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P1: JYD 0521834651c04.xml CB884/McFall-Ngai 0 521 83465 1 February 21, 2005 CHAPTER 4 Industrial revolution and microbial evolution Fernando de la Cruz and Julian Davies 73 4.1. INTRODUCTION There is significant controversy over the topic of the molecular mechanisms of evolution between supporters of the role of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) (de la Cruz and Davies 2000; Ochman et al. 2000; Bushman 2002) versus those who support a strict “tree of life” model based on ribosomal RNA sequences of living organisms (Kurland et al. 2003). We would like to propose in this chapter that this dispute is somewhat artificial and the dichotomy is essentially fragile. Both sides are fundamentally correct because both processes are important, but complementary. This is so because the corresponding mechanisms involve different time scales, although they both play indisputable roles in the evolution of the haploid unicellular prokaryotes. The different time scales underscore the two levels at which HGT and classical evolution play independent roles in bacterial genome organization. In the same way that optical and electron microscopy operate on different physical scales to reveal different levels of cell structure and function, so short- and long-term evolutionary processes operate with different genetic processes to reach their end points. It is difficult to assess the significance of events that occurred billions of years ago. Evolution is largely a series of nonreproducible (historical) events of which we see a final, polished, global result, best represented by the tree of life. On the other hand, we can look directly, and thus dissect with microbiological tools, events of the past 200 years, providing a magnified view of the evolutionary process over a (relatively) short period of time that has been important in terms of human association with microbes in health and in the environment. Within this short time span, we can look at concrete consequences of identifiable selective forces on bacterial populations. As it runs 20:38 P1: JYD 0521834651c04.xml f. de la cruz and j. davies 74 CB884/McFall-Ngai 0 521 83465 1 February 21, 2005 out, both views give contradictory results. The dichotomy is more apparent than real. Long-term (or classical) evolution is a process of “long wavelength” magnitude (eons or millions of years) spanning a period of some 3.5 billion years, starting with the last common ancestor(s) that proceeded through independent unicellular organisms with major diversions into the formation of protists and eukaryotes. See Chapter 1 for further discussion on this topic. These evolutionary pathways chart the formation of the major bacterial taxa as we identify them now (Woese 2000). Long-term evolution was driven by numerous selection factors (most of which are unknown), although the appearance of oxygen in the biosphere (itself a product of prokaryotes – see Chpater 1) was certainly a major component at a given time. The genetic mechanisms participating in vertical evolutionary pathways can only be inferred in retrospect, but nucleotide sequence analysis of modern microbial genomes indicates that significant gene exchange occurred between both related and unrelated genera (Garcia-Vallve et al. 2000; see Chapter 3). In fact, every new bacterium sequenced up to now contains perhaps thirty percent of its genome formed by DNA unrelated to anything else (obviously acquired DNA). On the other hand, the vertically continuous fraction of the genome more or less loosely follows the tree of life, so its phylogeny seems congruent and nonproblematic. As a result, most of the changes that took place by HGT in long-term evolution are understandably blurred when observed after so many millions of years because, in the long term, they did not contribute sufficient genetic material to obscure the slow, continuous influence of random mutagenesis and selection on genome evolution. Thus in the long term, the effects of this type of genetic creativity (HGT) are likely to be concealed. Unlike long-term evolution, short-term evolution provides opportunities to examine changes as they happen, by observation of genetic mechanisms that affect the structure and function of populations over years instead of eons. The scientific literature is rich with analyses of the changes in microbial function that have occurred in the recent past. We can identify phenomena that took place over the last two centuries or so, since the beginnings of the industrial revolution. During this time, the human population of the earth increased by almost an order of magnitude and concomitantly the industrial revolution bestowed diverse, intensive, and novel selective pressures on the biosphere because of increasing industrial activities and xenobiotic contamination. Most of this began in the early 1800s with the birth of the heavy chemical industry in Germany. When we look at the effects of this brief and stressful era of microbial evolution (which is still in process) we immediately perceive how bacteria 20:38 P1: JYD 0521834651c04.xml CB884/McFall-Ngai 0 521 83465 1 February 21, 2005 reacted to the challenges brought about by new selective pressures. Responses to xenobiotic compounds or antibiotic resistance clearly bring HGT to center stage (see de la Cruz and Davies 2000; de la Cruz et al. 2002). Looking only from the viewpoint of experimental short-term evolution, HGT seems certainly to be the most important driving force in prokaryotic adaptation. The development of resistance to a multitude of toxins defined directions of microbial evolution. In principle, this intense period of evolution should have been more amenable to close observation and experimental analysis. Unfortunately, this often occurs too long after the event, so science has to rely, once again, on retrospective rather than prospective investigation. There have been many opportunities for the latter, but few have been taken. During the intensive industrialization of the world’s economies, significant evolutionary change has taken place, affecting many forms of life in the biosphere by the same genetic processes as during the extended period of classical evolution. However, microbes were presumably the most capable of rapid response to a changing environment, which was made possible by the use of HGT, which we shall see is a highly cooperative, community-associated process. The interposition of mutation and HGT determined the nature of the events. There is a good understanding of these events because the end products are the survivors of defined chemical and physical insults. In many instances, the genetic components involved can be identified using the tools of molecular biology. Does this series of events represent a “capsule” of cellular evolution, or is it a different phenomenon? We believe it is the former and thus focus our discussion on the evolutionary role of designed chemotherapeutic agents, although the same principles apply equally to the bacterial evolution of recalcitrance to xenobiotics and industrial pollutants in the environment. A significant component of microbial change may be described in terms of evolved biotransformation and associated transport mechanisms. Massive industrial activity is not the only causative element in microbial evolution, since in more recent times, domestic activity has played an increasing role (perhaps less well recognized). For example, there is a growing, misperceived, and widely promoted notion that all microbes are dangerous and that human life is constantly threatened by bacteria. Extensive advertising promotes the need to avoid this danger by the use of chemical agents, and it is estimated that there are some 800 products containing biocides on the market in Europe and North America; the amounts exceed those used for therapy. The use of biocides may have significant consequences as a result of 75 industrial revolution and microbial evolution 4.2. THE MECHANISMS OF SHORT-TERM EVOLUTION 20:38 P1: JYD 0521834651c04.xml f. de la cruz and j. davies 76 CB884/McFall-Ngai 0 521 83465 1 February 21, 2005 inciting survival responses from a microbial population under stress, leading to a new wave of cooperative evolution involving the same genetic mechanisms, as in the case of antibiotic use. This theme is picked up again by Rino Rappuoli in the last chapter in this volume. Microbial responses to antibiotics are considered the prime example of evolution to chemical pressure and have been studied extensively. Interestingly, most antibiotics are natural products that are normally present at low concentrations in the environment and resistance mechanisms to these inhibitors are widely distributed in nature. The rapid growth of the pharmaceutical industry since the 1940s was associated with the release of unnaturally large quantities of these biologically active compounds into the biosphere. In many environments, they exist at concentrations that are orders of magnitude higher than normal (natural) levels; it can be said that the earth is essentially bathed in a dilute solution of antibiotics! Antibiotic resistance is, in reality, the product of a highly interactive system involving many different types of microbes. Microbial evolution is a cooperative process based on community structure and dynamics; complex interactions between different genera and species are required to achieve effective HGT. At another level, antibiotic resistance is the result of a systems biology process involving cellular interactions among the host, the pathogen(s), the commensal population, and the antibiotic. HGT is not a simple process because heterologous genes are acquired by new hosts. Gene adaptation usually involves gene tailoring for functional expression, a process that probably requires passage of genetic information through a variety of different hosts resident in the same community. Orthologues of many of the genes encoding antibiotic-inactivating enzymes (based on nucleic acid and protein sequence comparisons) have been identified in a variety of bacteria (commensals). The genes of origin are likely active in (largely unknown) metabolic functions and not as antibiotic resistance determinants in their hosts of origin. Only rarely is an antibiotic resistance phenotype manifest in the primary host, and gene sequence evolution to permit expression is required to establish a resistance phenotype. Mutation may also be a cooperative process because mutator genes are subject to HGT. In addition, the genetic and biochemical process of mutation (e.g., hypermutability) is influenced strongly by environmental factors. Many antibiotics (and xenobiotics) are themselves mutagens, and others can activate or repress the expression of DNA repair functions that lead to increased frequencies of mutation in different hosts. Several examples of the latter have been described in the recent literature, and some commonly used antibiotics are among the active agents identified. The roles of small molecules 20:38 P1: JYD 0521834651c04.xml CB884/McFall-Ngai 0 521 83465 1 February 21, 2005 4.3. THE CONSTRAINTS OF LONG-TERM EVOLUTION The classic evolutionary tree illustrates impressive conservation of protein sequence, as well as an indubitable congruence in the evolution of many cellular proteins, such as those essential for cell survival. Many reasons have been put forward to explain these important characteristics, which are certainly causally related. Massive congruence in protein sequence emphasizes the importance of well-defined arrangements of metabolic networks in the cell. Given that many biochemical mechanisms exist for gene shuffling, why is there so little evidence of its occurrence (or is it common and we have no way of recognizing it)? The answer has to be because cellular protein networks are so precisely highly articulated. It is difficult to change cell components and not incur loss of fitness or lack of competitiveness. For example, it seems to be difficult to bring about (seemingly) minute sequence changes in most of the central proteins in the cell. More than 500 (?) proteins (the minimal cell genetic backbone) are highly conserved among the entire bacterial kingdom. In an analysis of fifty-seven of these enzyme sets, Doolittle et al. (1996) found an average of thirty-seven percent identity (full range covering a span from twenty to fifty-seven percent) between eubacterial and eukaryotic proteins. This level of conservation is exceedingly high for what we know are the essential residues for enzyme activity. If mutations are rarely allowed, we can easily imagine the barriers to HGT. This is what has been shown, for example, with the gene components responsible for DNA synthesis and the transcriptional and translational machineries, the so-called “informational” genes. They are highly conserved and much more recalcitrant to HGT than 77 industrial revolution and microbial evolution in maintaining community function and population is poorly understood and cannot be overestimated. Most bacterial strains have the genetic capacity to produce biologically active peptides, polyketides, and other types of small molecules (<3,000 daltons) and a bewildering array of these molecules are found in nature. The combination of these activities with those of industrial pollutants (e.g., antibiotics) is likely to provoke extensive metabolic and genetic responses in bacterial populations. Many of these responses may lead to permanent alterations (mutation and HGT), leading to enhanced antibiotic resistance (for example). The notion of an enormous and readily accessible bacterial resistance gene pool has been mooted for some time, and mechanisms of gene recruitment have been demonstrated in the laboratory. Again, we must emphasize the critical involvement of interactions in microbial communities; the evolution and establishment of antibiotic resistance phenotypes does not occur in a vacuum! 20:38 P1: JYD 0521834651c04.xml f. de la cruz and j. davies 78 CB884/McFall-Ngai 0 521 83465 1 February 21, 2005 are “operational” genes (Jain et al. 1999), probably because they need to interact (and to avoid interacting) with many other protein components of the cell. All this implies that there are many more “lethal” mutations than can be identified in laboratory studies. As a specific example, in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, many mutations can be identified when selecting for rifampicin resistance in the laboratory; however, only three of these mutations account for eighty-six percent of those found in clinical isolates (Ramaswamy and Musser 1998). The same is true for streptomycin resistance mutations (in ribosomal protein RpsL). In summary, it would appear that about thirty percent of all amino acid positions are essential in the broad cellular context, and are thus highly conserved across the entire bacterial kingdom. We cannot but think that this fact represents the formidable integration and subsequent rigidity of bacterial protein networks, which are comprised of modules of pathways. An additional consideration, namely that many of these key enzyme sets (e.g., glycolysis and TCA cycle) contain proteins that extensively “moonlight,” is described in Chapter 17, in which the consequences for evolution of proteins are also considered. 4.4. RECENT BACTERIAL HISTORY Here we discuss events that underscore the roles of HGT in short-term bacterial evolution: since 1940 (for antibiotic resistance) or since the late 1800s (for xenobiotic tolerance and transformation). When wide-scale antibiotic use commenced early in the 1950s, microbial geneticists predicted that development of resistance during the clinical use of antibiotics would be unlikely. This conclusion was based on studies of mutation to antibiotic resistance in laboratory experiments and obviously lacked any knowledge of HGT and the extent to which antibiotics would be used. This expectation proved erroneous (de la Cruz and Davies 2000); microbes do not listen to geneticists! Similarly, when the fluoroquinolone (FQ) antibiotics, an entirely synthetic class of DNA gyrase inhibitors with a complex mode of action, were introduced into clinical practice in the 1970s, it was predicted that resistance would require multiple mutations and thus be a very low-frequency event. Bacterial populations failed to listen to reason in this case also; resistance to the FQs developed rapidly as a result of mutations in DNA gyrase gene combined with increased efflux from the cell. FQ-resistant strains are now common among a variety of human and animal bacterial pathogens. Induced hypermutability appears to have been a factor in this case, and although the FQs are not natural products (and not structurally related to any known bacterial product, although a quinolone molecule has been identified as a quorum-sensing autoinducer), 20:38 P1: JYD 0521834651c04.xml CB884/McFall-Ngai 0 521 83465 1 February 21, 2005 79 industrial revolution and microbial evolution plasmid-determined FQ resistance has been identified recently. It is worth noting that plasmid-determined (HGT) resistance to the sulfonamides and trimethoprim, both synthetic antibacterials, is common in clinical situations. This would not have been predicted. Parenthetically, the origins of these resistance determinants remain unknown. Erythromycin (a macrolide antibiotic) was introduced into the therapeutic armamentarium for the treatment of Gram-positive infections, especially those resistant to penicillin (and its analogues); the antibiotic was also favored for the treatment of patients allergic to beta-lactams. In spite of the fact that erythromycin has some unpleasant side effects (it causes gastric disturbances because of a highly specific interaction with the motilin receptor), it has been used extensively, and a variety of mechanisms of erythromycin resistance have been characterized. A large number of derivatives have been synthesized, and several compounds with improved pharmacologic characteristics have been introduced. The introduction of each new compound has been followed by the appearance of resistant strains with mutationally altered efflux systems or changes in the ribosome; in addition, plasmid-mediated resistance due to methylation of critical sites in 23S rRNA is widespread in a number of important pathogens. Other resistant isolates inactivate macrolides by enzymatic modification of the drug molecule (the resistance genes have been identified on multidrug resistance integrons of Gram-negative bacteria). This plenitude of resistance functions illustrates the incredible ability of microbes to mount resistance responses against toxic agents. One of the (rare) spinoffs of the use of antibiotics such as the macrolides and the aminoglycosides (which target 16S rRNA) is that high-resolution three-dimensional analysis of the binding of these drugs to the ribosome has provided amazingly detailed information on ribosome structure and function; this may yet lead to the discovery of new types of translation inhibitors. There are many other examples of the evolution of multidrug-resistant bacterial pathogens; any biochemically plausible mechanism of resistance is possible, and combined with HGT, this illustrates the extraordinary resiliency provided by bacterial communities. As described in the essay of Hacker and Kaper (2000), the same holds true for the evolution of pathogens (see Chapter 3). Microbial communities operate on every scale and in any environment. A proper understanding of the genetics and physiology of this type of cooperation is essential to the understanding of antibiotic resistance. Humans are considered to be the world’s greatest evolutionary force, and the industrial activities of the human population have provoked many significant evolutionary changes, largely the result of pollution of the biosphere. During the industrial revolution, many toxic molecules 20:38 P1: JYD 0521834651c04.xml f. de la cruz and j. davies 80 CB884/McFall-Ngai 0 521 83465 1 February 21, 2005 (heavy-metal derivatives and organic molecules) were released into the environment . . . and still continue to be. Many are naturally occurring compounds that are used in unnatural ways and amounts (e.g., antibiotics). The potent biocide triclosan is an interesting modern example; this compound is used extensively as an industrial and household cleaner. 100,000 tons are produced and used every year in Europe; however, the largest producers are in Russia, China, and India. The world total production may be five times as much. This is significantly more than any antibiotic, and it is all released into the environment as mouthwash; in clothing, bedding, and garbage bags; and in other consumer products. Triclosan has a very specific biochemical action and blocks microbial cell growth by preventing lipid biosynthesis; resistance occurs both by enhanced efflux and by mutation of a specific enoyl reductase gene ( fabI ). Interestingly, a relative of the latter is the target of the important antituberculosis drug isoniazid (Inh). The possibility has been raised that triclosan resistance may contribute to the development of multidrug resistance in bacteria by providing selection for resistance gene clusters such as integrons. However, the fact that use of this biocide may preselect resistance in mycobacterial infections has not received much attention. Could the use of compounds such as triclosan generate a reservoir of resistance genes that may be acquired by pathogens in the future? The full consequences of extreme biocide use remain to be seen. 4.5. CONCLUSIONS Long-term evolution (mega-years) and short-term evolution (tens of years) are clearly different genetic processes, which occur as the result of different evolutionary pressures and mechanisms. In recent times, we have had the opportunity to observe what happens when microbes adapt to a novel environmental challenge (the use of antibiotics and biocides). In many cases, new genes and metabolic pathways are rapidly recruited from unknown gene pools or adapted from preexisting ones, to give a first response to the challenge. Evolution, in the long run, does not respond to single challenges; the effects of many different individual selection processes are averaged, and the genome as a whole is preserved (with a few notable very ancient exceptions of massive HGT, such as endosymbiosis in the formation of mitochondria and chloroplasts). Evolutionary trees are depictions of the ancient evolution of bacteria, during which metabolic networks and the gene expression machinery crystalized through the combination of spontaneous mutation and occasional acquisition of vital new characteristics by HGT. Subsequent events produced “scars” but did not change the general structure of a bacterial cell. Every newly 20:38 P1: JYD 0521834651c04.xml CB884/McFall-Ngai 0 521 83465 1 February 21, 2005 REFERENCES Bushman, F. (2002). Lateral DNA Transfer: Mechanisms and Consequences. Cold Spring Harbor, NY: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. de la Cruz, F. and Davies, J. (2000). Horizontal gene transfer and the origin of species: Lessons from bacteria. Trends in Microbiology 8, 128–133. 81 industrial revolution and microbial evolution sequenced bacterial genome contains a significant number of genes with no obvious relationship to previously sequenced ones (the “species-specific” genome). We cannot ignore the possibility that the roots of the speciation process lay in the acquisition of some of this idiosyncratic genetic material. The acquisition of the symbiotic plasmid (pSym) converts an Agrobacterium strain into a bona fide Rhizobium, capable of nodulation and nitrogen fixation. Similarly, large virulence plasmids and other mobile genetic elements convert the commensal Escherichia coli into important pathogens like Shigella (discussed in more detail in Chapter 3). Contemporary evolution demands the accommodation of adaptive changes that occurred in the past two centuries. When looking at present trends (specific selection processes), we observe HGT more than anything else; the genome is changed. Primary HGT is frequently followed by genetic adaptation, as has been adequately demonstrated in the formation of families of -lactamases as antibiotic derivatives are introduced in efforts to counter “new” resistant strains. At any given point in time, HGT is the response to acute selective pressures. Mobile genetic elements are expert devices to promote evolutionary change, and their efficacy is dependent on gene capture within microbial communities in the environment. The storm of genetic change settles in long-term evolution. Most of the genetic change in bacteria that we have seen during the period of human-based industrial revolution will be lost when we disappear as a species from Earth (during the next 10 million years). But this is just a blink of an eye in bacterial evolution. Most of the R plasmids and conjugative transposons, xenobiotic degradation pathways, pathogenicity islands, and the plethora of mobile genetic elements that go with them will slowly decay in the bacterial genomes. The central protein backbone will remain essentially untouched, perhaps including one or two interesting additions or alternatives. This will be the only legacy of HGT after the next 10 million years. But in the meantime, it would have allowed bacteria to cope with the invasion of the human race, and thrive among the continuous new challenges that this one species imposes on the planet every year. One may not see HGT when looking at phylogenetic trees, but its impact is inescapable when dealing with present-day challenges to microbial life. 20:38 P1: JYD 0521834651c04.xml f. de la cruz and j. davies 82 CB884/McFall-Ngai 0 521 83465 1 February 21, 2005 de la Cruz, F., Garcı́a-Lobo, J. M., and Davies, J. (2002). Antibiotic resistance: How bacterial populations respond to a simple evolutionary force. In Bacterial Resistance to Antimicrobials. ed. K. Lewis, pp. 19–36. New York: Marcel Dekker, Inc. Doolittle, R. F., Feng, D. F., Tsang, S., Cho, G., and Little, E. (1996). Determining divergence times of the major kingdoms of living organisms with a protein clock. Science 271, 470–477. Garcia-Vallve, S., Romeu, A., and Palau, J. (2000). Horizontal gene transfer in bacterial and archaeal complete genomes. Genome Research 10, 1719–1725. Hacker, J. and Kaper, J. B. (2000). Pathogenicity islands and the evolution of microbes. Annual Reviews of Microbiology 54, 641–679. Jain, R., Rivera, M. C., and Lake, J. A. (1999). Horizontal gene transfer among genomes: The complexity hypothesis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 96, 3801–3806. Kurland, C. G., Canback, B., and Berg, O. G. (2003). Horizontal gene transfer: A critical view. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 100, 9658– 9662. Ochman, H., Lawrence, J. G., and Groisman, E. A. (2000). Lateral gene transfer and the nature of bacterial innovation. Nature 405, 299–304. Ramaswamy, S. and Musser, J. M. (1998). Molecular genetic basis of antimicrobial agent resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis: 1998 update. Tuberculosis Lung Disease 79, 3–29. Woese, C. R. (2000). Interpreting the universal phylogenetic tree. 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