Peek AS,
Vrijenhoek RC, Gaut BS (1998) Accelerated evolutionary rate in sulfur-oxidizing
endosymbiotic bacteria associated with the mode of symbiont transmission.
Molecular Biology and Evolution 15: 1514-1523
The nearly neutral theory
of molecular evolution predicts that the rate of nucleotide substitution should
accelerate in small populations at sites under low selective constraint. We
examined these predictions with respect to the relative population sizes for
three bacterial life histories within chemolithoautotrophic sulfur-oxidizing
bacteria: (1) free-living bacteria, (2) environmentally captured symbionts, and
(3) maternally transmitted symbionts. Both relative rates of nucleotide
substitution and relative ratios of loop, stem, and domain substitutions from
1,165 nt of the small-subunit 16S rDNA were consistent with expectations of the
nearly neutral theory. Relative to free-living sulfur-oxidizing autotrophic
bacteria, the maternally transmitted symbionts have faster substitution rates
overall and also in low-constraint domains of 16S rDNA. Nucleotide substitition
rates also differ between loop and stem positions. All of these findings are
consistent with the predictions that these symbionts have relatively small
effective population sizes. In contrast, the rates of nucleotide substitution
in environmentally captured symbionts are slower, particularly in
high-constraint domains, than in free-living bacteria.