Competition between Transposable Elements and Mutator Genes in Bacteria
Author(s) -
Tamás Fehér,
Balázs Bogos,
Orsolya Méhi,
Gergely Fekete,
Bálint Csörgő,
Károly Kovács,
György Pósfai,
Balázs Papp,
Laurence D. Hurst,
Csaba Pál
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
molecular biology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.637
H-Index - 218
eISSN - 1537-1719
pISSN - 0737-4038
DOI - 10.1093/molbev/mss122
Subject(s) - biology , transposable element , genetics , genome , gene , mutation accumulation , allele , mutation rate , genome evolution , insertion sequence , mobile genetic elements , evolutionary biology
Although both genotypes with elevated mutation rate (mutators) and mobilization of insertion sequence (IS) elements have substantial impact on genome diversification, their potential interactions are unknown. Moreover, the evolutionary forces driving gradual accumulation of these elements are unclear: Do these elements spread in an initially transposon-free bacterial genome as they enable rapid adaptive evolution? To address these issues, we inserted an active IS1 element into a reduced Escherichia coli genome devoid of all other mobile DNA. Evolutionary laboratory experiments revealed that IS elements increase mutational supply and occasionally generate variants with especially large phenotypic effects. However, their impact on adaptive evolution is small compared with mismatch repair mutator alleles, and hence, the latter impede the spread of IS-carrying strains. Given their ubiquity in natural populations, such mutator alleles could limit early phase of IS element evolution in a new bacterial host. More generally, our work demonstrates the existence of an evolutionary conflict between mutation-promoting mechanisms.
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