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Metabolic capabilities are highly conserved among human nasal-associated Corynebacterium species in pangenomic analyses.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Tran, TH; F Escapa, I; Roberts, AQ; Gao, W; Obawemimo, AC; Segre, JA; Kong, HH; Conlan, S; Kelly, MS; Lemon, KP
Published in: mSystems
December 17, 2024

UNLABELLED: Corynebacterium species are globally ubiquitous in human nasal microbiota across the lifespan. Moreover, nasal microbiota profiles typified by higher relative abundances of Corynebacterium are often positively associated with health. Among the most common human nasal Corynebacterium species are C. propinquum, C. pseudodiphtheriticum, C. accolens, and C. tuberculostearicum. To gain insight into the functions of these four species, we identified genomic, phylogenomic, and pangenomic properties and estimated the metabolic capabilities of 87 distinct human nasal Corynebacterium strain genomes: 31 from Botswana and 56 from the United States. C. pseudodiphtheriticum had geographically distinct clades consistent with localized strain circulation, whereas some strains from the other species had wide geographic distribution spanning Africa and North America. All species had similar genomic and pangenomic structures. Gene clusters assigned to all COG metabolic categories were overrepresented in the persistent versus accessory genome of each species indicating limited strain-level variability in metabolic capacity. Based on prevalence data, at least two Corynebacterium species likely coexist in the nasal microbiota of 82% of adults. So, it was surprising that core metabolic capabilities were highly conserved among the four species indicating limited species-level metabolic variation. Strikingly, strains in the U.S. clade of C. pseudodiphtheriticum lacked genes for assimilatory sulfate reduction present in most of the strains in the Botswana clade and in the other studied species, indicating a recent, geographically related loss of assimilatory sulfate reduction. Overall, the minimal species and strain variability in metabolic capacity implies coexisting strains might have limited ability to occupy distinct metabolic niches. IMPORTANCE: Pangenomic analysis with estimation of functional capabilities facilitates our understanding of the full biologic diversity of bacterial species. We performed systematic genomic, phylogenomic, and pangenomic analyses with qualitative estimation of the metabolic capabilities of four common human nasal Corynebacterium species, along with focused experimental validations, generating a foundational resource. The prevalence of each species in human nasal microbiota is consistent with the common coexistence of at least two species. We identified a notably high level of metabolic conservation within and among species indicating limited options for species to occupy distinct metabolic niches, highlighting the importance of investigating interactions among nasal Corynebacterium species. Comparing strains from two continents, C. pseudodiphtheriticum had restricted geographic strain distribution characterized by an evolutionarily recent loss of assimilatory sulfate reduction in U.S. strains. Our findings contribute to understanding the functions of Corynebacterium within human nasal microbiota and to evaluating their potential for future use as biotherapeutics.

Duke Scholars

Published In

mSystems

DOI

EISSN

2379-5077

Publication Date

December 17, 2024

Volume

9

Issue

12

Start / End Page

e0113224

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • United States
  • Phylogeny
  • Nose
  • Microbiota
  • Humans
  • Genomics
  • Genome, Bacterial
  • Corynebacterium
  • Botswana
 

Citation

APA
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ICMJE
MLA
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Tran, T. H., F Escapa, I., Roberts, A. Q., Gao, W., Obawemimo, A. C., Segre, J. A., … Lemon, K. P. (2024). Metabolic capabilities are highly conserved among human nasal-associated Corynebacterium species in pangenomic analyses. MSystems, 9(12), e0113224. https://doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01132-24
Tran, Tommy H., Isabel F Escapa, Ari Q. Roberts, Wei Gao, Abiola C. Obawemimo, Julia A. Segre, Heidi H. Kong, Sean Conlan, Matthew S. Kelly, and Katherine P. Lemon. “Metabolic capabilities are highly conserved among human nasal-associated Corynebacterium species in pangenomic analyses.MSystems 9, no. 12 (December 17, 2024): e0113224. https://doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01132-24.
Tran TH, F Escapa I, Roberts AQ, Gao W, Obawemimo AC, Segre JA, et al. Metabolic capabilities are highly conserved among human nasal-associated Corynebacterium species in pangenomic analyses. mSystems. 2024 Dec 17;9(12):e0113224.
Tran, Tommy H., et al. “Metabolic capabilities are highly conserved among human nasal-associated Corynebacterium species in pangenomic analyses.MSystems, vol. 9, no. 12, Dec. 2024, p. e0113224. Pubmed, doi:10.1128/msystems.01132-24.
Tran TH, F Escapa I, Roberts AQ, Gao W, Obawemimo AC, Segre JA, Kong HH, Conlan S, Kelly MS, Lemon KP. Metabolic capabilities are highly conserved among human nasal-associated Corynebacterium species in pangenomic analyses. mSystems. 2024 Dec 17;9(12):e0113224.

Published In

mSystems

DOI

EISSN

2379-5077

Publication Date

December 17, 2024

Volume

9

Issue

12

Start / End Page

e0113224

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • United States
  • Phylogeny
  • Nose
  • Microbiota
  • Humans
  • Genomics
  • Genome, Bacterial
  • Corynebacterium
  • Botswana