crispr associated diversity within a population of sulfolobus islandicuscrispr多样性有关人口的硫化叶菌islandicus.pdf
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CRISPR Associated Diversity within a Population of
Sulfolobus islandicus
Nicole L. Held, Alfa Herrera, Hinsby Cadillo-Quiroz, Rachel J. Whitaker*
Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, United States of America
Abstract
Background: Predator-prey models for virus-host interactions predict that viruses will cause oscillations of microbial host
densities due to an arms race between resistance and virulence. A new form of microbial resistance, CRISPRs (clustered
regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats) are a rapidly evolving, sequence-specific immunity mechanism in which a
short piece of invading viral DNA is inserted into the host’s chromosome, thereby rendering the host resistant to further
infection. Few studies have linked this form of resistance to population dynamics in natural microbial populations.
Methodology/Principal Findings: We examined sequence diversity in 39 strains of the archeaon Sulfolobus islandicus from a
single, isolated hot spring from Kamchatka, Russia to determine the effects of CRISPR immunity on microbial population
dynamics. First, multiple housekeeping genetic markers identify a large clonal group of identical genotypes coexisting with
a diverse set of rare genotypes. Second, the sequence-specific CRISPR spacer arrays split the large group of isolates into two
very different groups and reveal extensive diversity and no evidence for dominance of a single clone within the population.
Conclusions/Significance: The evenness of resistance genotypes found within this population of S. islandicus is indicative of
a lack of strain dominance, in contrast to the prediction for a resistant strain in a simple predator-prey interaction. Based on
evidence for the independent acquisition of resistant sequences, we hypothesize that CRISPR mediated clonal interference
between resistant strains prom
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