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The repertoire of ICE in prokaryotes underscores the unity, diversity, and ubiquity of conjugation

Abstract: Horizontal gene transfer shapes the genomes of prokaryotes by allowing rapid acquisition of novel adaptive functions. Conjugation allows the broadest range and the highest gene transfer input per transfer event. While conjugative plasmids have been studied for decades, the number and diversity of integrative conjugative elements (ICE) in prokaryotes remained unknown. We defined a large set of protein profiles of the conjugation machinery to scan over 1,000 genomes of prokaryotes. We found 682 putative conjugative systems among all major phylogenetic clades and showed that ICEs are the most abundant conjugative elements in prokaryotes. Nearly half of the genomes contain a type IV secretion system (T4SS), with larger genomes encoding more conjugative systems. Surprisingly, almost half of the chromosomal T4SS lack co-localized relaxases and, consequently, might be devoted to protein transport instead of conjugation. This class of elements is preponderant among small genomes, is less commonly associated with integrases, and is rarer in plasmids. ICEs and conjugative plasmids in proteobacteria have different preferences for each type of T4SS, but all types exist in both chromosomes and plasmids. Mobilizable elements outnumber self-conjugative elements in both ICEs and plasmids, which suggests an extensive use of T4SS in trans. Our evolutionary analysis indicates that switch of plasmids to and from ICEs were frequent and that extant elements began to differentiate only relatively recently. According to the present results, ICEs are the most abundant conjugative elements in practically all prokaryotic clades and might be far more frequently domesticated into non-conjugative protein transport systems than previously thought. While conjugative plasmids and ICEs have different means of genomic stabilization, their mechanisms of mobility by conjugation show strikingly conserved patterns, arguing for a unitary view of conjugation in shaping the genomes of prokaryotes by horizontal gene transfer.

Other publications of the same journal or congress with authors from the University of Cantabria

 Authorship: Guglielmini J., Quintais L., Garcillán-Barcia M., de la Cruz F., Rocha E.,

 Fuente: PLoS Genetics, 2011, 7(8), e1002222

Publisher: Public Library of Science

 Publication date: 01/08/2011

No. of pages: 11

Publication type: Artículo de Revista

 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002222

ISSN: 1553-7390,1553-7404

 Spanish project: BFU2008-00995/BMC

 European project: info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/248919/EU/Bacterial Computing with Engineered Populations/BACTOCOM/

Publication Url: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002222

Authorship

GUGLIELMINI, JULIEN

QUINTAIS, LEONOR

ROCHA, EDUARDO P. C.