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Deciphering polymorphism in 61,157 Escherichia coli genomes via epistatic sequence landscapes

  • Lucile Vigué
  • , Giancarlo Croce
  • , Marie Petitjean
  • , Etienne Ruppé
  • , Olivier Tenaillon
  • , Martin Weigt
  • University Paris 13
  • University of Lausanne
  • Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics
  • Medical and Infectious Diseases ICU (MI2)
  • Sorbonne Université

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Characterizing the effect of mutations is key to understand the evolution of protein sequences and to separate neutral amino-acid changes from deleterious ones. Epistatic interactions between residues can lead to a context dependence of mutation effects. Context dependence constrains the amino-acid changes that can contribute to polymorphism in the short term, and the ones that can accumulate between species in the long term. We use computational approaches to accurately predict the polymorphisms segregating in a panel of 61,157 Escherichia coli genomes from the analysis of distant homologues. By comparing a context-aware Direct-Coupling Analysis modelling to a non-epistatic approach, we show that the genetic context strongly constrains the tolerable amino acids in 30% to 50% of amino-acid sites. The study of more distant species suggests the gradual build-up of genetic context over long evolutionary timescales by the accumulation of small epistatic contributions.

Original languageEnglish
Article number4030
JournalNature Communications
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2022
Externally publishedYes

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