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Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens. Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Outline. Emergence of pathogens Global importance of microorganisms What are pathogens? Evolution of pathogenesis Re-emergence of pathogens Antibiotic resistance
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Evolution and Ecology of Pathogens Martin Polz Civil & Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Outline • Emergence of pathogens • Global importance of microorganisms • What are pathogens? • Evolution of pathogenesis • Re-emergence of pathogens • Antibiotic resistance • Cholera • Conclusions
Candice's Germ Poem Germs, germs everywhere Even on a little pear, Germs germs all around, Even on the dirty ground. Germs, germs make me sick, Especially on a candy stick. Germs, germs are so small, Even on a bouncy ball.
Example: The Nitrogen Cycle <3 fixation in lightening 100 human activities ATMOSPHERE 200 denitrification 140 biological fixation 15 biological fixation 140 denitrification 36 river flow groundwater 1200 internal cycling 8000 internal cycling 10 burial SOIL OCEANS
Nitrogen Cycle Without Microbes <3 fixation in lightening ? human activities ATMOSPHERE 200 denitrification 140 biological fixation 15 biological fixation 140 denitrification ? river flow groundwater 1200 internal cycling 8000 internal cycling ? burial All processes slow. Would life be possible? SOIL OCEANS
Microbes • Bacteria • Fungi • Protists • Viruses
Bacteria • Small • Efficient • Biochemically diverse • Fast growth
Cells/ ml or g x106 Total cells x1026 Marine 0.5 1,000 Freshwater 1.0 1.5 Sediments 4,600 170 Subsurface sediments (0-3,000 m) 0.34-200 38,000 Animal guts 1-105 0.0004 Bacteria are everywhere (Whitman et al. 1998)
Plants Bacteria Soil and Aquatic Subsurface Terrestrial 560 26 22-215 Marine 1.8 2.2 303 Global bacterial biomass (Pg of C) Microbial biomass rivals plant biomass but has higher turnover
How many bacterialspecies are there? Wilson 1988 Hammond 1995 Total number species: ~ 1.4 million Bacteria: ~3,500 Total number species: ~ 11 million Bacteria: ~10 million
microbial community plating DAPI stained marine water sample The great plate count anomaly < 1% of observable bacteria grow on standard culture media
Genetic diversity Total nucleic acids 16S ribosomal RNA genes Sequences Identification and quantification Diversity and evolutionary relationships
Molecular approach: • great diversity of microbes • pathogens only a minor component • of microbial diversity • allows understanding of evolution • of pathogenesis
What is a pathogen? An evolutionary view. Example: Escherichia coli (E. coli) Normally a harmless gut bacterium but… Eterotoxigenic strains Enteropathogenic strains Enteroinvasive strains Enterohemorrhagic strains Enteroaggregative strains Uropathogenic strains
Genome analysis provides answer Comparative analysis: Strains closely related Genome structure similar But…. Insertions of ‘foreign’ DNA = pathogenicity islands
Comparison harmless and pathogenic E. coli strains A B C E. coli K12 A B C E. coli O157:H7 Foreign DNA = locus of enterocyte effacement Responsible for pathogenicity: allows attachment and toxin productions A harmless bacterium has become a pathogen by ‘stealing’ DNA from another bacterium!
Mechanisms of gene transfer: 2 1 3 Transformation: uptake of DNA from environment Transduction: DNA transfer by viruses Conjugation: plasmid transfer between bacterial cells Can all transfer genes from other bacteria that can become incorporated into genome
Fate of transferred genes: RecA system = recombination into genome dependent on sequence similarity recombination rate % sequence difference
How often does gene transfer happen? Gene transfer is rare e.g., transduction by viruses insert foreign DNA every 108 virus infections But…. Microbes have very large populations e.g., gene transfer in marine environment ~20 million billion times per second! Genes must be advantageous to recipient….
Ecology of pathogenesis Bacteria grow fast High population densities Great competition for resources Pathogen = normal bacterium that has gained access to a new resource through new genes --> Competitive advantage
species 1 species 2 common resource Example 1: Antibiotics Antibiotics - natural warfare
Example 1: Antibiotics Antibiotics - natural warfare species 1 species 2 antibiotic common resource
Example 1: Antibiotics Antibiotics - natural warfare species 1 species 2 antibiotic common resource
Example 1: Antibiotics Antibiotics - natural warfare species 1 common resource
Antibiotic resistance Bacteria have evolved resistance genes to antibiotics Located on plasmids
Plasmid encoded resistance is easily transferred between species because plasmids are mobile Occurrence usually low unless selection through widespread antibiotic use
Antibiotics overuse creates ‘Superbugs’ 50 million tons antibiotics per year ‘Superbugs’ resistant to most antibiotics Example: Tuberculosis 2.5 million deaths Mycobacterium tuberculosis increasingly resistant
Example 2: Cholera and climate Vibrio cholerae and other vibrios ubiquitous in marine, coastal waters Genetically similar non-pathogenic and pathogenic strains co-exist V.cholera
Seasonal cholera in Calcutta (Sharma, 1998)
Vibrio infections linked to El Nino Dhaka, Bangladesh Cholera cases Seasonality Removed (Pascual, 2000)
Possible reasons for seasonality Attachment to algae and zooplankton? Temperature dependent growth? T Algal growth = vibrio growth? Temperature rise = vibrio growth? Links to global warming and/or pollution
Re-Emergence is an evolutionary/ecological phenomenon Microbial communities extremely diverse Large numbers of individuals Potential for gene transfer Pathogenesis arises via gene transfer Result: harmless bacterial species becomes pathogen because it gains competitive advantage Ecological factors (resistance, alternate hosts, climate) may trigger increased incidence of pathogenesis
Outlook for the future Need to understand environmentalcontext of pathogenesis Need to understand gene transfer rates and diversity of co-occurring genomes
Thanks to: Silvia Acinas Dan Distel Dana Hunt Vanja Klepac Luisa Marcelino Chanathip Pharino Ramahi Sarma-Rupavtarm Janelle Thompson NSF, NIH, Seagrant, DOE - Genomes to Life