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      Horizontally transmitted symbiont populations in deep-sea mussels are genetically isolated: Supplement

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      bioRxiv

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          Abstract

          Eukaryotes are habitats for bacterial organisms where the host colonization and dispersal among individual hosts have consequences for the bacterial ecology and evolution. Vertical symbiont transmission leads to geographic isolation of the microbial population and consequently to genetic isolation of microbiotas from individual hosts. In contrast, the extent of geographic and genetic isolation of horizontally transmitted microbiota is poorly characterized. Here we show that chemosynthetic symbionts of individual Bathymodiolus brooksi mussels constitute genetically isolated populations. The reconstruction of core genome-wide strain sequences from high-resolution metagenomes revealed distinct phylogenetic clades. Nucleotide diversity and strain composition vary along the mussel lifespan and individual hosts show a high degree of genetic isolation. Our results suggest that the uptake of environmental bacteria is a restricted process in B. brooksi, where self-infection of the gill tissue results in serial founder effects during symbiont evolution. We conclude that bacterial colonization dynamics over the host life-cycle is thus an important determinant of population structure and genome evolution of horizontally transmitted symbionts.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          bioRxiv
          February 01 2019
          Article
          10.1101/536854
          9c5a78ba-acf4-43e1-afa8-22b060213939
          © 2019
          History

          Microbiology & Virology
          Microbiology & Virology

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