This is a preprint.
A ubiquitous mobile genetic element disarms a bacterial antagonist of the gut microbiota
- PMID: 37662397
- PMCID: PMC10473720
- DOI: 10.1101/2023.08.25.553775
A ubiquitous mobile genetic element disarms a bacterial antagonist of the gut microbiota
Update in
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A ubiquitous mobile genetic element changes the antagonistic weaponry of a human gut symbiont.Science. 2024 Oct 25;386(6720):414-420. doi: 10.1126/science.adj9504. Epub 2024 Oct 24. Science. 2024. PMID: 39446952 Free PMC article.
Abstract
DNA transfer is ubiquitous in the gut microbiota, especially among species of Bacteroidales. In silico analyses have revealed hundreds of mobile genetic elements shared between these species, yet little is known about the phenotypes they encode, their effects on fitness, or pleiotropic consequences for the recipient's genome. Here, we show that acquisition of a ubiquitous integrative and conjugative element encoding an antagonistic system shuts down the native contact-dependent antagonistic system of Bacteroides fragilis . Despite inactivating the native antagonism system, mobile element acquisition increases fitness of the B. fragilis transconjugant over its progenitor by arming it with a new weapon. This DNA transfer causes the strain to change allegiances so that it no longer targets ecosystem members containing the same element yet is armed for communal defense.
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