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Independent evolution of shape and motility allows evolutionary flexibility in Firmicutes bacteria

Version 4 2024-03-12, 14:39
Version 3 2023-10-29, 11:07
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 14:39 authored by Fouad El Baidouri, Chris Venditti, Stuart HumphriesStuart Humphries
<p>Functional morphological adaptation is an implicit assumption across many ecological studies. However, despite a few pioneering attempts to link bacterial form and function, functional morphology is largely unstudied in prokaryotes. One intriguing candidate for analysis is bacterial shape, as multiple lines of theory indicate that cell shape and motility should be strongly correlated. Here we present a large-scale use of modern phylogenetic comparative methods to explore this relationship across 325 species of the phylum Firmicutes. In contrast to clear predictions from theory, we show that cell shape and motility are not coupled, and that transitions to and from flagellar motility are common and strongly associated with lifestyle (free-living or host-associated). We find no association between shape and lifestyle, and contrary to recent evidence, no indication that shape is associated with pathogenicity. Our results suggest that the independent evolution of shape and motility in this group might allow a greater evolutionary flexibility.</p>

Funding

Leverhulme Trust project RLA RL-2012-022

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Nature Ecology & Evolution

Volume

1

Issue

1

Pages/Article Number

0009

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

ISSN

2397-334X

eISSN

2397-334X

Date Submitted

2016-09-22

Date Accepted

2016-09-14

Date of First Publication

2016-11-21

Date of Final Publication

2017-11-27

Date Document First Uploaded

2016-09-19

ePrints ID

24221

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