Mycoplasma, the smallest self-replicating organism with a minimal metabolism and little genomic redundancy, is expected to be a close approximation to the minimal set of genes needed to sustain bacterial life. This study employs comparative evolutionary analysis of twenty Mycoplasma genomes to gain an improved understanding of essential genes. By analyzing the core genome of mycoplasmas, we finally revealed the conserved essential genes set for mycoplasma survival. Further analysis showed that the core genome set has many characteristics in common with experimentally identified essential genes. Several key genes, which are related to DNA replication and repair and can be disrupted in transposon mutagenesis studies, may be critical for bacteria survival especially over long period natural selection. Phylogenomic reconstructions based on 3,355 homologous groups allowed robust estimation of phylogenetic relatedness among mycoplasma strains. To obtain deeper insight into the relative roles of molecular evolution in pathogen adaptation to their hosts, we also analyzed the positive selection pressures on particular sites and lineages. There appears to be an approximate correlation between the divergence of species and the level of positive selection detected in corresponding lineages.
BackgroundMycoplasma hyopneumoniae is the causative agent of porcine enzootic pneumonia (EP), a mild, chronic pneumonia of swine. Despite presenting with low direct mortality, EP is responsible for major economic losses in the pig industry. To identify the virulence-associated determinants of M. hyopneumoniae, we determined the whole genome sequence of M. hyopneumoniae strain 168 and its attenuated high-passage strain 168-L and carried out comparative genomic analyses.ResultsWe performed the first comprehensive analysis of M. hyopneumoniae strain 168 and its attenuated strain and made a preliminary survey of coding sequences (CDSs) that may be related to virulence. The 168-L genome has a highly similar gene content and order to that of 168, but is 4,483 bp smaller because there are 60 insertions and 43 deletions in 168-L. Besides these indels, 227 single nucleotide variations (SNVs) were identified. We further investigated the variants that affected CDSs, and compared them to reported virulence determinants. Notably, almost all of the reported virulence determinants are included in these variants affected CDSs. In addition to variations previously described in mycoplasma adhesins (P97, P102, P146, P159, P216, and LppT), cell envelope proteins (P95), cell surface antigens (P36), secreted proteins and chaperone protein (DnaK), mutations in genes related to metabolism and growth may also contribute to the attenuated virulence in 168-L. Furthermore, many mutations were located in the previously described repeat motif, which may be of primary importance for virulence.ConclusionsWe studied the virulence attenuation mechanism of M. hyopneumoniae by comparative genomic analysis of virulent strain 168 and its attenuated high-passage strain 168-L. Our findings provide a preliminary survey of CDSs that may be related to virulence. While these include reported virulence-related genes, other novel virulence determinants were also detected. This new information will form the foundation of future investigations into the pathogenesis of M. hyopneumoniae and facilitate the design of new vaccines.
POLE/POLD1 gene variants have been suggested as potential markers for immunotherapy due to their significant association with the tumor mutational burden (TMB), an effective indicator for response prediction in immunotherapy. However, the correlation of POLE/POLD1 variants with MSI, MMR, TMB, MMR-related and key driver gene mutations needs to be defined to support patient recruitment and therapeutic effect assessment in immunotherapy. 1,392 Chinese cancer patients were recruited, and the correlation of POLE/POLD1 variants with existing immunotherapeutic markers and cancer pathways was investigated. A next-generation sequencing panel including 605 cancer-related genes was used for variant sequencing. It was found that the frequency of POLE variants was not statistically different from that in COSMIC database, while the frequency of POLD1 variants was significantly higher in lung cancer. c.857 C > G and c.2091dupC were potential high frequency variants in Chinese cancer patients. Patients carrying POLE damaging variants were significantly younger than POLE/POLD1 WT patients. Patients carrying POLE/POLD1 damaging variants exhibited significantly higher TMB and frequency of MMR gene variants than POLE/POLD1 WT patients. Patients with POLE damaging variants also exhibited significantly higher frequency of driver gene variants than POLE/POLD1 WT patients. Further analysis showed that POLE damaging variants may affect the cancer development through MMR, TGFβ and RTK/RAS/RAF signaling pathways, and POLD1 through MMR pathways. In conclusion, this study identified key characteristics and regions of POLE/POLD1 genes that correlates with TMB, MMR gene mutations and key driver gene mutations, and provided theoretical and practical basis for patient selection based on POLE/POLD1 gene status in immunotherapy.
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