Costs and benefits of diversity-generating immune mechanisms
Sünderhauf, David
Date: 26 September 2017
Publisher
University of Exeter
Degree Title
MbyRes in Biological Sciences
Abstract
Organisms across the tree of life have evolved diversity-generating immune
mechanisms (DGMs) to counteract selective pressures imposed by their parasites.
Increased host diversity has a major impact on parasite epidemics as well
as host evolution. Being virtually ubiquitous, bacteria and their predators, bacteriophage
(phage), are ...
Organisms across the tree of life have evolved diversity-generating immune
mechanisms (DGMs) to counteract selective pressures imposed by their parasites.
Increased host diversity has a major impact on parasite epidemics as well
as host evolution. Being virtually ubiquitous, bacteria and their predators, bacteriophage
(phage), are essential to every ecological niche on earth and key players
in industrial and healthcare applications. Bacterial DGMs include CRISPRCas
and Restriction-Modification (RM) shufflons. Type I RM methylates self-DNA
and cleaves unmethylated invasive DNA, however phage can escape from this
response by becoming methylated themselves. Shufflons recombine genes coding
for the RM specificity subunit, creating population-level diversity in recognition
sequences; this is thought to limit phage escape. We investigate the Mycoplasma
pulmonis Mpu shufflon, which has the capacity to generate 30 different specificity
subunits, of which we predict at least 12 to be functional. We create a model
system by adapting the Mpu shufflon for expression in Pseudomonas aeruginosa
PA14. Transforming a CRISPR-deficient PA14 host with RM, we uncover large
autoimmune costs when inducing a novel RM system with only limited benefits of
low-level phage resistance. When expressed together, CRISPR-Cas and RM
provide PA14 with complete resistance against most Pseudomonas phages
tested and partial resistance against lipopolysaccharide-specific phage LMA2.
Surprisingly, the RM restriction subunit is not an essential component for this effect;
the mechanistic basis of this synergistic interaction between DNA methylation
and CRISPR-Cas systems requires further investigation. The lack of detectable
spacer acquisition, required for CRISPR-Cas to effectively target the infecting
phage, suggests these effects are likely due to altered host gene expression
that in turn impacts the ability of phage to infect. Future studies need to address
questions about the molecular basis of resistance in this model system.
MbyRes Dissertations
Doctoral College
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