Identical sequences found in distant genomes reveal frequent horizontal transfer across the bacterial domain

Publication date

2021-06-14

Authors

Sheinman, MichaelISNI 0000000507425404
Arkhipova, KISNI 0000000493355600
Arndt, Peter F.
Dutilh, BasISNI 0000000389464735
Hermsen, RutgerORCID 0000-0003-4633-4877ISNI 0000000394734437
Massip, Florian

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is an essential force in microbial evolution. Despite detailed studies on a variety of systems, a global picture of HGT in the microbial world is still missing. Here, we exploit that HGT creates long identical DNA sequences in the genomes of distant species, which can be found efficiently using alignment-free methods. Our pairwise analysis of 93,481 bacterial genomes identified 138,273 HGT events. We developed a model to explain their statistical properties as well as estimate the transfer rate between pairs of taxa. This reveals that long-distance HGT is frequent: our results indicate that HGT between species from different phyla has occurred in at least 8% of the species. Finally, our results confirm that the function of sequences strongly impacts their transfer rate, which varies by more than three orders of magnitude between different functional categories. Overall, we provide a comprehensive view of HGT, illuminating a fundamental process driving bacterial evolution.

Keywords

General Neuroscience, General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology, General Immunology and Microbiology

Citation

Sheinman, M, Arkhipova, K, Arndt, P F, Dutilh, B E, Hermsen, R & Massip, F 2021, 'Identical sequences found in distant genomes reveal frequent horizontal transfer across the bacterial domain', eLife, vol. 10, e62719. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.62719