Medical Journals

Modelling Bacterial Speciation.

Authors:
  • Hanage William P
  • Spratt Brian G
  • Turner Katherine M E
  • Fraser Christophe

From: Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Imperial College London, St Mary’s Hospital Campus, Norfolk Place, London W2 1PGUK.

Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences

  • Publish Date: Nov 2006
  • ISSN: 0962-8436
  • Volume: 361
  • Issue: 1475
  • Pages: 2039-44
  • Medium: Print
  • Language: English
  • Citation (JAMA): Hanage William P, Spratt Brian G, Turner Katherine M E, et al. Modelling Bacterial Speciation.. Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond., B, Biol. Sci. Nov 2006;361:2039-44

Abstract

A central problem in understanding bacterial speciation is how clusters of closely related strains emerge and persist in the face of recombination. We use a neutral Fisher-Wright model in which genotypes, defined by the alleles at 140 house-keeping loci, change in each generation by mutation or recombination, and examine conditions in which an initially uniform population gives rise to resolved clusters. Where recombination occurs at equal frequency between all members of the population, we observe a transition between clonal structure and sexual structure as the rate of recombination increases. In the clonal situation, clearly resolved clusters are regularly formed, break up or go extinct. In the sexual situation, the formation of distinct clusters is prevented by the cohesive force of recombination. Where the rate of recombination is a declining log-linear function of the genetic distance between the donor and recipient strain, distinct clusters emerge even with high rates of recombination. These clusters arise in the absence of selection, and have many of the properties of species, with high recombination rates and thus sexual cohesion within clusters and low rates between clusters. Distance-scaled recombination can thus lead to a population splitting into distinct genotypic clusters, a process that mimics sympatric speciation. However, empirical estimates of the relationship between sequence divergence and recombination rate indicate that the decline in recombination is an insufficiently steep function of genetic distance to generate species in nature under neutral drift, and thus that other mechanisms should be invoked to explain speciation in the presence of recombination.

Mesh Headings (Keywords): Bacteria, Computer Simulation, Genetic Speciation, Genetics, Population, Models, Genetic, Recombination, Genetic


Check for Full Text / PubMed Unique Identifier (PMID): 17062418


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