Extensive Phenotypic Changes Associated with Large-scale Horizontal Gene Transfer

Extensive Phenotypic Changes Associated with Large-scale Horizontal Gene Transfer
Kevin Dougherty, Brian A Smith, Autum F Moore, Shannon Maitland, Chris Fanger, Rachel Murillo, David A Baltrus

Horizontal gene transfer often leads to phenotypic changes within recipient organisms independent of any immediate evolutionary benefits. While secondary phenotypic effects of horizontal transfer (i.e. changes in growth rates) have been demonstrated and studied across a variety of systems using relatively small plasmid and phage, little is known about how size of the acquired region affects the magnitude or number of such costs. Here we describe an amazing breadth of phenotypic changes which occur after a large-scale horizontal transfer event (~1Mb megaplasmid) within Pseudomonas stutzeri including sensitization to various stresses as well as changes in bacterial behavior. These results highlight the power of horizontal transfer to shift pleiotropic relationships and cellular networks within bacterial genomes. They also provide an important context for how secondary effects of transfer can bias evolutionary trajectories and interactions between species. Lastly, these results and system provide a foundation to investigate evolutionary consequences in real time as newly acquired regions are ameliorated and integrated into new genomic contexts.

2 thoughts on “Extensive Phenotypic Changes Associated with Large-scale Horizontal Gene Transfer

  1. Horizontal gene transfer also affects eukaryotic life, and may be the main driver for macroevolutionary progress. This principle is crucial for the strong version of panspermia, which holds that life is older than Earth. Elaboration at panspermia.org.

  2. Pingback: Author post: Extensive Phenotypic Changes Associated with Large-scale Horizontal Gene Transfer | Haldane's Sieve

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