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Abstract
Evolution results from the interaction of stochastic and deterministic processes that create a web of historical contingency, shaping gene content and organismal function. To understand the scope of this interaction, we examine the relative contributions of stochasticity, determinism, and contingency in shaping gene inactivation in 34 lineages of endosymbiotic bacteria, Sodalis, found in parasitic lice, Columbicola, that are independently undergoing genome degeneration. Here we show that the process of genome degeneration in this system is largely deterministic: genes involved in amino acid biosynthesis are lost while those involved in providing B-vitamins to the host are retained. In contrast, many genes encoding redundant functions, including components of the respiratory chain and DNA repair pathways, are subject to stochastic loss, yielding historical contingencies that constrain subsequent losses. Thus, while selection results in functional convergence between symbiont lineages, stochastic mutations initiate distinct evolutionary trajectories, generating diverse gene inventories that lack the functional redundancy typically found in free-living relatives.
Endosymbionts often have small genomes that maintain minimal functions required to serve their hosts. This study examines cases of new endosymbiont acquisition and finds genome degeneration involves both stochastic and deterministic processes that shape gene content and organismal function.
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1 Virginia Commonwealth University, Center for Biological Data Science, Richmond, US (GRID:grid.224260.0) (ISNI:0000 0004 0458 8737)
2 University of Utah, School of Biological Sciences, Salt Lake City, US (GRID:grid.223827.e) (ISNI:0000 0001 2193 0096)
3 University of Illinois, Illinois Natural History Survey, Prairie Research Institute, Champaign, US (GRID:grid.35403.31) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9991)
4 University of Utah, Department of Human Genetics, Salt Lake City, US (GRID:grid.223827.e) (ISNI:0000 0001 2193 0096)