Pseudomonas aeruginosa notoriously adapts to the airways of people with cystic fibrosis (CF), yet how infection-site biogeography and associated evolutionary processes vary as lifelong infections progress remains unclear. Here we test the hypothesis that early adaptations promoting aggregation influence evolutionary-genetic trajectories by examining longitudinal P. aeruginosa from the sinuses of six adults with CF. Highly host-adapted lineages harbored mutator genotypes displaying signatures of early genome degradation associated with recent host restriction. Using an advanced imaging technique (MiPACT-HCR [microbial identification after passive clarity technique]), we find population structure tracks with genome degradation, with the most host-adapted, genome-degraded P. aeruginosa (the mutators) residing in small, sparse aggregates. We propose that following initial adaptive evolution in larger populations under strong selection for aggregation, P. aeruginosa persists in small, fragmented populations that experience stronger effects of genetic drift. These conditions enrich for mutators and promote degenerative genome evolution. Our findings underscore the importance of infection-site biogeography to pathogen evolution.
Adaptation and genomic erosion in fragmented Pseudomonas aeruginosa populations in the sinuses of people with cystic fibrosis.
囊性纤维化患者鼻窦中铜绿假单胞菌种群的适应和基因组侵蚀
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作者:Armbruster Catherine R, Marshall Christopher W, Garber Arkadiy I, Melvin Jeffrey A, Zemke Anna C, Moore John, Zamora Paula F, Li Kelvin, Fritz Ian L, Manko Christopher D, Weaver Madison L, Gaston Jordan R, Morris Alison, Methé Barbara, DePas William H, Lee Stella E, Cooper Vaughn S, Bomberger Jennifer M
| 期刊: | Cell Reports | 影响因子: | 6.900 |
| 时间: | 2021 | 起止号: | 2021 Oct 19; 37(3):109829 |
| doi: | 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.109829 | 研究方向: | 其它 |
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