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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2007, p. 1199-1208, Vol. 189, No. 4
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01351-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Evolutionary Genomics of Lactic Acid Bacteria
Kira S. Makarova* and
Eugene V. Koonin
National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20894

INTRODUCTION
The lactic acid bacteria (LAB) might be the most numerous group
of bacteria linked to humans. They are naturally associated
with mucosal surfaces, particularly the gastrointestinal tract,
and are also indigenous to food-related habitats, including
plant (fruits, vegetables, and cereal grains), wine, milk, and
meat environments (
60,
61). The LAB include both important pathogens,
e.g., several
Streptococcus species, and extremely valuable
nonpathogenic species that are used for industrial fermentation
of dairy products, meats, and vegetables, and they are also
critical for the production of wine, coffee, silage, cocoa,
and sourdough (
13,
60,
61). In addition, the LAB are a priceless
source of antimicrobial agents, the bacteriocins (reference
10 and references therein).
The term LAB mainly refers to the defining feature of the basal metabolism of these bacteria, the fermentation of hexose sugars yielding, primarily, lactic acid. Various aspects of LAB biology and application are thoroughly covered in several books by Wood and Holzapfel and Wood and Warner (60, 61) and numerous reviews, including those in a recent specialized issue of FEMS Microbiology Reviews (12, 14, 18, 20, 23, 24, 31, 39, 42, 49, 58). The definition of LAB is biological rather than taxonomical, i.e., the LAB do not comprise a monophyletic group of bacteria. Most of the LAB belong to the order Lactobacillales, a group of nonsporulating, gram-positive bacteria, but a few LAB species belong to the Actinobacteria (60).
The early sequencing of LAB genomes involved mostly bacteria of the genus Streptococcus, which encompasses most of the pathogenic LABs (50, 60). Currently, 19 complete genomes of streptococci are available, covering different strains of five species. A program aimed at extensive sequencing of the genomes of nonpathogenic LAB was announced in 2002 by the Lactic Acid Bacteria Genome Sequencing Consortium (19), but the actual breakthrough occurred only in the last 2 years (2005 and 2006). At the time of writing (August 2006), 18 complete genome sequences of the nonpathogenic LAB representing 14 species from the order Lactobacillales were available (Table 1) . The Lactobacillales have relatively small genomes for nonobligatory bacterial parasites or symbionts (characteristic genome size,
2 megabases, with
2,000 genes), with the number of genes in different species spanning the range from
1,600 to
3,000. This variation in the number of genes suggests that the evolution of LAB involved active processes of gene loss, duplication, and acquisition. The current collection of LAB genomes is a unique data set that includes multiple related genomes with a gradient of divergence in sequences and genome organizations. This set of related genomes is amenable to detailed reconstruction of genome evolution, which is not yet attainable with other groups of bacteria.
This review is largely based on recent work on comparative genomic
analysis of 12 nonpathogenic LAB from the order
Lactobacillales (Table
1) (
28). We briefly discuss the customized comparative-genomic
framework that was developed for the LAB and its application
to evolutionary reconstruction and functional genomics.

CLUSTERS OF ORTHOLOGOUS GENES OF LACTOBACILLALES: A FRAMEWORK FOR COMPARATIVE GENOMICS AND A TOOL FOR GENOME ANNOTATION
Robust identification of sets of orthologs (genes derived from
the same gene in the last common ancestor of the compared species)
is a prerequisite for informative evolutionary-genomic analysis
of any group of organisms (
25). Construction of orthologous
gene clusters for a compact taxon, such as the
Lactobacillales,
results in much finer granularity than is attainable for broader
groups of organisms (e.g., all bacteria), with a greater fraction
of clusters containing a single member from all or most of the
analyzed genomes.
Lactobacillales-specific clusters of orthologous
protein coding genes (LaCOGs) in 12 sequenced
Lactobacillales genomes were built using the computational procedures that were
previously employed for the construction of clusters of orthologous
groups of proteins (COGs) from the sequenced prokaryotic and
eukaryotic genomes (
52,
53). As with the original COG database,
manual curation was undertaken to refine the results of the
automatic procedure, including tree reconstruction for LaCOGs
that had multiple representatives for several genomes, searching
for potential missing LaCOG members in untranslated regions
of the LAB genomes, merging two or more LaCOGs when they appeared
to have evolved from the same ancestral gene, using genomic
context for LaCOG validation and refinement, and several additional
analyses (
37,
52).
Figure 1 shows the projection of the LaCOGs on the set of COGs that includes 63 prokaryotic genomes (52). The finer granularity of ortholog identification in the LaCOGs is apparent from the fact that 42% (1,359) of the LaCOGs correspond to 390 COGs. Not unexpectedly, many LaCOGs in this group represent duplications of widely conserved bacterial genes in the common ancestor of Bacilli or at a later stage of evolution. For example, there are three LaCOGs corresponding to the single COG that includes 23S RNA-specific pseudouridylate synthases from other bacteria (COG0564) and two LaCOGs for SpoU-like rRNA methylases (COG0566), TrmA-like tRNA (uracil-5-)-methyltransferases (COG2265), SrmB-like RNA helicases (COG0513), FtsW-like bacterial cell division membrane protein (COG0772), and many other COGs. Several paralogous genes (i.e., genes that evolved by duplication) in this group appear to be characteristic of Lactobacillales and deserve a more detailed discussion. One notable case involves two paralogous enolases (two LaCOGs), a nearly ubiquitous glycolytic enzyme that is present in a single copy in other bacteria. Phylogenetic analysis showed that one of the enolases in Lactobacillales is the ancestral version of that in gram-positive bacteria, whereas the other had apparently been acquired by the ancestor of the Lactobacillales from a different bacterial lineage, most likely Actinobacteria (28). Thus, the enolases of LAB actually appear to be pseudoparalogs, i.e., genes that evolved via acquisition of one of the related genes by horizontal transfer from a distant lineage rather than via duplication within the given lineage (25). It has been shown that both enolases of Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis have enzymatic activity (15); however, their specific physiological functions remain unknown.
Another case analysis revealed an even more complex evolutionary
history within the family of enzymes involved in peptidoglycan
biosynthesis. The gene in question is present in a single copy
in the majority of bacteria and encodes the enzyme UDP-
N-acetylmuramyl
tripeptide synthase (MurE), which catalyzes the addition of
mesodiaminopimelate to the peptidoglycan biosynthesis intermediate
UDP-
N-acetylmuramoyl-
L-alanyl-glutamate. The phylogenetic tree
suggests that two paralogs (LaCOG00743 and LaCOG01200) of this
enzyme from another group of bacteria (perhaps, again, actinobacteria)
have replaced the ancestral gene in all
Lactobacillales, with
the exception of
Lactobacillus plantarum, with subsequent functional
diversification (Fig.
2). The proteins of LaCOG01200 apparently
changed the substrate specificity to lysine and continue to
function in the peptidoglycan biosynthesis pathway (
4). The
function of LaCOG00743 remains unknown, but examination of the
genomic context yields some clues. The gene is located in a
conserved operon with the gene for

-carboxyl amidase, which
acts on the second amino acid (
D-Glu) of the stem peptide precursors;
in addition, the LaCOG00743 protein lacks the catalytic residues.
Thus, it can be inferred that this protein is the substrate
recognition subunit of the amidase.
Another group of interest consists of 707 (22%) LaCOGs that
have no counterparts in the general COG set. Of these, 338 (

11%)
were shared with one or more non-
Lactobacillales bacterial genomes
among those reported recently and not yet included in the COGs,
whereas 369 (

11%) appeared to be specific to
Lactobacillales and could be considered the genomic signature of the group.
Considerable effort has been invested in assigning reliable functional annotations to LaCOGs to reflect recent experimental findings on LAB genes and to predict functions of uncharacterized proteins on the basis of sequence similarity to proteins with known functions and domain architectures. Thanks to the broad representation of various lineages of Lactobacillales in the set of genomes used for LaCOG construction, LaCOGs provide excellent coverage of new genomes from this taxon, up to 90% of the genes (Fig. 3). Thus, LaCOGs are expected to become an essential, evolving resource for annotation of new genomes from the order Lactobacillales. The complete annotated list of LaCOGs is available at ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/pub/wolf/lacto (file LaCOGS_table.xls); other detailed results of this analysis, including reconstructions of gene loss and gain, are available upon request.

THE CONSERVED GENE CORE OF LACTOBACILLALES
An important issue that can be readily addressed with the help
of LaCOGs is the identification of the conserved gene core of
Lactobacillales, i.e., the set of genes that are present in
all sequenced genomes from this taxon and, by inference, are
likely to be essential for these bacteria. There are 567 LaCOGs
(18%) that are present in all 12 analyzed genomes. Not surprisingly,
the functional distribution of these LaCOGs shows that the majority
encode components of the information-processing systems (translation,
transcription, and replication). However, the core also includes
50 genes for which only a general prediction of biochemical
activity is available and 41 genes without known or predicted
functions. This observation emphasizes the current lack of understanding
of even some of the central cellular functions of relatively
simple bacteria. Two core genes have no detectable orthologs
outside
Lactobacillales and thus may be considered unique genomic
markers of
Lactobacillales. One of these unique genes encodes
a protein containing a peptidoglycan-binding LysM domain (LaCOG01826)
(Fig.
4A). In several genomes, this gene is located next to
the genes for ribosomal proteins and cytidylate kinase and might
be coregulated with these housekeeping genes. The second genomic
marker of
Lactobacillales, the highly conserved LaCOG01237,
contains no characterized domains (Fig.
4B). However, this gene
is located in a conserved genomic neighborhood encoding two
enzymes implicated in 4-thiouridine modification of tRNA [(5-methylaminomethyl-2-thiouridylate)
methyltransferase and a predicted sulfurase] (LaCOG00578 and
LaCOG01188), suggesting a role of LaCOG01237 proteins in specific
modulation of this essential modification (
27).

PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS AND HETEROGENEITY OF EVOLUTIONARY RATES AMONG LACTOBACILLALES
The LAB considered here belong to the phylum
Firmicutes, class
Bacilli, and order
Lactobacillales, a sister taxon to the order
Bacillales. Prior to the recent, extensive genome sequencing,
classification of
Lactobacillales remained an unresolved issue,
particularly because the phenotypic classification, which was
traditionally based on the type of fermentation, did not match
the rRNA-based phylogeny (
56). Whole-genome DNA and DNA-RNA
hybridization and GC content analysis led to the delineation
of three closely related lineages of
Lactobacillales: the
Leuconostoc group (
Leuconostoc mesenteroides and
Oenococcus oeni), the
Lactobacillus casei-Pediococcus group (
L. plantarum,
L. casei,
Pediococcus pentosaceus, and
Lactobacillus brevis), and the
Lactobacillus delbrueckii group (
L. delbrueckii,
Lactobacillus gasseri, and
Lactobacillus johnsonii); streptococci (
Streptococcus thermophilus)
and lactococci (
L. lactis subsp.
lactis and
Lactococcus lactis subsp.
cremoris) formed a separate branch (
48). With the availability
of complete genomes for all major branches of
Lactobacillales,
phylogenetic trees can be built by using concatenated protein
sequences encoded by genes that are unlikely to be transferred
horizontally. This approach has been shown to improve the resolution
and increase the robustness of phylogenetic analyses (
59). A
tree of
Lactobacillales constructed by this approach from concatenated
sequences of ribosomal proteins and RNA polymerase subunits
had the same topology and was supported by high bootstrap values
but disagreed in some important respects with the above classification
(
28). Specifically, the new tree suggests that the
Streptococcus-
Lactococcus branch is basal in the
Lactobacillales tree and the
Pediococcus group is a sister to the
Leuconostoc group within the
Lactobacillus clade. Thus, the genus
Lactobacillus appears to be paraphyletic
with respect to the
Pediococcus-Leuconostoc group.
Lactobacillus casei is confidently placed at the base of the
L. delbrueckii group. Figure
5 shows the phylogenetic tree of concatenated
RNA polymerase subunits for all species of
Lactobacillales whose
genomes are currently available; this tree, made for an expanded
species set, was fully compatible with the previous one (
28).
A molecular-clock test performed for the phylogenetic tree based
on multiple alignment of concatenated ribosomal proteins (
51)
revealed a high heterogeneity of evolutionary rates among
Lactobacillales,
including confirmation of the previously reported (
62) accelerated
evolution of the
Leuconostoc group by a factor of 1.7 to 1.9
relative to the sister
Pediococcus group (
28). Similarly,
O. oeni was found to evolve substantially faster (by a factor of
1.6) than
Leuconostoc. This finding is in accord with the experimental
observation of an increased mutation rate in
O. oeni (D. A.
Mills, unpublished observation) and the absence in the species
of the key enzymes of mismatch repair, MutL and MutS, which
is unique among the
Lactobacillales (Table
2) .

PHYLETIC PATTERNS AS A TOOL FOR ANALYSIS OF GENERAL TRENDS OF EVOLUTION FOR DIFFERENT SETS OF SPECIES
Analysis of phyletic (phylogenetic) patterns, i.e., patterns
of gene presence/absence in a particular set of genomes, is
a valuable approach both for the detection of evolutionary trends
and for functional prediction (
36,
44). A straightforward examination
of frequent phyletic patterns in LaCOGs immediately reveals
several trends in the evolution of
Lactobacillales that mostly
reflect gene losses, especially of genes that encode biosynthetic
enzymes (Table
2). However, genes shared by distinct sets of
bacteria are also of interest. Some of these shared genes apparently
reflect recent gene exchanges between distantly related species
within the order
Lactobacillales. Several cases are obvious,
e.g., 11 genes that are shared by
L. johnsonii and
L. lactis subsp.
cremoris and are located adjacent to a prophage and therefore
in all likelihood have been transferred by the phage vehicle.
Another set of genes disseminated via horizontal transfer is
the CRISPR-related system (CASS) implicated in the defense against
integrative phages and plasmids (
6,
33) in
L. delbrueckii and
L. casei. In these LAB, the CASS includes a unique gene that
encodes a protein with a Cas1 domain fused to a 3'-5' exonuclease
domain (
29). Other phyletic patterns reflect specific sets of
genes shared by related species, often poorly understood in
functional terms. Not surprisingly, the second largest gene
set (246 genes), after the conserved core, is shared by two
most closely related genomes, those of
Lactococcus lactis subsp.
lactis and
Lactococcus lactis subsp.
cremoris. Many genes in
this list (>50) apparently belong to prophages that are shared
by these two species and have probably integrated into the genome
of their common ancestor. Among the 88 genes that are specifically
shared by
L. johnsonii and
L. gasseri, 48 are uncharacterized;
many of them encode secreted and membrane proteins that are
likely to be involved in the interaction with mucosal surfaces
of the gastrointestinal tract, which these bacteria colonize.
Similar trends have been observed for three related species,
L. johnsonii,
L. gasseri, and
L. delbruecki, that specifically
share 39 genes, 27 of which are uncharacterized.

GENE LOSS AND GAIN IN THE EVOLUTION OF LACTOBACILLALES
Phyletic patterns of LaCOGs, together with the phylogenetic
tree of
Lactobacillales, can be used for explicit reconstruction
of the events that occurred during the evolution of this group
after its divergence from the common ancestor with the rest
of the
Bacilli. For the purpose of this reconstruction, we employed
a modification of a previously developed method based on the
weighted-parsimony approach (
32). The results of the reconstruction
(
28) suggest that the common ancestor of
Lactobacillales had
at least

2,100 to 2,200 genes, having lost 600 to 1,200 genes
(

25 to 30%) and gained <100 genes after the divergence from
the
Bacilli ancestor, for which the genome size of

2,700 to
3,700 genes was estimated (Fig.
6). Many of the changes mapped
to this stage of evolution seem to be related to the transition
made by the LAB to existence in nutritionally rich medium. Thus,
a number of genes for biosynthesis of cofactors, such as heme,
molybdenum coenzyme, and panthothenate, were lost, and conversely,
some cofactor transporters were acquired, e.g., nicotinamide
mononucleotide transporter. Another notable acquisition is a
group of diverse peptidases which are obviously an important
commodity in the protein-rich environments inhabited by the
LAB. The loss of heme/copper-type cytochrome/quinol oxidase-related
genes (CyoABCDE) and catalase (KatE), characteristic enzymes
of aerobic bacteria, suggest that the ancestor of
Lactobacillales was a microaerophile or an anaerobe.
Lineage-specific gene loss was extensive in the evolution of
all lineages of
Lactobacillales, but several species stand out
as especially notable "losers." In particular,
S. thermophilus not only lost numerous genes but also has many fresh pseudogenes,
suggesting an active and ongoing process of genome decay, which
has been reported for two different strains of the same species
(
5). Moreover, substantial gene loss (368 genes, according to
the present reconstruction) also occurred at the base of the
Streptococcus-
Lactococcus branch, including several genes involved
in cell division that are conserved in most bacteria, such as
CrcB, MreB, MreC, and MinD. This is reminiscent of the trends
of gene loss that are observed in other symbiotic and pathogenic
bacteria (
21,
35). The lineages of
Lactobacillales that are
particularly prone to gene loss are
P. pentosaceus; the
Leuconostoc and
Oenococcus branch, with considerable additional loss in
each species; and the
L. delbrueckii group (
L. debrueckii,
L. gasseri, and
L. johnsonii), with further genome reduction in
L. gasseri and
L. johnsonii (Fig.
6). In the species with larger
genomes, such as
L. plantarum and
L. casei, the loss of ancestral
genes was counterbalanced by the emergence of many new genes
via duplication and horizontal gene transfer (HGT) (Fig.
6).

HORIZONTAL GENE TRANSFER IN LACTOBACILLALES
Horizontal gene transfer via bacteriophage-mediated or conjugative
pathways has been extensively documented in
Lactobacillales and appears to be important for niche-specific adaptation in
the lactococci (
61). Signs of HGT are particularly notable in
L. lactis subsp.
cremoris SK11, which harbors a conjugative
plasmid (pLAC3) and several additional plasmids carrying genes
related to growth in milk (
47).
Horizontal gene transfer definitely played an important role in shaping the common ancestor of Lactobacillales. As many as 84 genes that were inferred to have been acquired by the Lactobacillales ancestor (Fig. 6) most probably were horizontally transferred from different sources (only 2 of the 86 acquired genes currently do not have orthologs outside Lactobacillales). In some cases, the ancestor acquired an additional, pseudoparalogous copy of a gene by HGT (e.g., the aforementioned enolases), whereas on other occasions, xenologous displacement (acquisition of genes via HGT, followed by the loss of the ancestral orthologous gene) (26) apparently took place, as in the case of the two forms of the MurE-like UDP-N-acetylmuramyl tripeptide synthase.
Recently, a simple approach for the detection of violations of the molecular clock in individual COGs has been developed (41). The approach is based on comparing the evolutionary distances within a set of orthologs to a standard intergenomic distance measured for genes known to be less prone than others to HGT and deviations in evolutionary rates (e.g., ribosomal proteins and subunits of RNA polymerase). Most often, statistically significant deviations from the molecular clock are best explained by HGT (41). This test was applied to the LaCOGs, and significant violations of the molecular clock were detected in at least 25% of the LaCOGs, suggesting a high level of HGT and/or major local accelerations of evolution. Molecular-clock violations are particularly common in certain functional groups of genes, such as those encoding enzymes of sugar metabolism, including key enzymes, such as phosphoketolase, transketolase, and various components of phosphotransferase systems.
Furthermore, most of the unique genes that are present in the individual genomes (not covered by LaCOGs) and that have homologs outside Lactobacillales are probable products of recent HGT. Among such examples are two copies of the Mn-containing catalase (COG3546) in P. pentosaceus that is shared with a different strain of L. plantarum (3) and that were probably transferred to the ancestral lineage of the Pediococcus group from a source belonging to Bacilli (but not Lactobacillales), with subsequent loss in other members of the Pediococcus group; a distinct form of the predicted polymerase of CASS (COG1353) that is most often present in thermophiles and was detected in all strains of S. thermophilus (29); the urease complex that is present in S. thermophilus but absent in other Lactobacillales and that has been shown to influence the rate of milk acidification (34); and the propanediol utilization operon, which is present in L. brevis and so far has been found only in a few species from different lineages, including Lactobacillus collinoides, a heterofermentative LAB contained in cider, where the enzymes encoded in this operon are thought to be involved in glycerol degradation (45).

LINEAGE-SPECIFIC EXPANSION OF PARALOGOUS GENE FAMILIES
Like all other bacterial lineages (
16),
Lactobacillales have
a substantial number of expanded gene families that evolved
either by lineage-specific gene duplication or by acquisition
of pseudoparalogous genes via HGT (
26). A closer examination
of these families indicates that adaptation to growth in nutrient-rich
environments was the major driving force behind the fixation
of duplications and acquisitions during the evolution of the
Lactobacillales.
Many genes encoding proteins involved in sugar metabolism and transport were duplicated or acquired early in the evolution of the Lactobacillales, including those encoding enolase, several phosphotransferase systems, ß-galactosidase, GpmB-family sugar phosphatases, galactose mutarotase, and others. In addition, expansion of peptidases and amino acid transporters seems to have occurred in several lineages of Lactobacillales. Interestingly, several expanded families include proteins involved in antibiotic resistance in other bacteria, such as ß-lactamases and penicillin V acylases, despite the fact that most LAB species are sensitive to common antibiotics and, after centuries of consumption by humans, have been accordingly "generally recognized as safe" (17, 54). Conceivably, the homologs of antibiotic resistance genes are involved in normal cell wall biosynthesis in the Lactobacillales. In the same vein, expansion of a distinct family of tyrosine/serine phosphatases, which are often located in the same operon with a serine/threonine protein kinase fused to ß-lactam-binding (PASTA) domains, is likely to be important for regulation of cell wall biosynthesis (63). Furthermore, Lactobacillales encode a paralog of class II lysyl-tRNA synthetase that is fused to a membrane-associated domain (COG2898) implicated in oxacillin-like antibiotic resistance (40) and is probably involved in cell wall biosynthesis.

SIMILAR EVOLUTIONARY TRENDS IN LACTOBACILLALES AND BIFIDOBACTERIUM LONGUM
Bifidobacterium longum is a LAB that belongs to a different
major bacterial branch, the actinobacteria. The complete genome
sequence of
B. longum has been reported (
46). This bacterium
also inhabits the gastrointestinal tract and so shares the environment
with several
Lactobacillales (Table
1). Identification of common
genes between
B. longum and
Lactobacillales is of interest because
it has the potential to delineate a "genomic cognate" of the
LAB phenotype. However, only seven genes that are present in
B. longum but not in the genomes of non-LAB actinobacteria are
shared specifically with
Lactobacillales. Only one of these
genes, which encodes a functionally uncharacterized membrane
protein, is present in seven genomes of
Lactobacillales (LaCOG00453),
whereas the rest are present only in
B. longum and two
Lactobacillales species. By contrast, common trends of gene loss among LAB with
different taxonomic affinities are obvious (Table
3). The majority
of these common losses map to the last common ancestor of
Lactobacillales.
These observations indicate that convergent evolution of the
LAB phenotype in different bacterial lineages was accompanied
by similar processes of extensive loss of genes, primarily those
encoding a variety of metabolic capabilities, whereas acquisition
of new genes was much less extensive and involved different
gene sets. At least in the case of
B. longum and the
Lactobacillales,
there is no evidence of substantial HGT between taxonomically
distant LAB.

USING THE GENE CONTEXT APPROACH FOR DETECTION OF NEW BACTERIOCINS
Lactobacillales are known for producing specific antimicrobial
peptides, the bacteriocins (
38,
55). Several proteins responsible
for the modification and export of bacteriocins and regulation
of bacteriocin biosynthesis are often encoded in the same operon
with the bacteriocins themselves (
38,
55). Since bacteriocins
are small proteins with highly diverged sequences, they are
often difficult to identify by amino acid sequence conservation.
A comparative-genomic approach is likely to be effective for
a more complete characterization of the bacteriocin repertoire
of
Lactobacillales. Indeed, in seven
Lactobacillales genomes,
we identified clustered genes for putative bacteriocins and
associated proteins. Several of these newly detected candidate
bacteriocins clearly belong to two families characterized previously:
homologs of pediocin from
P. pentosaceus, homologs of which
are also present in
L. mesenteroides and
L. casei, and homologs
of divercin V41 (
30), which are present in
P. pentosaceus and
L. johnsonii. In addition, numerous small open reading frames
located in the immediate vicinity of the genes for bacteriocins
and associated proteins might encode novel bacteriocins, despite
the lack of sequence similarity to known ones (Fig.
7). Recently,
a similar strategy for genome mining in search of new bacteriocins
has been implemented in a specialized online server (
11).

CONCLUSIONS
The sequencing of multiple complete genomes has created unprecedented
opportunities for evolutionary genomics of LAB, particularly
those of the
Lactobacillales lineage. The clusters of orthologous
genes from
Lactobacillales (LaCOGs) provide a convenient, flexible
framework for both functional annotation of new genomes of
Lactobacillales and evolutionary reconstruction. Loss of ancestral genes, primarily
those for various metabolic enzymes, comes across as the central
theme in the evolution of
Lactobacillales, with a clear connection
with the adaptation of these bacteria to their nutrient-rich
habitats. Substantial gene loss had already occurred at an early
stage of the evolution of
Lactobacillales, after their divergence
from the common ancestor with the rest of the
Bacilli but before
the radiation of the extant species. Additional differential
gene loss took place during the subsequent evolution of each
lineage of
Lactobacillales. The trends of gene loss are very
similar in taxonomically distant LAB, particularly between
Lactobacillales and
B. longum, an actinomycete, conceivably due to similar environmental
pressures. However, the repertoires of genes that were acquired
via HGT are quite different, indicating that the LAB phenotype
evolved convergently in diverse lineages of bacteria as opposed
to horizontal transfer of a unique suite of genes. Some of the
genes acquired by
Lactobacillales are clearly adaptations to
existence in the nutrient-rich habitats of these bacteria. Comparative-genomic
analysis substantially facilitates functional annotation of
LAB genomes. In particular, this analysis helps to predict new
bacteriocins, antimicrobial peptides that are typically produced
by LAB, apparently reflecting their long-term existence in complex
microbial communities.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank the members of the Lactic Acid Bacteria Genome Sequencing
Consortium and, personally, David Mills and Sergay Kozyavkin
for extensive collaboration and numerous helpful discussions
in the course of the comparative-genomic analysis of LAB.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20894. Phone: (301) 435-5912. Fax: (301) 435-7794. E-mail:
makarova{at}ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.

Published ahead of print on 3 November 2006. 

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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2007, p. 1199-1208, Vol. 189, No. 4
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01351-06
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