4.4 Article

Ancient Darwinian replicators nested within eubacterial genomes

Journal

BIOESSAYS
Volume 45, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bies.202200085

Keywords

endosymbiosis; interactions; levels of selection; population biology

Funding

  1. Max Planck Society
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) Collaborative Research Center [1182, SFB1182]

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This study focuses on REPEN, a class of mobile genetic elements (MGEs) that propagate within bacterial genomes. Unlike other MGEs, REPENs can persist for millions of years within individual lineages and form beneficial associations with host genomes. The study reveals the complex interactions between REPENs and host genomes, providing a new perspective on our understanding of MGEs.
Integrative mobile genetic elements (MGEs), such as transposons and insertion sequences, propagate within bacterial genomes, but persistence times in individual lineages are short. For long-term survival, MGEs must continuously invade new hosts by horizontal transfer. Theoretically, MGEs that persist for millions of years in single lineages, and are thus subject to vertical inheritance, should not exist. Here we draw attention to an exception - a class of MGE termed REPIN. REPINs are non-autonomous MGEs whose duplication depends on non-jumping RAYT transposases. Comparisons of REPINs and typical MGEs show that replication rates of REPINs are orders of magnitude lower, REPIN population size fluctuations correlate with changes in available genome space, REPIN conservation depends on RAYT function, and REPIN diversity accumulates within host lineages. These data lead to the hypothesis that REPINs form enduring, beneficial associations with eubacterial chromosomes. Given replicative nesting, our hypothesis predicts conflicts arising from the diverging effects of selection acting simultaneously on REPINs and host genomes. Evidence in support comes from patterns of REPIN abundance and diversity in two distantly related bacterial species. Together this bolsters the conclusion that REPINs are the genetic counterpart of mutualistic endosymbiotic bacteria.

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