Abundance and co-occurrence of extracellular capsules increase environmental breadth: Implications for the emergence of pathogens.

Extracellular capsules constitute the outermost layer of many bacteria, are major virulence factors, and affect antimicrobial therapies. They have been used as epidemiological markers and recently became vaccination targets. Despite the efforts to biochemically serotype capsules in a few model patho...

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Main Authors: Olaya Rendueles, Marc Garcia-Garcerà, Bertrand Néron, Marie Touchon, Eduardo P C Rocha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-07-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006525
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spelling doaj-4915d9c93f41408ca34af9ec10dbc92a2021-04-21T17:36:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742017-07-01137e100652510.1371/journal.ppat.1006525Abundance and co-occurrence of extracellular capsules increase environmental breadth: Implications for the emergence of pathogens.Olaya RenduelesMarc Garcia-GarceràBertrand NéronMarie TouchonEduardo P C RochaExtracellular capsules constitute the outermost layer of many bacteria, are major virulence factors, and affect antimicrobial therapies. They have been used as epidemiological markers and recently became vaccination targets. Despite the efforts to biochemically serotype capsules in a few model pathogens, little is known of their taxonomic and environmental distribution. We developed, validated, and made available a computational tool, CapsuleFinder, to identify capsules in genomes. The analysis of over 2500 prokaryotic genomes, accessible in a database, revealed that ca. 50% of them-including Archaea-encode a capsule. The Wzx/Wzy-dependent capsular group was by far the most abundant. Surprisingly, a fifth of the genomes encode more than one capsule system-often from different groups-and their non-random co-occurrence suggests the existence of negative and positive epistatic interactions. To understand the role of multiple capsules, we queried more than 6700 metagenomes for the presence of species encoding capsules and showed that their distribution varied between environmental categories and, within the human microbiome, between body locations. Species encoding capsules, and especially those encoding multiple capsules, had larger environmental breadths than the other species. Accordingly, capsules were more frequent in environmental bacteria than in pathogens and, within the latter, they were more frequent among facultative pathogens. Nevertheless, capsules were frequent in clinical samples, and were usually associated with fast-growing bacteria with high infectious doses. Our results suggest that capsules increase the environmental range of bacteria and make them more resilient to environmental perturbations. Capsules might allow opportunistic pathogens to profit from empty ecological niches or environmental perturbations, such as those resulting from antibiotic therapy, to colonize the host. Capsule-associated virulence might thus be a by-product of environmental adaptation. Understanding the role of capsules in natural environments might enlighten their function in pathogenesis.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006525
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olaya Rendueles
Marc Garcia-Garcerà
Bertrand Néron
Marie Touchon
Eduardo P C Rocha
spellingShingle Olaya Rendueles
Marc Garcia-Garcerà
Bertrand Néron
Marie Touchon
Eduardo P C Rocha
Abundance and co-occurrence of extracellular capsules increase environmental breadth: Implications for the emergence of pathogens.
PLoS Pathogens
author_facet Olaya Rendueles
Marc Garcia-Garcerà
Bertrand Néron
Marie Touchon
Eduardo P C Rocha
author_sort Olaya Rendueles
title Abundance and co-occurrence of extracellular capsules increase environmental breadth: Implications for the emergence of pathogens.
title_short Abundance and co-occurrence of extracellular capsules increase environmental breadth: Implications for the emergence of pathogens.
title_full Abundance and co-occurrence of extracellular capsules increase environmental breadth: Implications for the emergence of pathogens.
title_fullStr Abundance and co-occurrence of extracellular capsules increase environmental breadth: Implications for the emergence of pathogens.
title_full_unstemmed Abundance and co-occurrence of extracellular capsules increase environmental breadth: Implications for the emergence of pathogens.
title_sort abundance and co-occurrence of extracellular capsules increase environmental breadth: implications for the emergence of pathogens.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Pathogens
issn 1553-7366
1553-7374
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Extracellular capsules constitute the outermost layer of many bacteria, are major virulence factors, and affect antimicrobial therapies. They have been used as epidemiological markers and recently became vaccination targets. Despite the efforts to biochemically serotype capsules in a few model pathogens, little is known of their taxonomic and environmental distribution. We developed, validated, and made available a computational tool, CapsuleFinder, to identify capsules in genomes. The analysis of over 2500 prokaryotic genomes, accessible in a database, revealed that ca. 50% of them-including Archaea-encode a capsule. The Wzx/Wzy-dependent capsular group was by far the most abundant. Surprisingly, a fifth of the genomes encode more than one capsule system-often from different groups-and their non-random co-occurrence suggests the existence of negative and positive epistatic interactions. To understand the role of multiple capsules, we queried more than 6700 metagenomes for the presence of species encoding capsules and showed that their distribution varied between environmental categories and, within the human microbiome, between body locations. Species encoding capsules, and especially those encoding multiple capsules, had larger environmental breadths than the other species. Accordingly, capsules were more frequent in environmental bacteria than in pathogens and, within the latter, they were more frequent among facultative pathogens. Nevertheless, capsules were frequent in clinical samples, and were usually associated with fast-growing bacteria with high infectious doses. Our results suggest that capsules increase the environmental range of bacteria and make them more resilient to environmental perturbations. Capsules might allow opportunistic pathogens to profit from empty ecological niches or environmental perturbations, such as those resulting from antibiotic therapy, to colonize the host. Capsule-associated virulence might thus be a by-product of environmental adaptation. Understanding the role of capsules in natural environments might enlighten their function in pathogenesis.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006525
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