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dc.date.accessioned 2020-10-29T13:11:56Z
dc.date.available 2020-10-29T13:11:56Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.uri http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/107915
dc.description.abstract Prokaryotes represent an ancestral lineage in the tree of life and constitute optimal resources for investigating the evolution of genomes in unicellular organisms. Many bacterial species possess multipartite genomes offering opportunities to study functional variations among replicons, how and where new genes integrate into a genome, and how genetic information within a lineage becomes encoded and evolves. To analyze these issues, we focused on the model soil bacterium Sinorhizobium meliloti, which harbors a chromosome, a chromid (pSymB), a megaplasmid (pSymA), and, in many strains, one or more accessory plasmids. The analysis of several genomes, together with 1.4 Mb of accessory plasmid DNA that we purified and sequenced, revealed clearly different functional profiles associated with each genomic entity. pSymA, in particular, exhibited remarkable interstrain variation and a high density of singletons (unique, exclusive genes) featuring functionalities and modal codon usages that were very similar to those of the plasmidome. All this evidence reinforces the idea of a close relationship between pSymA and the plasmidome. Correspondence analyses revealed that adaptation of codon usages to the translational machinery increased from plasmidome to pSymA to pSymB to chromosome, corresponding as such to the ancestry of each replicon in the lineage. We demonstrated that chromosomal core genes gradually adapted to the translational machinery, reminiscent of observations in several bacterial taxa for genes with high expression levels. Such findings indicate a previously undiscovered codon usage adaptation associated with the chromosomal core information that likely operates to improve bacterial fitness. We present a comprehensive model illustrating the central findings described here, discussed in the context of the changes occurring during the evolution of a multipartite prokaryote genome. Importance: Bacterial genomes usually include many thousands of genes which are expressed with diverse spatial-temporal patterns and intensities. A well-known evidence is that highly expressed genes, such as the ribosomal and other translation-related proteins (RTRPs), have accommodated their codon usage to optimize translation efficiency and accuracy. Using a bioinformatic approach, we identify core-genes sets with different ancestries, and demonstrate that selection processes that optimize codon usage are not restricted to RTRPs but extended at a genomewide scale. Such findings highlight, for the first time, a previously undiscovered adaptation strategy associated with the chromosomal-core information. Contrasted with the translationally more adapted genes, singletons (i.e., exclusive genes, including those of the plasmidome) appear as the gene pool with the less-ameliorated codon usage in the lineage. A comprehensive summary describing the inter- and intra-replicon heterogeneity of codon usages in a complex prokaryote genome is presented. en
dc.language en es
dc.subject codon usage es
dc.subject genome evolution es
dc.subject host-microbe interaction es
dc.subject mobile genetic elements es
dc.subject plasmidome es
dc.title Codon Usage Heterogeneity in the Multipartite Prokaryote Genome: Selection-Based Coding Bias Associated with Gene Location, Expression Level, and Ancestry en
dc.type Articulo es
sedici.identifier.uri http://europepmc.org/backend/ptpmcrender.fcgi?accid=PMC6538778&blobtype=pdf es
sedici.identifier.uri https://mbio.asm.org/content/10/3/e00505-19 es
sedici.identifier.other pmid:31138741 es
sedici.identifier.other pmcid:PMC6538778 es
sedici.identifier.other http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00505-19 es
sedici.identifier.issn 2150-7511 es
sedici.creator.person López, José Luis es
sedici.creator.person Lozano, Mauricio Javier es
sedici.creator.person Lagares, Antonio es
sedici.creator.person Fabre, María Laura es
sedici.creator.person Draghi, Walter Omar es
sedici.creator.person Del Papa, María Florencia es
sedici.creator.person Pistorio, Mariano es
sedici.creator.person Becker, A. es
sedici.creator.person Wibberg, D. es
sedici.creator.person Schlüter, A. es
sedici.creator.person Pühler, A. es
sedici.creator.person Blom, J. es
sedici.creator.person Goesmann, A. es
sedici.creator.person Lagares, Antonio es
sedici.subject.materias Ciencias Exactas es
sedici.subject.materias Biología es
sedici.description.fulltext true es
mods.originInfo.place Facultad de Ciencias Exactas es
mods.originInfo.place Instituto de Biotecnologia y Biologia Molecular es
sedici.subtype Articulo es
sedici.rights.license Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
sedici.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
sedici.description.peerReview peer-review es
sedici.relation.journalTitle mBio es
sedici.relation.journalVolumeAndIssue vol. 10, no. 3 es


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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)