Bacterial adaptation by a transposition burst of an invading IS element

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Abstract

The impact of transposable elements on host fitness range from highly deleterious to beneficial, but their general importance for adaptive evolution remains debated. Here, we investigated whether IS elements are a major source of beneficial mutations during 400 generations of laboratory evolution of the cyanobacterium Acaryochloris marina strain CCMEE 5410, which has experienced a recent or on-going IS element expansion. The dynamics of adaptive evolution were highly repeatable among eight independent experimental populations and included beneficial mutations related to exopolysaccharide production and inorganic carbon concentrating mechanisms for photosynthetic carbon fixation. Most detected mutations were IS transposition events, but, surprisingly, the majority of these involved the copy-and-paste activity of only a single copy of an unclassified element (ISAm1) that has recently invaded the genome of A. marina strain CCMEE 5410. Our study reveals that the activity of a single transposase can fuel adaptation for at least several hundred generations. Impact statement A single transposable element can fuel adaptation to a novel environment for hundreds of generations without an apparent accumulation of a deleterious mutational load.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00
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License: CC-BY-4.0