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Evidence for selection in a prokaryote pangenome

Whelan, Fiona Jane; Hall, Rebecca J.; McInerney, James O.

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Authors

Fiona Jane Whelan

Rebecca J. Hall



Abstract

A pangenome is the complete set of genes (core and accessory) present in a phylogenetic clade. We hypothesize that a pangenome’s accessory gene content is structured and maintained by selection. To test this hypothesis, we interrogated the genomes of 40 Pseudomonas genomes for statistically significant coincident (i.e. co-occurring/avoiding) gene patterns. We found that 86.7% of common accessory genes are involved in ≥1 coincident relationship. Further, genes that co-occur and/or avoid each other - but are not vertically or horizontally co-inherited - are more likely to share Gene Ontology categories, are more likely to be simultaneously transcribed, and are more likely to produce interacting proteins, than would be expected by chance. These results are not due to coincident genes being adjacent to one another on the chromosome. Together, these findings suggest that the accessory genome is structured into interacting sets of genes co-selected to function together within a given strain. Given the simi larity of the Pseudomonas pangenome with open pangenomes of other prokaryotic species, we speculate that these results are generalizable.

Citation

Whelan, F. J., Hall, R. J., & McInerney, J. O. Evidence for selection in a prokaryote pangenome

Deposit Date Oct 29, 2022
Publicly Available Date Nov 1, 2022
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/5008959
Publisher URL https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.10.28.359307v1

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