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Home › Publications › Genomic changes associated with the evolutionary transitions of Nostoc to a plant symbiont

Genomic changes associated with the evolutionary transitions of Nostoc to a plant symbiont

Published in:

Mol Biol Evol (Mar 15 2018)

Author(s):

Warshan, D., Liaimer, A., Pederson, E., Kim, S. Y., Shapiro, N., Woyke, T., Altermark, B., Pawlowski, K., Weyman, P. D., Dupont, C. L., Rasmussen, U.

DOI:

10.1093/molbev/msy029

Abstract:

The cyanobacteria belonging to the genus Nostoc comprise free-living strains but also facultative plant-symbionts. Symbiotic strains can enter into symbiosis with taxonomically diverse range of host plants. Little is known about genomic changes associated with evolutionary transition of Nostoc from free-living to plant symbiont. Here we compared the genomes derived from eleven symbiotic Nostoc strains isolated from different host plants and infer phylogenetic relationships between strains. Phylogenetic reconstructions of 89 Nostocales showed that symbiotic Nostoc strains with a broad host range, entering epiphytic and intracellular or extracellular endophytic interactions, form a monophyletic clade indicating a common evolutionary history. A polyphyletic origin was found for Nostoc strains which enter only extracellular symbioses, and inference of transfer events implied that this trait was likely acquired several times in the evolution of the Nostocales. Symbiotic Nostoc strains showed enriched functions in transport and metabolism of organic sulfur, chemotaxis and motility, as well as the uptake of phosphate, branched-chain amino acid, and ammonium. The genomes of the intracellular clade differ from that of other Nostoc strains, with a gain/enrichment of genes encoding proteins to generate L-methionine from sulfite and pathways for the degradation of the plant metabolites vanillin and vanillate, and of the macromolecule xylan present in plant cell-walls. These compounds could function as C sources for members of the intracellular clade. Molecular clock analysis indicated that the intracellular clade emerged ca. 600 million years ago, suggesting that intracellular Nostoc symbioses predate the origin of land plants and the emergence of their extant hosts.

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