Artículo
Comparative Genomics of Synechococcus elongatus Explains the Phenotypic Diversity of the Strains
Autor/es | Adomako, Marie
Ernst, Dustin Simkovsky, Ryan Chao, Yi Yun Wang, Jingtong Fang, Mingxu Bouchier, Christiane López Igual, Rocío Mazel, Didier Gugger, Muriel Golden, Susan S. |
Departamento | Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Bioquímica Vegetal y Biología Molecular |
Fecha de publicación | 2022 |
Fecha de depósito | 2024-07-03 |
Publicado en |
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Resumen | Strains of the freshwater cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus were first isolated approximately 60 years ago, and PCC 7942 is well established as a model for photosynthesis, circadian biology, and biotechnology research. ... Strains of the freshwater cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus were first isolated approximately 60 years ago, and PCC 7942 is well established as a model for photosynthesis, circadian biology, and biotechnology research. The recent isolation of UTEX 3055 and subsequent discoveries in biofilm and phototaxis phenotypes suggest that lab strains of S. elongatus are highly domesticated. We performed a comprehensive genome comparison among the available genomes of S. elongatus and sequenced two additional laboratory strains to trace the loss of native phenotypes from the standard lab strains and determine the genetic basis of useful phenotypes. The genome comparison analysis provides a pangenome description of S. elongatus, as well as correction of extensive errors in the published sequence for the type strain PCC 6301. The comparison of gene sets and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) among strains clarifies strain isolation histories and, together with large-scale genome differences, supports a hypothesis of laboratory domestication. Prophage genes in laboratory strains, but not UTEX 3055, affect pigmentation, while unique genes in UTEX 3055 are necessary for phototaxis. The genomic differences identified in this study include previously reported SNPs that are, in reality, sequencing errors, as well as SNPs and genome differences that have phenotypic consequences. One SNP in the circadian response regulator rpaA that has caused confusion is clarified here as belonging to an aberrant clone of PCC 7942, used for the published genome sequence, that has confounded the interpretation of circadian fitness research. |
Agencias financiadoras | National Institutes of Health. United States |
Identificador del proyecto | F32GM130070
R35GM118290 |
Cita | Adomako, M., Ernst, D., Simkovsky, R., Chao, Y.Y., Wang, J., Fang, M.,...,Golden, S.S. (2022). Comparative Genomics of Synechococcus elongatus Explains the Phenotypic Diversity of the Strains. mBio, 13 (3). https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00862-22. |
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