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Genome evolution of Campylobacter jejuni during experimental adaptation

Posted on:2013-09-21Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Michigan State UniversityCandidate:Jerome, John PaulFull Text:PDF
GTID:2454390008464854Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:
Campylobacter jejuni is a leading cause of foodborne bacterial enteritis in humans. An important reservoir for C. jejuni is in chickens, but it has been shown to colonize a large host range. Passage through a mouse model of campylobacteriosis resulted in a hypervirulent phenotype in mice for C. jejuni strain NCTC11168. After analyzing the wild-type and mouse-adapted variants by phenotype assays, expression microarray, pulse-field gel electrophoresis and whole genome sequencing we discovered that the genetic changes in the mouse-adapted variant were confined to thirteen hypermutable regions of DNA in contingency loci. We also show that specific contingency loci changes occurred in parallel during mouse infection when reisolates from multiple mice were analyzed. Furthermore, a mathematical model that considers contingency loci mutation rates and patterns does not explain the observed changes. Taken together, this is the first experimental evidence that contingency loci play a role in the rapid genetic adaptation of C. jejuni to a host, which results in increased virulence.;In contrast to the observed virulence increase by serial host passage, we showed that C. jejuni rapidly loses an essential host colonization determinant during adaptive laboratory evolution. Passage in broth culture selected for flagellar motility deficient C. jejuni cells in parallel for five independently evolved lines. Moreover, the loss of motility occurred by two genetic mechanisms: reversible and irreversible. Reversible loss of motility occurred early during broth adaptation, followed by irreversible motility loss in the majority of cells by the end of the experiment. Whole genome sequencing implicated diverse mutation events that resulted in the loss of gene expression necessary for flagellar biosynthesis. Furthermore, reversible mutations in homopolymeric DNA tracts of adenine/thymine residues, and irreversible types of mutation such as gene deletion, were discovered in the broth-evolved populations. In all evolved lines, an alternative sigma factor necessary for flagellar structural gene expression was removed from the genome.;Overall, this dissertation contains the first accounts of C. jejuni experimental evolution. The results provide insight into the biological importance of reversible mutations in homopolymeric DNA tracts, and provide a basis for future studies of C. jejuni evolvability.
Keywords/Search Tags:Jejuni, DNA, Genome, Contingency loci, Evolution, Experimental, Reversible
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