4.4 Article

Genetic basis of evolutionary adaptation by Escherichia coli to stressful cycles of freezing, thawing and growth

Journal

GENETICS
Volume 180, Issue 1, Pages 431-443

Publisher

GENETICS SOCIETY AMERICA
DOI: 10.1534/genetics.108.091330

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Microbial evolution experiments offer a powerful approach for coupling changes in complex phenotypes, including fitness and its components, with specific mutations. Here we investigate mutations substituted in 15 lines of Escherichia coli that evolved for 1000 generations under freeze-thaw-growth (FTG) conditions. To investigate the genetic basis of their improvemens, we screened many of the lines for mutations involving insertion sequence (IS) elements and identified two genes where multiple lines had similar mutations. Three lines had IS150 insertions in cls, which encodes cardiolipin synthase, and 8 lines had IS150 insertions in the uspA-usB intergenic region, encoding two universal stress proteins. Another line had an 11-bp deletion is beneficial under the FTG regime in its evolved genetic background. Futher experiments showed that this cls mutation helps maintain membrane fluidity after freezing and thawing and improves freeze-thaw (FT) survival. Reconstruction of isogenic strains also showed that the IS150 insertions in uspA/B are beneficial under the FTG regime. The evolved insertions reduce uspB transcription and increase both FT survival and recovery, but the physiological mechanism for this fitness improvement remains unknown.

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