Sex and virulence in <i>Escherichia coli</i>: an evolutionary perspective

Thierry Wirth(University of Konstanz), Daniel Falush(Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology), Ruiting Lan(UNSW Sydney), Frances M. Colles(University of Oxford), Patience Mensa(University of Oxford), Lothar H. Wieler(Freie Universität Berlin), Helge Karch(University of Münster), Peter R. Reeves(The University of Sydney), Martin Maiden(University of Oxford), Howard Ochman(University of Arizona), Mark Achtman(Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology)
Molecular Microbiology
May 4, 2006
Cited by 2,014Open Access
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Abstract

Pathogenic Escherichia coli cause over 160 million cases of dysentery and one million deaths per year, whereas non-pathogenic E. coli constitute part of the normal intestinal flora of healthy mammals and birds. The evolutionary pathways underlying this dichotomy in bacterial lifestyle were investigated by multilocus sequence typing of a global collection of isolates. Specific pathogen types [enterohaemorrhagic E. coli, enteropathogenic E. coli, enteroinvasive E. coli, K1 and Shigella] have arisen independently and repeatedly in several lineages, whereas other lineages contain only few pathogens. Rates of evolution have accelerated in pathogenic lineages, culminating in highly virulent organisms whose genomic contents are altered frequently by increased rates of homologous recombination; thus, the evolution of virulence is linked to bacterial sex. This long-term pattern of evolution was observed in genes distributed throughout the genome, and thereby is the likely result of episodic selection for strains that can escape the host immune response.


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