephrobacter clade. In total, positive selection was detected in 89 genes, including also genes involved in DNA metabolism, tRNA modification, and TonB-dependent iron uptake, potentially highlighting functions important in symbiosis. Our results suggest that the transition to symbiosis was accompanied by molecular adaptation, while purifying selection was only moderately relaxed, despite the evolutionary age and stability of the host-association. We hypothesize that bi-parental transmission of symbionts and rare genetic mixing during transmission can prevent genome erosion in heritable symbionts.

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