The evolution of insertion sequences within enteric bacteria

Citation:

Lawrence, JG, H Ochman, and DL Hartl. 1992. “The evolution of insertion sequences within enteric bacteria.” Genetics 131: 9-20.

Date Published:

May

Abstract:

To identify mechanisms that influence the evolution of bacterial transposons, DNA sequence variation was evaluated among homologs of insertion sequences IS1, IS3 and IS30 from natural strains of Escherichia coli and related enteric bacteria. The nucleotide sequences within each class of IS were highly conserved among E. coli strains, over 99.7% similar to a consensus sequence. When compared to the range of nucleotide divergence among chromosomal genes, these data indicate high turnover and rapid movement of the transposons among clonal lineages of E. coli. In addition, length polymorphism among IS appears to be far less frequent than in eukaryotic transposons, indicating that nonfunctional elements comprise a smaller fraction of bacterial transposon populations than found in eukaryotes. IS present in other species of enteric bacteria are substantially divergent from E. coli elements, indicating that IS are mobilized among bacterial species at a reduced rate. However, homologs of IS1 and IS3 from diverse species provide evidence that recombination events and horizontal transfer of IS among species have both played major roles in the evolution of these elements. IS3 elements from E. coli and Shigella show multiple, nested, intragenic recombinations with a distantly related transposon, and IS1 homologs from diverse taxa reveal a mosaic structure indicative of multiple recombination and horizontal transfer events.

Notes:

Lawrence, J GOchman, HHartl, D LengGM 40322/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/GM 40995/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.1992/05/01Genetics. 1992 May;131(1):9-20.

Last updated on 05/20/2015