GSE138099 Molecular causes of an evolutionary shift along the parasitism-mutualism continuum in a bacterial symbiont

Contributors : Paul Herrera ; Lisa Schuster ; Cecilia Wentrup ; Lena K önig ; Thomas Kempinger ; Hyunsoo Na ; Jasmin Schwarz ; Stephan Köstlbacher ; Florian Wascher ; Markus Zojer ; Thomas Rattei ; Matthias HornSeries Type : Expression profiling by high throughput sequencingOrganism : Parachlamydia acanthamoebae UV-7Symbiosis is a ubiquitous phenomenon in nature, and these inter-species interactions have a massive impact on organisms, shaping the world around us today. The relationship between the partners in microbial symbioses have been described as existing along a parasitism-mutualism continuum, and the dynamics of this continuum are dependent upon numerous genotypic and environmental factors. Theoretical and experimental studies show that vertical transmission (VT) leads to the evolution of mutualistic traits, whereas horizontal transmission (HT) facilitates the emergence of parasitic features. However, these studies focused on phenotypic data, and we know little about underlying molecular changes at the genomic level. Here we show that a dramatic shift in the frequency of genetic variants, coupled with major changes in gene expression, allow an obligate intracellular bacterial symbiont to alter its position in the mutualism-parasitism continuum depending on the mode of between-host transmission. We found that increased virulence in horizontally transmitted chlamydiae residing in amoebae was a result of processes occurring at the infectious stage of the chl...
Source: GEO: Gene Expression Omnibus - Category: Genetics & Stem Cells Tags: Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing Parachlamydia acanthamoebae UV-7 Source Type: research