TY - JOUR
T1 - The Fitness Effects of Codon Composition of the Horizontally Transferred Antibiotic Resistance Genes Intensify at Sub-lethal Antibiotic Levels
AU - Shaferman, Michael
AU - Gencel, Melis
AU - Alon, Noga
AU - Alasad, Khawla
AU - Rotblat, Barak
AU - Serohijos, Adrian W.R.
AU - Alfonta, Lital
AU - Bershtein, Shimon
N1 - Funding Information: We thank Adrian I. Levy for his feedback on the manuscript. S.B. was supported by the Israel Science Foundation personal research grant 593/21. B. R. was supported by the Israel Science Foundation personal grant 1436/19. Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.
PY - 2023/6/1
Y1 - 2023/6/1
N2 - The rampant variability in codon bias existing between bacterial genomes is expected to interfere with horizontal gene transfer (HGT), a phenomenon that drives bacterial adaptation. However, delineating the constraints imposed by codon bias on functional integration of the transferred genes is complicated by multiple genomic and functional barriers controlling HGT, and by the dependence of the evolutionary outcomes of HGT on the host's environment. Here, we designed an experimental system in which codon composition of the transferred genes is the only variable triggering fitness change of the host. We replaced Escherichia coli's chromosomal folA gene encoding dihydrofolate reductase, an essential enzyme that constitutes a target for trimethoprim, with combinatorial libraries of synonymous codons of folA genes from trimethoprim-sensitive Listeria grayi and trimethoprim-resistant Neisseria sicca. The resulting populations underwent selection at a range of trimethoprim concentrations, and the ensuing changes in variant frequencies were used to infer the fitness effects of the individual combinations of codons. We found that when HGT causes overstabilization of the 5′-end mRNA, the fitness contribution of mRNA folding stability dominates over that of codon optimality. The 5′-end overstabilization can also lead to mRNA accumulation outside of the polysome, thus preventing the decay of the foreign transcripts despite the codon composition-driven reduction in translation efficiency. Importantly, the fitness effects of mRNA stability or codon optimality become apparent only at sub-lethal levels of trimethoprim individually tailored for each library, emphasizing the central role of the host's environment in shaping the codon bias compatibility of horizontally transferred genes.
AB - The rampant variability in codon bias existing between bacterial genomes is expected to interfere with horizontal gene transfer (HGT), a phenomenon that drives bacterial adaptation. However, delineating the constraints imposed by codon bias on functional integration of the transferred genes is complicated by multiple genomic and functional barriers controlling HGT, and by the dependence of the evolutionary outcomes of HGT on the host's environment. Here, we designed an experimental system in which codon composition of the transferred genes is the only variable triggering fitness change of the host. We replaced Escherichia coli's chromosomal folA gene encoding dihydrofolate reductase, an essential enzyme that constitutes a target for trimethoprim, with combinatorial libraries of synonymous codons of folA genes from trimethoprim-sensitive Listeria grayi and trimethoprim-resistant Neisseria sicca. The resulting populations underwent selection at a range of trimethoprim concentrations, and the ensuing changes in variant frequencies were used to infer the fitness effects of the individual combinations of codons. We found that when HGT causes overstabilization of the 5′-end mRNA, the fitness contribution of mRNA folding stability dominates over that of codon optimality. The 5′-end overstabilization can also lead to mRNA accumulation outside of the polysome, thus preventing the decay of the foreign transcripts despite the codon composition-driven reduction in translation efficiency. Importantly, the fitness effects of mRNA stability or codon optimality become apparent only at sub-lethal levels of trimethoprim individually tailored for each library, emphasizing the central role of the host's environment in shaping the codon bias compatibility of horizontally transferred genes.
KW - bacterial adaptation
KW - codon bias
KW - codon optimality
KW - horizontal gene transfer
KW - mRNA folding stability
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85163154642&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/molbev/msad123
DO - 10.1093/molbev/msad123
M3 - Article
C2 - 37221009
SN - 0737-4038
VL - 40
JO - Molecular Biology and Evolution
JF - Molecular Biology and Evolution
IS - 6
M1 - msad123
ER -