Abstract

The extreme variation in gene content among phylogenetically related microorganisms suggests that gene acquisition, expansion, and loss are important evolutionary forces for adaptation to new environments. Accordingly, phylogenetically disparate organisms that share a habitat may converge in gene content as they adapt to confront shared challenges. This response should be especially pronounced for functional genes that are important for survival in a particular habitat. We illustrate this principle by showing that the repertoires of two different types of carbohydrate-active enzymes, glycoside hydrolases and glycosyltransferases, have converged in bacteria and archaea that live in the human gut and that this convergence is largely due to horizontal gene transfer rather than gene family expansion. We also identify gut microbes that may have more similar dietary niches in the human gut than would be expected based on phylogeny. The techniques used to obtain these results should be broadly applicable to understanding the functional genes and evolutionary processes important for adaptation in many environments and useful for interpreting the large number of reference microbial genome sequences being generated for the International Human Microbiome Project.

Keywords

BiologyHorizontal gene transferGeneAdaptation (eye)ArchaeaMicrobiomePhylogeneticsGenomeEvolutionary biologyConvergent evolutionGeneticsGene familyComputational biology

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Year
2008
Type
article
Volume
105
Issue
39
Pages
15076-15081
Citations
138
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Closed

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Catherine Lozupone, Micah Hamady, Brandi L. Cantarel et al. (2008). The convergence of carbohydrate active gene repertoires in human gut microbes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , 105 (39) , 15076-15081. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0807339105

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DOI
10.1073/pnas.0807339105