2–6 Jun 2025
Europe/Berlin timezone

Experimental capture of genomic islands defines a widespread class of genetic element capable of non-autonomous transfer

3 Jun 2025, 14:00
30m

Speaker

Yansong Zhao (MPI for Evolutionary Biology)

Description

Bacteria acquire new genes by horizontal gene transfer (HGT). Acquisition is typically mediated by mobile genetic elements (MGEs), however, beyond plasmids, bacteriophages and certain integrative conjugative elements (ICEs), the nature and diversity of MGEs is poorly understood. The bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25 was propagated by serial transfer in the presence of filtrate obtained from garden compost communities. Genome sequencing of derived colonies revealed acquisition of three different mobile elements, each integrated immediately downstream of tmRNA. All are flanked by direct repeats and harbour a tyrosine integrase (intY), followed by a cargo of accessory genes including putative phage defence systems. Although characteristic of genomic islands, MGE-classifiers showed no matches to mobile elements. Interrogation of DNA sequence databases showed that similar elements are widespread in the genus Pseudomonas and beyond, with Vibrio Pathogenicity Island-1 (VPI-1) from V. cholerae being a notable example. Bioinformatic analyses demonstrate frequent transfer among diverse hosts. With focus on a single 55 kb element (I55) we show that intY is necessary for excision and circularisation, that the element is incapable of autonomous horizontal transfer, but is mobilizable – in the absence of direct cell-cell contact – upon addition of community filtrate. Recent evidence from filtrate sequencing suggests that the transfer is mediated by a jumbo phage. Further analyses demonstrate that I55 enhances host fitness in the presence of community filtrate, which stems in part from its ability, equipped by a type II restriction-modification system encoded by I55, to defend against another phage in the filtrate. Together, this work demonstrates the potential for real-time evolution experiments in capturing and characterising mobile genetic elements with phage defence activity.

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