Functional genotypes are associated with commensal Escherichia coli strain abundance within host individuals and populations (#20)
The selective pressures that determine genotype
abundance and distribution frequently vary between ecological levels. Thus, it is
often unclear whether the same functional genotypes will become abundant at
different levels and how selection acting at these different scales are linked. We examined whether particular functional genotypes, defined by
the presence or absence of 34 genes, of commensal E. coli strains were associated with within-host abundance and/or
host population abundance in a wild population of 54 adult mountain brushtail
possums (Trichosurus cunninghami). Our
results revealed that there was a positive correlation between a strain’s
relative abundance within individuals and the strain’s abundance in the host
population. We also found that strain abundance at both ecological levels was predicted
by the same group of functional genes (agn43,
focH, micH47, iroN, ygiL, ompT, kspmT2 and K1) that had associated
patterns of occurrence. We propose that direct selection on the same functional
genes at both levels may in part be responsible for the observed correlation
between the ecological levels.