Genome and Evolution of Yersinia pestis

Adv Exp Med Biol. 2016:918:171-192. doi: 10.1007/978-94-024-0890-4_6.

Abstract

This chapter summarizes researches on genome and evolution features of Yersinia pestis, the young pathogen that evolved from Y. pseudotuberculosis at least 5000 years ago. Y. pestis is a highly clonal bacterial species with closed pan-genome. Comparative genomic analysis revealed that genome of Y. pestis experienced highly frequent rearrangement and genome decay events during the evolution. The genealogy of Y. pestis includes five major branches, and four of them seemed raised from a "big bang" node that is associated with the Black Death. Although whole genome-wide variation of Y. pestis reflected a neutral evolutionary process, the branch length in the genealogical tree revealed over dispersion, which was supposedly caused by varied historical molecular clock that is associated with demographical effect by alternate cycles of enzootic disease and epizootic disease in sylvatic plague foci. In recent years, palaeomicrobiology researches on victims of the Black Death, and Justinian's plague verified that two historical pandemics were indeed caused by Y. pestis, but the etiological lineages might be extinct today.

Keywords: Evolution; Genome; Molecular clock; Population diversity; Y. pestis.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Evolution, Molecular*
  • Gene Silencing
  • Genome, Bacterial / genetics*
  • Mutation Rate
  • Pandemics*
  • Plague / epidemiology
  • Plague / microbiology*
  • Yersinia pestis / classification
  • Yersinia pestis / genetics*
  • Yersinia pestis / pathogenicity
  • Yersinia pestis / physiology