Rowan Green, Huw Richards, Deniz Ozbilek, Francesca Tyrrell, Victoria Barton, Ziang Zhang, Simon C Lovell, Danna R Gifford, Mato Lagator, Andrew J McBain, Rok Krašovec, Christopher G Knight
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The rate of spontaneous mutation is a key factor in determining the capacity of a population to adapt to a novel environment, for example, a bacterial population exposed to antibiotics. Genetic and environmental factors controlling the mutation rate commonly also cause shifts in the relative rates of different mutational classes, i.e. the mutational spectrum. When the mutational spectrum is altered, the relatively enriched and depleted mutations may differ in their fitness effects. Here, we explore how a reduced mutation rate and altered mutational spectrum can contribute to adaptation in Escherichia coli. We measure mutation rates across a set of Nudix hydrolase deletants, finding multiple strains with an antimutator phenotype. We focus on the antimutator ΔnudJ, which can cause a 6-fold mutation rate reduction relative to the wildtype, with an altered mutational spectrum biased towards A > C transversions. Its reduced mutation rate, most pronounced at low population densities, appears to occur via NudJ's role in nucleotide and/or prenyl metabolism, with a reduced internal ATP pool. Its effects may be reversed by mutations to genes, including waaZ, affecting the outer membrane. Not only does nudJ deletion reduce the probability of antibiotic resistance arising at all but through enhancing an existing hotspot for low fitness A > C rifampicin resistance mutations reduces the expected fitness of strains when resistance does arise. Thus, our findings with ΔnudJ suggest future anti-evolution drug strategies could suppress spontaneous resistance evolution not only through minimizing resistance mutations but also by specifically limiting access to the fittest mutations.
期刊介绍:
Molecular Biology and Evolution
Journal Overview:
Publishes research at the interface of molecular (including genomics) and evolutionary biology
Considers manuscripts containing patterns, processes, and predictions at all levels of organization: population, taxonomic, functional, and phenotypic
Interested in fundamental discoveries, new and improved methods, resources, technologies, and theories advancing evolutionary research
Publishes balanced reviews of recent developments in genome evolution and forward-looking perspectives suggesting future directions in molecular evolution applications.