De novo mutations mediate phenotypic switching in an opportunistic human lung pathogen.
| Authors | |
| Abstract | Bacteria evolving within human hosts encounter selective tradeoffs that render mutations adaptive in one context and deleterious in another. Here, we report that the cystic fibrosis-associated pathogen Burkholderia dolosa overcomes in-human selective tradeoffs by acquiring successive point mutations that alternate phenotypes. We sequenced the whole genomes of 931 respiratory isolates from two recently infected cystic fibrosis patients and an epidemiologically-linked, chronically-infected patient. These isolates are contextualized using 112 historical genomes from the same outbreak strain. Within both newly infected patients, convergent mutations that disrupt O-antigen expression quickly arose, comprising 29% and 63% of their B. dolosa communities by 3 years. The selection for loss of O-antigen starkly contrasts with our previous observation of parallel O-antigen-restoring mutations after many years of chronic infection in the historical outbreak. Experimental characterization reveals that O-antigen loss increases uptake in immune cells while decreasing competitiveness in the mouse lung. We propose that the balance of these pressures, and thus whether O-antigen expression is advantageous, depends on tissue localization and infection duration. These results suggest that mutation-driven phenotypic alternation may be underestimated without dense temporal sampling, particularly for microbes with prolonged infection or colonization. |
| Year of Publication | 2025
|
| Journal | Nature communications
|
| Volume | 16
|
| Issue | 1
|
| Pages | 6799
|
| Date Published | 07/2025
|
| ISSN | 2041-1723
|
| DOI | 10.1038/s41467-025-61168-4
|
| PubMed ID | 40701980
|
| Links |