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Ancestral acquisitions,gene flow and multiple evolutionary trajectories of the type three secretion system and effectors in Xanthomonas plant pathogens
Authors:Déborah Merda  Martial Briand  Eran Bosis  Céline Rousseau  Perrine Portier  Matthieu Barret  Marie‐Agnès Jacques  Marion Fischer‐Le Saux
Institution:1. IRHS, Agrocampus‐Ouest, INRA, Université d'Angers, SFR 4207 QuaSaV, Beaucouzé, France;2. Department of Biotechnology Engineering, ORT Braude College, Karmiel, Israel
Abstract:Deciphering the evolutionary history and transmission patterns of virulence determinants is necessary to understand the emergence of novel pathogens. The main virulence determinant of most pathogenic proteobacteria is the type three secretion system (T3SS). The Xanthomonas genus includes bacteria responsible for numerous epidemics in agroecosystems worldwide and represents a major threat to plant health. The main virulence factor of Xanthomonas is the Hrp2 family T3SS; however, this system is not conserved in all strains and it has not been previously determined whether the distribution of T3SS in this bacterial genus has resulted from losses or independent acquisitions. Based on comparative genomics of 82 genome sequences representing the diversity of the genus, we have inferred three ancestral acquisitions of the Hrp2 cluster during Xanthomonas evolution followed by subsequent losses in some commensal strains and re‐acquisition in some species. While mutation was the main force driving polymorphism at the gene level, interspecies homologous recombination of large fragments expanding through several genes shaped Hrp2 cluster polymorphism. Horizontal gene transfer of the entire Hrp2 cluster also occurred. A reduced core effectome composed of xopF1, xopM, avrBs2 and xopR was identified that may allow commensal strains overcoming plant basal immunity. In contrast, stepwise accumulation of numerous type 3 effector genes was shown in successful pathogens responsible for epidemics. Our data suggest that capacity to intimately interact with plants through T3SS would be an ancestral trait of xanthomonads. Since its acquisition, T3SS has experienced a highly dynamic evolutionary history characterized by intense gene flux between species that may reflect its role in host adaptation.
Keywords:comparative genomics  homologous recombination  horizontal gene transfer  hrp cluster  pathogen emergence  phylogenomics
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