Journal article
Experimental evolution in vivo to identify selective pressures during pneumococcal colonization
VS Cooper, E Honsa, H Rowe, C Deitrick, AR Iverson, JJ Whittall, SL Neville, CA McDevitt, C Kietzman, JW Rosch
Msystems | AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY | Published : 2020
Abstract
Experimental evolution is a powerful technique to understand how populations evolve from selective pressures imparted by the surrounding environment. With the advancement of whole-population genomic sequencing, it is possible to identify and track multiple contending genotypes associated with adaptations to specific selective pressures. This approach has been used repeatedly with model species in vitro, but only rarely in vivo. Herein we report results of replicate experimentally evolved populations of Streptococcus pneumoniae propagated by repeated murine nasal colonization with the aim of identifying gene products under strong selection as well as the population genetic dynamics of infecti..
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Grants
Awarded by Automotive Research Center
Funding Acknowledgements
J.W.R. and V.S.C. are supported by grant 1U01AI124302. J.W.R. is supported by grant 1R01AI110618. This work was supported by St. Jude Children's Hospital and ALSAC. This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Project grant DP170102102 to J.W.R. and C.A.M. S.L.N. is a National Health and Medical Research Council Early Career Research Fellow (1142695), and C.A.M. is an ARC Future Fellow (FT170100006).