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Horizontal gene transfer
Horizontal gene transfer
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Tree of life showing vertical and horizontal gene transfers

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) or lateral gene transfer (LGT)[1][2][3] is the movement of genetic material between organisms other than by the ("vertical") transmission of DNA from parent to offspring (reproduction).[4] HGT is an important factor in the evolution of many organisms.[5][6] HGT is influencing scientific understanding of higher-order evolution while more significantly shifting perspectives on bacterial evolution.[7]

Horizontal gene transfer is the primary mechanism for the spread of antibiotic resistance in bacteria,[8][5][9][10] and plays an important role in the evolution of bacteria that can degrade novel compounds such as human-created pesticides[11] and in the evolution, maintenance, and transmission of virulence.[12] It often involves temperate bacteriophages and plasmids.[13][14][15] Genes responsible for antibiotic resistance in one species of bacteria can be transferred to another species of bacteria through various mechanisms of HGT such as transformation, transduction and conjugation, subsequently arming the antibiotic resistant genes' recipient against antibiotics. The rapid spread of antibiotic resistance genes in this manner is becoming a challenge to manage in the field of medicine. Ecological factors may also play a role in the HGT of antibiotic resistant genes.[16]

Horizontal gene transfer is recognized as a pervasive evolutionary process that distributes genes between divergent prokaryotic lineages[17] and can also involve eukaryotes.[18][19] HGT events are thought to occur less frequently in eukaryotes than in prokaryotes. However, growing evidence indicates that HGT is relatively common among many eukaryotic species and can have an impact on adaptation to novel environments. Its study, however, is hindered by the complexity of eukaryotic genomes and the abundance of repeat-rich regions, which complicate the accurate identification and characterization of transferred genes.[20][21]

It is postulated that HGT promotes the maintenance of a universal life biochemistry and, subsequently, the universality of the genetic code.[22]

History

[edit]

Griffith's experiment, reported in 1928 by Frederick Griffith,[23] was the first experiment suggesting that bacteria are capable of transferring genetic information through a process known as transformation.[24][25] Griffith's findings were followed by research in the late 1930s and early 1940s that isolated DNA as the material that communicated this genetic information.

Horizontal genetic transfer was then described in Seattle in 1951, in a paper demonstrating that the transfer of a viral gene into Corynebacterium diphtheriae created a virulent strain from a non-virulent strain,[26] simultaneously revealing the mechanism of diphtheria (that patients could be infected with the bacteria but not have any symptoms, and then suddenly convert later or never),[27] and giving the first example for the relevance of the lysogenic cycle.[28] Inter-bacterial gene transfer was first described in Japan in a 1959 publication that demonstrated the transfer of antibiotic resistance between different species of bacteria.[29][30] In the mid-1980s, Syvanen[31] postulated that biologically significant lateral gene transfer has existed since the beginning of life on Earth and has been involved in shaping all of evolutionary history.

As Jian, Rivera and Lake (1999) put it: "Increasingly, studies of genes and genomes are indicating that considerable horizontal transfer has occurred between prokaryotes"[32] (see also Lake and Rivera, 2007).[33] The phenomenon appears to have had some significance for unicellular eukaryotes as well. As Bapteste et al. (2005) observe, "additional evidence suggests that gene transfer might also be an important evolutionary mechanism in protist evolution."[34]

Grafting of one plant to another can transfer chloroplasts (organelles in plant cells that conduct photosynthesis), mitochondrial DNA, and the entire cell nucleus containing the genome to potentially make a new species.[35] Some Lepidoptera (e.g. monarch butterflies and silkworms) have been genetically modified by horizontal gene transfer from the wasp bracovirus.[36] Bites from insects in the family Reduviidae (assassin bugs) can, via a parasite, infect humans with the trypanosomal Chagas disease, which can insert its DNA into the human genome.[37] It has been suggested that lateral gene transfer to humans from bacteria may play a role in cancer.[38]

Aaron Richardson and Jeffrey D. Palmer state: "Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) has played a major role in bacterial evolution and is fairly common in certain unicellular eukaryotes. However, the prevalence and importance of HGT in the evolution of multicellular eukaryotes remain unclear."[39]

Due to the increasing amount of evidence suggesting the importance of these phenomena for evolution (see below) molecular biologists such as Peter Gogarten have described horizontal gene transfer as "A New Paradigm for Biology".[40]

Mechanisms

[edit]

There are several mechanisms for horizontal gene transfer:[5][41][42]

Horizontal transposon transfer

[edit]

A transposable element (TE) (also called a transposon or jumping gene) is a mobile segment of DNA that can sometimes pick up a resistance gene and insert it into a plasmid or chromosome, thereby inducing horizontal gene transfer of antibiotic resistance.[43]

Horizontal transposon transfer (HTT) refers to the passage of pieces of DNA that are characterized by their ability to move from one locus to another between genomes by means other than parent-to-offspring inheritance. Horizontal gene transfer has long been thought to be crucial to prokaryotic evolution, but there is a growing amount of data showing that HTT is a common and widespread phenomenon in eukaryote evolution as well.[46] On the transposable element side, spreading between genomes via horizontal transfer may be viewed as a strategy to escape purging due to purifying selection, mutational decay and/or host defense mechanisms.[47]

HTT can occur with any type of transposable elements, but DNA transposons and LTR retroelements are more likely to be capable of HTT because both have a stable, double-stranded DNA intermediate that is thought to be sturdier than the single-stranded RNA intermediate of non-LTR retroelements, which can be highly degradable.[46] Non-autonomous elements may be less likely to transfer horizontally compared to autonomous elements because they do not encode the proteins required for their own mobilization. The structure of these non-autonomous elements generally consists of an intronless gene encoding a transposase protein, and may or may not have a promoter sequence. Those that do not have promoter sequences encoded within the mobile region rely on adjacent host promoters for expression.[46] Horizontal transfer is thought to play an important role in the TE life cycle.[46] In plants, it appears that LTR retrotransposons of the Copia superfamilies, especially those with low copy numbers from the Ale and Ivana lineages, are more likely to undergo horizontal transfer between different plant species.[48]

HTT has been shown to occur between species and across continents in both plants[49] and animals (Ivancevic et al. 2013), though some TEs have been shown to more successfully colonize the genomes of certain species over others.[50] Both spatial and taxonomic proximity of species has been proposed to favor HTTs in plants and animals.[49] It is unknown how the density of a population may affect the rate of HTT events within a population, but close proximity due to parasitism and cross contamination due to crowding have been proposed to favor HTT in both plants and animals.[49] In plants, the interaction between lianas and trees has been shown to facilitate HTT in natural ecosystems.[48] Successful transfer of a transposable element requires delivery of DNA from donor to host cell (and to the germ line for multi-cellular organisms), followed by integration into the recipient host genome.[46] Though the actual mechanism for the transportation of TEs from donor cells to host cells is unknown, it is established that naked DNA and RNA can circulate in bodily fluid.[46] Many proposed vectors include arthropods, viruses, freshwater snails (Ivancevic et al. 2013), endosymbiotic bacteria,[47] and intracellular parasitic bacteria.[46] In some cases, even TEs facilitate transport for other TEs.[50]

The arrival of a new TE in a host genome can have detrimental consequences because TE mobility may induce mutation. However, HTT can also be beneficial by introducing new genetic material into a genome and promoting the shuffling of genes and TE domains among hosts, which can be co-opted by the host genome to perform new functions.[50] Moreover, transposition activity increases the TE copy number and generates chromosomal rearrangement hotspots.[51] HTT detection is a difficult task because it is an ongoing phenomenon that is constantly changing in frequency of occurrence and composition of TEs inside host genomes. Furthermore, few species have been analyzed for HTT, making it difficult to establish patterns of HTT events between species. These issues can lead to the underestimation or overestimation of HTT events between ancestral and current eukaryotic species.[51]

Methods of detection

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A speciation event produces orthologs of a gene in the two daughter species. A horizontal gene transfer event from one species to another adds a xenolog of the gene to the receiving genome.

Horizontal gene transfer is typically inferred using bioinformatics methods, either by identifying atypical sequence signatures ("parametric" methods) or by identifying strong discrepancies between the evolutionary history of particular sequences compared to that of their hosts. The transferred gene (xenolog) found in the receiving species is more closely related to the genes of the donor species than would be expected.[citation needed]

Viruses

[edit]

The virus called Mimivirus infects amoebae. Another virus, called Sputnik, also infects amoebae, but it cannot reproduce unless mimivirus has already infected the same cell.[52]

Sputnik's genome reveals further insight into its biology. Although 13 of its genes show little similarity to any other known genes, three are closely related to mimivirus and mamavirus genes, perhaps cannibalized by the tiny virus as it packaged up particles sometime in its history. This suggests that the satellite virus could perform horizontal gene transfer between viruses, paralleling the way that bacteriophages ferry genes between bacteria.[53]

Horizontal transfer is also seen between geminiviruses and tobacco plants.

Prokaryotes

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Horizontal gene transfer is common among bacteria, even among very distantly related ones, and also between bacteria and archaea[54]. This process is thought to be a significant cause of increased drug resistance[5][55] when one bacterial cell acquires resistance, and the resistance genes are transferred to the other species.[56][57] Transposition and horizontal gene transfer, along with strong natural selective forces have led to multi-drug resistant strains of S. aureus and many other pathogenic bacteria.[43] Horizontal gene transfer also plays a role in the spread of virulence factors, such as exotoxins and exoenzymes, amongst bacteria.[5] A prime example concerning the spread of exotoxins is the adaptive evolution of Shiga toxins in E. coli through horizontal gene transfer via transduction with Shigella species of bacteria.[58] Strategies to combat certain bacterial infections by targeting these specific virulence factors and mobile genetic elements have been proposed.[12] For example, horizontally transferred genetic elements play important roles in the virulence of E. coli, Salmonella, Streptococcus and Clostridium perfringens.[5]

In prokaryotes, restriction-modification systems are known to provide immunity against horizontal gene transfer and in stabilizing mobile genetic elements. Genes encoding restriction modification systems have been reported to move between prokaryotic genomes within mobile genetic elements (MGE) such as plasmids, prophages, insertion sequences/transposons, integrative conjugative elements (ICE),[59] and integrons. Still, they are more frequently a chromosomal-encoded barrier to MGE than an MGE-encoded tool for cell infection.[60]

Lateral gene transfer via a mobile genetic element, namely the integrated conjugative element (ICE) Bs1 has been reported for its role in the global DNA damage SOS response of the gram positive Bacillus subtilis.[61] Furthermore, it has been linked with the radiation and desiccation resistance of Bacillus pumilus SAFR-032 spores,[62] isolated from spacecraft cleanroom facilities.[63][64][65]

Transposon insertion elements have been reported to increase the fitness of gram-negative E. coli strains through either major transpositions or genome rearrangements, and increasing mutation rates.[66][67] In a study on the effects of long-term exposure of simulated microgravity on non-pathogenic E. coli, the results showed transposon insertions occur at loci, linked to SOS stress response.[68] When the same E. coli strain was exposed to a combination of simulated microgravity and trace (background) levels of (the broad spectrum) antibiotic (chloramphenicol), the results showed transposon-mediated rearrangements (TMRs), disrupting genes involved in bacterial adhesion, and deleting an entire segment of several genes involved with motility and chemotaxis.[69] Both of these studies have implications for microbial growth, adaptation to and antibiotic resistance in real time space conditions.

Horizontal gene transfer is particularly active in bacterial genomes around the production of secondary or specialized metabolites.[70] This is clearly exhibited within certain groups of bacteria including P. aeruginosa and actinomycetales, an order of Actinomycetota.[71] Polyketide synthases (PKSs) and biosynthetic gene clusters provide modular organizations of associated genes making these bacteria well-adapted to acquire and discard helpful modular modifications via HGT.[citation needed] Certain areas of genes known as hotspots further increase the likelihood of horizontally transferred secondary metabolite-producing genes.[72] The promiscuity of enzymes is a reoccurring theme in this particular theatre.[citation needed]

Bacterial transformation

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1: Donor bacterium 2: Bacterium who will receive the gene 3: The red portion represents the gene that will be transferred. Transformation in bacteria happens in a certain environment.

Natural transformation is a bacterial adaptation for DNA transfer (HGT) that depends on the expression of numerous bacterial genes whose products are responsible for this process.[73][74] In general, transformation is a complex, energy-requiring developmental process. In order for a bacterium to bind, take up and recombine exogenous DNA into its chromosome, it must become competent, that is, enter a special physiological state. Competence development in Bacillus subtilis requires expression of about 40 genes.[75] The DNA integrated into the host chromosome is usually (but with infrequent exceptions) derived from another bacterium of the same species, and is thus homologous to the resident chromosome. The capacity for natural transformation occurs in at least 67 prokaryotic species.[74] Competence for transformation is typically induced by high cell density and/or nutritional limitation, conditions associated with the stationary phase of bacterial growth. Competence appears to be an adaptation for DNA repair.[76] Transformation in bacteria can be viewed as a primitive sexual process, since it involves interaction of homologous DNA from two individuals to form recombinant DNA that is passed on to succeeding generations. Although transduction is the form of HGT most commonly associated with bacteriophages, certain phages may also be able to promote transformation.[77]

Bacterial conjugation

[edit]
1: Donor bacterium cell (F+ cell) 2: Bacterium that receives the plasmid (F- cell) 3: Plasmid that will be moved to the other bacterium 4: Pilus and T4SS. Conjugation in bacteria using a sex pilus; then the bacterium that received the plasmid can go give it to other bacteria as well.
E. coli cells going through conjugation and sharing genetic information. F-pilus is reaching towards other cell.

As mentioned before, conjugation is a method of horizontal gene transfer through cell to cell contact.[43] Through the process of conjugation, type IV Secretion Systems (T4SS) are used to passage on DNA from the donor cell to the recipient cell.[78] These T4SS encoded within the plasmid carry other proteins and genes that help supplement the cell in conjugation. Research has shown that there are Single Binding DNA Binding proteins (SSBs) also encoded within the conjugative plasmid may help with conjugation and cell viability.[79] This is thought to be the case because SSBs naturally are expressed to help with stabilizing single-stranded DNA (ssDNA).[80] SSBs will also recruit other proteins like RadD or RecA expressed in events of DNA recombination, repair, and replication.[81][82] Further showcasing their possible role in conjugation. Although it may help, studies have also shown for proteins like SSB to not be essential in conjugation. For example, the plasmid pCF10 from Enterococcus faecalis, a gram-positive bacterium, has a SSB like-protein called PrgE and was classified for not being required for conjugation.[83] More work needs to be done on why proteins that bind to ssDNA are encoded into conjugative plasmids.

Conjugation in the case of microbiomes and symbioses is very important. From this process new genes are acquired that lead to increasing genetic diversity and evolution such as the acquisition of antibiotic resistance genes. Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a species that has evolved through methods like conjugation while gaining antibiotic resistance.[84][85] This evolution or increase in genetic diversity is also seen in many other species.[86] Due to this, there is a huge concern on how impactful conjugation or horizontal gene transfer can be on human health and your microbiome as pathogenic microbes can become more pathogenic. Studies have shown that even our own microbiome has a plethora of antimicrobial genes which if transferred to pathogenic microbes could be detrimental.[87]

Conjugation in Mycobacterium smegmatis, like conjugation in E. coli, requires stable and extended contact between a donor and a recipient strain, is DNase resistant, and the transferred DNA is incorporated into the recipient chromosome by homologous recombination. However, unlike E. coli high frequency of recombination conjugation (Hfr), mycobacterial conjugation is a type of HGT that is chromosome rather than plasmid based.[88] Furthermore, in contrast to E. coli (Hfr) conjugation, in M. smegmatis all regions of the chromosome are transferred with comparable efficiencies. Substantial blending of the parental genomes was found as a result of conjugation, and this blending was regarded as reminiscent of that seen in the meiotic products of sexual reproduction.[88][89]

Archaeal DNA transfer

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Haloarchaea are aerobic halophiles thought to have evolved from anaerobic methanogens. A large amount of their genome, 126 composite gene families, are derived from genetic material from bacterial genomes. This has allowed them to adapt to extremely salty environments.[90][91]

The archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus, when UV irradiated, strongly induces the formation of type IV pili which then facilitates cellular aggregation.[92][93] Exposure to chemical agents that cause DNA damage also induces cellular aggregation.[92] Other physical stressors, such as temperature shift or pH, do not induce aggregation, suggesting that DNA damage is a specific inducer of cellular aggregation.[citation needed]

UV-induced cellular aggregation mediates intercellular chromosomal HGT marker exchange with high frequency,[94] and UV-induced cultures display recombination rates that exceed those of uninduced cultures by as much as three orders of magnitude. S. solfataricus cells aggregate preferentially with other cells of their own species.[94] Frols et al.[92][95] and Ajon et al.[94] suggested that UV-inducible DNA transfer is likely an important mechanism for providing increased repair of damaged DNA via homologous recombination. This process can be regarded as a simple form of sexual interaction.

Another thermophilic species, Sulfolobus acidocaldarius, is able to undergo HGT. S. acidocaldarius can exchange and recombine chromosomal markers at temperatures up to 84 °C.[96] UV exposure induces pili formation and cellular aggregation.[94] Cells with the ability to aggregate have greater survival than mutants lacking pili that are unable to aggregate. The frequency of recombination is increased by DNA damage induced by UV-irradiation[97] and by DNA damaging chemicals.[98]

The ups operon, containing five genes, is highly induced by UV irradiation. The proteins encoded by the ups operon are employed in UV-induced pili assembly and cellular aggregation leading to intercellular DNA exchange and homologous recombination.[99] Since this system increases the fitness of S. acidocaldarius cells after UV exposure, Wolferen et al.[99][100] considered that transfer of DNA likely takes place in order to repair UV-induced DNA damages by homologous recombination.

Eukaryotes

[edit]

"Sequence comparisons suggest recent horizontal transfer of many genes among diverse species including across the boundaries of phylogenetic 'domains'. Thus determining the phylogenetic history of a species can not be done conclusively by determining evolutionary trees for single genes."[101]

Organelle to nuclear genome

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Organelle to organelle

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Bacteria to fungi

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Bacteria to plants

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  • Agrobacterium, a pathogenic bacterium that causes cells to proliferate as crown galls and proliferating roots is an example of a bacterium that can transfer genes to plants and this plays an important role in plant evolution.[107]
  • Land plants and their close relatives, the charophycean green algae, share a set of glycosyl hydrolases. These enzymes were likely transferred from bacteria and fungi to the last common ancestor of these organisms before the origin of land plants.[108]

Bacteria to animals

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  • HhMAN1 is a gene in the genome of the coffee berry borer (Hypothenemus hampei) that resembles bacterial genes, and is thought to be transferred from bacteria in the beetle's gut.[109][110]
  • oskar is an essential gene for the specification of the germline in Holometabola and its origin is through to be due to a HGT event followed by a fusion with a LOTUS domain.[111]
  • Bdelloid rotifers currently hold the 'record' for HGT in animals with ~8% of their genes from bacterial origins.[112] Tardigrades were thought to break the record with 17.5% HGT, but that finding was an artifact of bacterial contamination.[113]
  • A study found the genomes of 40 animals (including 10 primates, four Caenorhabditis worms, and 12 Drosophila insects) contained genes which the researchers concluded had been transferred from bacteria and fungi by horizontal gene transfer.[114] The researchers estimated that for some nematodes and Drosophila insects these genes had been acquired relatively recently.[115]
  • A bacteriophage-mediated mechanism transfers genes between prokaryotes and eukaryotes.[116] Nuclear localization signals in bacteriophage terminal proteins (TP) prime DNA replication and become covalently linked to the viral genome. The role of virus and bacteriophages in HGT in bacteria, suggests that TP-containing genomes could be a vehicle of inter-kingdom genetic information transference all throughout evolution.[117]
  • The adzuki bean beetle has acquired genetic material from its (non-beneficial) endosymbiont Wolbachia.[118] New examples have recently been reported demonstrating that Wolbachia bacteria represent an important potential source of genetic material in arthropods and filarial nematodes.[119]
  • The psyllid Pachypsylla venusta has acquired genes from its current endosymbiont Carsonella, and from many of its historical endosymbionts, too.[120]

Plant to plant

[edit]
  • Striga hermonthica, a parasitic eudicot, has received a gene from sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) to its nuclear genome.[121] The gene's functionality is unknown.
  • A gene that allowed ferns to survive in dark forests came from the hornwort, which grows in mats on streambanks or trees. The neochrome gene arrived about 180 million years ago.[122]
  • Transfer of mRNA between host plants and heterotrophs plants in the Orobanchaceae have been directly observed. mRNA transcripts can therefore be a factor involved in the transfer and integration of foreign DNA in heterotrophs.[123]

Plants to animals

[edit]

Plant to fungus

[edit]
  • Gene transfer between plants and fungi has been posited for a number of cases, including rice (Oryza sativa).[citation needed]
  • Evidence of gene transfer from plants was documented in the fungus Colletotrichum.[128]
  • Plant expansin genes were transferred to fungi further enabling the fungi to infect plants.[129]

Plant to bacteria

[edit]
  • Plant expansin genes were transferred to bacteria further enabling the bacteria to infect plants.[129]

Fungi to insects

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Fungi to fungi

[edit]
  • The toxin α-amanitin is found in numerous, seemingly unrelated genera fungi such as Amanita, Lepiota, and Galerina. Two biosynthetic genes involved in the production of α-amanitin are P450-29 and FMO1. Phylogenetic and genetic analyses of these genes strongly indicate that they were transferred between the genera via horizontal gene transfer.[132]
  • The ToxA protein (wheat virulence protein) included in a ~14 kb element, containing both coding and non-coding regions was transferred between different fungal wheat patogens: Parastagonospora nodorum, Pyrenophora tritici-repentis, and Bipolaris sorokiniana.[133]
  • A large genomic element named "Wallaby," approximately 500 kb in length, was recently transferred between two Penicillium species used in cheesemaking: P. camemberti and P. roqueforti. Wallaby contains around 250 genes, including several that are thought to play a role in microbial competition.[134]

Fungi to oomycetes

[edit]
  • 4 genes from Magnaporthe grisea, the rice blast fungus, were suspected to be horizontally transferred from the genus Phytophthora, and hypothesized to play a role in the fungus evolution into a plant pathogen.[135]

Oomycetes to fungi

[edit]
  • The oomycete species Phytophthora ramorum, Phytophthora sojae, Phytophthora infestans, and Hyaloperonospora parasitica were estimated to have 33 horizontal gene transfers from fungi. The transferred genes were hypothesized to be involved in functions that facilitate plant tissues colonization, such as secreted proteins to evade plant immune response and breaking down plant cell walls.[136]

Animals to animals

[edit]

Animals to bacteria

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  • The strikingly fish-like copper/zinc superoxide dismutase of Photobacterium leiognathi[138] is most easily explained in terms of transfer of a gene from an ancestor of its fish host.

Human to protozoan

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Human genome

[edit]
  • One study identified approximately 100 of humans' approximately 20,000 total genes which likely resulted from horizontal gene transfer,[140] but this number has been challenged by several researchers arguing these candidate genes for HGT are more likely the result of gene loss combined with differences in the rate of evolution.[citation needed]

Compounds found to promote horizontal gene transfer

[edit]

Through research into the growing issue of antibiotic resistance[141] certain compounds have been observed to promote horizontal gene transfer.[142][143][144][145] Antibiotics given to bacteria at non-lethal levels have been known to be a cause of antibiotic resistance[145] but emerging research is now showing that certain non-antibiotic pharmaceuticals (ibuprofen, naproxen, gemfibrozil, diclofenac, propranolol, etc.) also have a role in promoting antibiotic resistance through their ability to promote horizontal gene transfer (HGT) of genes responsible for antibiotic resistance. The transfer of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) through conjugation is significantly accelerated when donor cells with plasmids and recipient cells are introduced to each other in the presence of one of the pharmaceuticals.[142] Non-antibiotic pharmaceuticals were also found to cause some responses in bacteria similar to those responses to antibiotics, such as increasing expression of the genes lexA, umuC, umuD and soxR involved in the bacteria's SOS response as well as other genes also expressed during exposure to antibiotics.[142] These findings are from 2021 and due to the widespread use of non-antibiotic pharmaceuticals, more research needs to be done in order to further understanding on the issue.[142]

Alongside non-antibiotic pharmaceuticals, other compounds relevant to antibiotic resistance have been tested such as malachite green, ethylbenzene, styrene, 2,4-dichloroaniline, trioxymethylene, o-xylene solutions, p-nitrophenol (PNP), p-aminophenol (PAP), and phenol (PhOH).[143][144] It is a global concern that ARGs have been found in wastewater treatment plants[143] Textile wastewater has been found to contain 3- to 13-fold higher abundance of mobile genetic elements than other samples of wastewater.[143] The cause of this is the organic compounds used for textile dying (o-xylene, ethylbenzene, trioxymethylene, styrene, 2,4-dichloroaniline, and malachite green)[143] raising the frequency of conjugative transfer when bacteria and plasmid (with donor) are introduced in the presence of these molecules.[143] When textile wastewater combines with wastewater from domestic sewage, the ARGs present in wastewater are transferred at a higher rate due to the addition of textile dyeing compounds increasing the occurrence of HGT.[citation needed]

Other organic pollutants commonly found in wastewater have been the subject of similar experiments.[144] A 2021 study used similar methods of using plasmid in a donor and mixing that with a receptor in the presence of compound in order to test horizontal gene transfer of antibiotic resistance genes but this time in the presence of phenolic compounds.[144] Phenolic compounds are commonly found in wastewater and have been found to change functions and structures of the microbial communities during the wastewater treatment process.[144] Additionally, HGT increases in frequency in the presence of the compounds p-nitrophenol (PNP), p-aminophenol (PAP), and phenol. These compounds result in a 2- to 9-fold increase in HGT (p-nitrophenol being on the lower side of 2-fold increases and p-aminophenol and phenol having a maximum increase of 9-fold).[144] This increase in HGT is on average less than the compounds ibuprofen, naproxen, gemfibrozil, diclofenac, propranolol, o-xylene, ethylbenzene, trioxymethylene, styrene, 2,4-dichloroaniline, and malachite green[142][143] but their increases is still significant.[144] The study that came to this conclusion is similar to the study on horizontal gene transfer and non-antibiotic pharmaceuticals in that it was done in 2021 and leaves room for more research, specifically in the focus of the study which is activated sludge.[144]

Heavy metals have also been found to promote conjugative transfer of antibiotic resistance genes.[145] The paper that led to the discovery of this was done in 2017 during the emerging field of horizontal gene transfer assisting compound research.[145] Metals assist in the spread of antibiotic resistance through both co-resistance as well as cross-resistance mechanisms.[145] In quantities relevant to the environment, Cu(II), Ag(I), Cr(VI), and Zn(II) promote HGT from donor and receptor strains of E. coli.[145] The presence of these metals triggered SOS response from bacterial cells and made the cells more permeable. These are the mechanisms that make even low levels of heavy metal pollution in the environment impact HGT and therefore the spread of ARGs.

Promiscuous DNA

[edit]

Promiscuous DNA is a form of horizontal gene transfer that transmits genetic information across organellar barriers.[146] Promiscuous DNA transfer has substantial evidence in its movement across the genome of numerous organisms, from movements in chloroplast to the nucleus,[147] chloroplast to the mitochondria,[148] and mitochondria to the nucleus.[149]

History

[edit]

In 1982, R. John Ellis defined this type of transpositional transfer mutation as "intracellular promiscuity".[150] Ellis further explored the phenomenon of "intracellular promiscuity" through the experiments of David Stern and David Lonsdale,[151] in which genetic transfer between chloroplasts to mitochondria was discovered, aiding in the definition and discovery of promiscuous DNA.

Mechanism

[edit]

While much remains to be understood about how promiscuous DNA undergoes movement and transfer, numerous experiments have pointed to plastid sequences, ptDNA, as a key player.[152][153][154] Plasmids, with their mobile nature and crucial role in horizontal gene transfer, are seen as a significant element in DNA that exchanges genetic information.[155] This mobility makes ptDNA a potential donor for promiscuous DNA to traverse organellar barriers.[156]

Types

[edit]

NUMTs

[edit]

NUMTs (nuclear sequences of mitochondrial) are a type of promiscuous DNA that arises from the natural transfer of mitochondria DNA (mtDNA) to the nuclear genome (nDNA).[157] These NUMTs, with their varying frequencies, sizes, and features, contribute to the genetic diversity across all eukaryotes and, in some cases, to diseases among humans.[149]

NUPTs

[edit]

NUPTs (nuclear plastid DNA sequences) are a type of promiscuous DNA that arises from the natural transfer of ptDNA (plastid DNA) into nDNA.[158] These fragments of ptDNA, similar to NUMTs in frequency, size, and features, also exhibit variability across species.[159]

Artificial horizontal gene transfer

[edit]
Before it is transformed, a bacterium is susceptible to antibiotics. A plasmid can be inserted when the bacteria is under stress, and be incorporated into the bacterial DNA creating antibiotic resistance. When the plasmids are prepared they are inserted into the bacterial cell by either making pores in the plasma membrane with temperature extremes and chemical treatments, or making it semi permeable through the process of electrophoresis, in which electric currents create the holes in the membrane. After conditions return to normal the holes in the membrane close and the plasmids are trapped inside the bacteria where they become part of the genetic material and their genes are expressed by the bacteria.

Genetic engineering is essentially horizontal gene transfer, albeit with synthetic expression cassettes. The Sleeping Beauty transposon system[160] (SB) was developed as a synthetic gene transfer agent that was based on the known abilities of Tc1/mariner transposons to invade genomes of extremely diverse species.[161] The SB system has been used to introduce genetic sequences into a wide variety of animal genomes.[162][163]

In evolution

[edit]

Horizontal gene transfer is a potential confounding factor in inferring phylogenetic trees based on the sequence of one gene.[164] For example, given two distantly related bacteria that have exchanged a gene a phylogenetic tree including those species will show them to be closely related because that gene is the same even though most other genes are dissimilar. For this reason, it is often ideal to use other information to infer robust phylogenies such as the presence or absence of genes or, more commonly, to include as wide a range of genes for phylogenetic analysis as possible.

For example, the most common gene to be used for constructing phylogenetic relationships in prokaryotes is the 16S ribosomal RNA gene since its sequences tend to be conserved among members with close phylogenetic distances, but variable enough that differences can be measured. However, in recent years it has also been argued that 16s rRNA genes can also be horizontally transferred. Although this may be infrequent, the validity of 16s rRNA-constructed phylogenetic trees must be reevaluated.[165]

Biologist Johann Peter Gogarten suggests "the original metaphor of a tree no longer fits the data from recent genome research" therefore "biologists should use the metaphor of a mosaic to describe the different histories combined in individual genomes and use the metaphor of a net to visualize the rich exchange and cooperative effects of HGT among microbes".[40] There exist several methods to infer such phylogenetic networks.

Using single genes as phylogenetic markers, it is difficult to trace organismal phylogeny in the presence of horizontal gene transfer. Combining the simple coalescence model of cladogenesis with rare HGT horizontal gene transfer events suggest there was no single most recent common ancestor that contained all of the genes ancestral to those shared among the three domains of life. Each contemporary molecule has its own history and traces back to an individual molecule cenancestor. However, these molecular ancestors were likely to be present in different organisms at different times."[166]

Challenge to the tree of life

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Horizontal gene transfer poses a possible challenge to the concept of the last universal common ancestor (LUCA) at the root of the tree of life that was first formulated by Carl Woese, which led him to propose the Archaea as a third domain of life.[167] Indeed, it was while examining the new three-domain model of life that horizontal gene transfer arose as a complicating issue: Archaeoglobus fulgidus was seen as an anomaly with respect to a phylogenetic tree, based upon the encoding for the enzyme HMGCoA reductase; the organism in question is a definite Archaean, with all the cell lipids and transcription machinery that are expected of an Archaean, but whose HMGCoA genes are of bacterial origin.[167] Scientists are broadly agreed on symbiogenesis, that mitochondria in eukaryotes derived from alpha-proteobacterial cells and that chloroplasts came from ingested cyanobacteria, and other gene transfers may have affected early eukaryotes. (In contrast, multicellular eukaryotes have mechanisms to prevent horizontal gene transfer, including separated germ cells.) If there had been continued and extensive gene transfer, there would be a complex network with many ancestors, instead of a tree of life with sharply delineated lineages leading back to a LUCA.[167][168] However, a LUCA can be identified, so horizontal transfers must have been relatively limited.[169]

Other early HGTs are thought to have happened. The first common ancestor (FUCA), earliest ancestor of LUCA, had other descendants that had their own lineages.[170] These now-extinct sister lineages of LUCA descending from FUCA are thought to have horizontally transferred some of their genes into the genome of early descendants of LUCA.[170]

Phylogenetic information in HGT

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It has been remarked that, despite the complications, the detection of horizontal gene transfers brings valuable phylogenetic and dating information.[171]

The potential of HGT to be used for dating phylogenies has recently been confirmed.[172][173]

The chromosomal organization of horizontal gene transfer

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The acquisition of new genes has the potential to disorganize the other genetic elements and hinder the function of the bacterial cell, thus affecting the competitiveness of bacteria. Consequently, bacterial adaptation lies in a conflict between the advantages of acquiring beneficial genes, and the need to maintain the organization of the rest of its genome. Horizontally transferred genes are typically concentrated in only ~1% of the chromosome (in regions called hotspots). This concentration increases with genome size and with the rate of transfer. Hotspots diversify by rapid gene turnover; their chromosomal distribution depends on local contexts (neighboring core genes), and content in mobile genetic elements. Hotspots concentrate most changes in gene repertoires, reduce the trade-off between genome diversification and organization, and should be treasure troves of strain-specific adaptive genes. Most mobile genetic elements and antibiotic resistance genes are in hotspots, but many hotspots lack recognizable mobile genetic elements and exhibit frequent homologous recombination at flanking core genes. Overrepresentation of hotspots with fewer mobile genetic elements in naturally transformable bacteria suggests that homologous recombination and horizontal gene transfer are tightly linked in genome evolution.[174]

Genes

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There is evidence for historical horizontal transfer of the following genes:

See also

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Horizontal gene transfer (HGT), also known as lateral gene transfer, is the movement and incorporation of genetic material between organisms other than through vertical inheritance from parent to offspring. This process contrasts with the traditional vertical transmission in reproduction and plays a crucial role in microbial evolution by enabling the rapid spread of advantageous traits, such as antibiotic resistance and virulence factors. HGT is particularly prevalent in prokaryotes like bacteria and archaea, but it also occurs in eukaryotes, reshaping genomes across all domains of life. The primary mechanisms of HGT include transformation, conjugation, and transduction. In transformation, competent bacterial cells actively take up free DNA from the environment through specialized protein complexes, incorporating it into their genome after recombination. Conjugation involves direct cell-to-cell contact, where a donor bacterium transfers single-stranded DNA via a type IV secretion system, often carried on plasmids or integrative conjugative elements. Transduction occurs when bacteriophages (viruses that infect bacteria) accidentally package and deliver host DNA to another cell during infection. These mechanisms facilitate the exchange of genes not only within species but also between distantly related organisms, challenging the classic tree-of-life model by creating a more web-like evolutionary network. HGT has profound implications for evolution and human health. In bacteria, it drives the acquisition of antibiotic resistance genes, contributing to the emergence of multidrug-resistant pathogens like methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), where resistance traits have transferred from animal to human strains. For instance, the spread of genes encoding enzymes like NDM-1 via transformation or conjugation has accelerated the development of pan-resistant bacteria. Recent global surveillance, such as the 2025 WHO report, underscores HGT's ongoing contribution to rising antimicrobial resistance levels. In archaea, mechanisms such as cell fusion in species like Haloferax volcanii enable gene exchange within biofilms, while eukaryotes exhibit rarer HGT events, often linked to endosymbiotic processes or parasitic interactions. Overall, HGT enhances genetic diversity, with microbial pan-genomes—such as that of Escherichia coli, estimated at over 30,000 genes in analyses of hundreds of strains as of 2024—far surpassing individual strain genomes (typically around 4,000–5,000 genes), underscoring its role as a key evolutionary force. Detection relies on phylogenetic incongruences, gene composition anomalies, and comparative genomics, highlighting ongoing research into its historical and contemporary impacts.

History and overview

Historical discoveries

In 1928, British bacteriologist conducted experiments with bacteria, demonstrating that a "transforming principle" from heat-killed virulent (smooth, S) strains could convert live non-virulent (rough, R) strains into virulent ones, enabling the transformed bacteria to cause lethal infections in mice. This observation suggested the transfer of genetic material between bacterial cells, marking the first of what would later be understood as horizontal gene transfer, though Griffith did not identify the molecular agent. Building on Griffith's work, Oswald Avery, Colin MacLeod, and Maclyn McCarty at the Rockefeller Institute purified the transforming principle in 1944 and conclusively showed it to be deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) through chemical analyses, enzymatic degradations, and serological tests that ruled out proteins, polysaccharides, or lipids as the active component. Their experiments demonstrated that purified DNA from Type III pneumococci could heritably transform Type II strains, establishing DNA as the carrier of genetic information capable of inter-strain transfer. In 1946, and Edward Tatum reported in auxotrophic mutants of K-12, where rare prototrophic progeny arose from mixed cultures, indicating the exchange of genetic markers between bacterial cells via a process later known as conjugation. This discovery revealed a sexual-like mechanism for gene transfer in bacteria, distinct from transformation, and laid the foundation for understanding plasmid-mediated exchanges. During the 1950s, Lederberg and colleagues, including , identified the fertility factor (F factor) as an extrachromosomal element enabling conjugation, with coining the term "plasmid" in 1952 to describe such autonomously replicating genetic units. In , Norton Zinder and discovered transduction while studying genetic exchange in typhimurium. Using a U-tube apparatus similar to that later employed by Bernard Davis, they observed that filtrates from lysogenic cultures could transfer genetic markers between auxotrophic strains, initially thought to be transformation but revealed to be mediated by bacteriophages that package and inject bacterial DNA into recipient cells. This finding established transduction as a phage-dependent mechanism of HGT, complementing transformation and conjugation. Around the same time, in the 1950s, Barbara McClintock's cytogenetic studies on chromosomes uncovered transposable elements, or "controlling elements," that could excise and reintegrate within the genome, causing mutable phenotypes in kernel color and other traits; these were initially interpreted as mechanisms of vertical inheritance but later recognized as potential facilitators of horizontal gene transfer. By the 1970s, advances in enabled broader recognition of horizontal gene transfer in prokaryotes, as Edwin Southern's 1975 invention of the technique allowed hybridization-based detection of homologous DNA sequences across related and distantly related bacterial , revealing shared genetic elements like resistance plasmids. Concurrently, Frederick Sanger's development of in 1977 provided direct evidence of sequence similarities indicative of gene transfer events, such as in antibiotic resistance determinants, solidifying HGT as a key evolutionary process in up to the 1980s.

Definition and comparison to vertical transfer

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT), also known as lateral gene transfer, is the process by which genetic material is transferred between organisms other than through vertical inheritance from parent to offspring. This mechanism allows for the movement of DNA segments, such as or operons, between individuals of the same or across different , including those from distinct biological domains like to eukaryotes. Unlike routine genetic mutations, which alter existing DNA sequences within a lineage, HGT involves the acquisition of novel genetic material from external sources. Key characteristics of HGT include its non-sexual nature, distinguishing it from reproductive processes, and its capacity for interspecies or even inter-kingdom exchanges, which can introduce entirely new functional capabilities to recipient organisms. Common vectors facilitating HGT encompass plasmids—self-replicating molecules—and viruses, which package and deliver foreign DNA, as well as direct uptake of free DNA from the environment. These transfers often confer adaptive advantages, such as antibiotic resistance or metabolic innovations, by integrating donor genes into the recipient's . In contrast to HGT, vertical gene transfer occurs through the faithful replication of genetic material during ( in somatic cells or in gametes) and its transmission from parents to offspring via . This process maintains lineage-specific and genetic continuity within a , typically involving the entire or large chromosomal segments without external input. HGT, however, bypasses reproductive barriers, enabling rapid dissemination of beneficial traits across microbial communities or even between distant taxa, as exemplified by gene transfers during endosymbiosis where bacterial genes integrate into host eukaryotic . Such endosymbiotic events, like those contributing to , highlight HGT's role in expanding genetic repertoires beyond vertical descent.

Mechanisms

Transformation

Transformation is a mechanism of horizontal gene transfer in which competent cells actively take up free extracellular DNA from the environment and incorporate it into their genome through homologous recombination. This process begins when bacterial cells enter a specialized physiological state known as natural competence, triggered by environmental cues such as nutrient limitation or high cell density. During competence, cells express a set of genes that enable the binding of double-stranded DNA to the cell surface, typically via pilus-like structures such as type IV pili in Gram-negative bacteria or pseudopili in Gram-positive species. The bound DNA is then transported across the outer membrane and cell wall into the periplasm or cytoplasm, where it is processed into single-stranded form and integrated into the recipient's chromosome using the RecA protein for strand invasion and recombination. In model organisms like , competence is regulated by a network of genes including comA through comG, which encode components of the DNA uptake machinery such as the ComEA receptor for DNA binding and the ComEC channel for translocation across the inner membrane. These late competence genes are induced under specific growth conditions, allowing only a subpopulation of cells—often about 10%—to become transformable, which may confer a survival advantage by enabling rapid adaptation. Integration of the incoming DNA requires homology with the recipient genome and is facilitated by , which protects the single-stranded DNA from degradation and promotes pairing with homologous sequences. While primarily studied in prokaryotes, natural transformation also occurs in some eukaryotes, such as the alga , where free DNA uptake supports in natural populations.31003-X) A classic example of is observed in , where competence is induced by a competence-stimulating peptide during , allowing the bacterium to acquire virulence factors or antibiotic resistance genes from lysed cells in the environment. In contrast, does not exhibit but can be artificially induced in laboratory settings using chemical treatments like to facilitate uptake, mimicking aspects of horizontal gene transfer for . This induced process highlights transformation's role in HGT, though it differs from the regulated natural state in other species. Several barriers limit successful transformation, including restriction-modification (RM) systems, which recognize and cleave unmethylated foreign DNA while sparing the host's modified genome, thereby preventing integration of non-homologous or incompatible sequences. These type II RM systems are widespread in bacteria and can reduce transformation efficiency by orders of magnitude for alien DNA. Natural competence occurs in approximately 80 documented bacterial species, representing about 1% of known bacterial diversity, and is often promoted under stress conditions like DNA damage or antibiotic exposure, enhancing survival by enabling repair or acquisition of beneficial alleles.

Conjugation

Conjugation is a primary mechanism of horizontal gene transfer in , involving the direct transfer of DNA from a donor cell to a recipient cell through cell-to-cell contact. In this process, the donor cell, which harbors a conjugative such as the , expresses genes that assemble a type IV secretion system (T4SS) and a to establish contact with the recipient. The , a thin filamentous structure extending from the donor, mediates initial attachment and retracts to bring the cells into close proximity, forming a stable mating pair. Once connected, a relaxosome complex in the donor nicks the DNA at its origin of transfer (oriT), initiating the unidirectional transfer of a single-stranded DNA molecule (T-strand) into the recipient via the T4SS channel. In the recipient, the transferred strand is converted to double-stranded DNA through complementary strand synthesis, while the donor replenishes its via rolling-circle replication, ensuring both cells end up with copies of the . This contact-dependent process is highly efficient over short distances, typically within biofilms or aggregates, with transfer rates reaching up to 10^{-1} transconjugants per recipient under optimal conditions. Central to conjugation are specific genetic elements on the conjugative that orchestrate the transfer machinery. The oriT serves as the precise site for DNA nicking and entry into the T4SS, recognized by the , such as TraI in the , which covalently attaches to the 5' end of the T-strand to guide its export. The tra encodes the majority of these components, including proteins for biogenesis (e.g., TraA for pilin subunits), mating pair stabilization (e.g., and TraD), and the T4SS inner membrane channel (e.g., VirB-like proteins). of tra expression, as in the , involves activators like TraJ and repressors such as FinOP to control production and prevent unnecessary energy expenditure. These elements ensure precise, unidirectional DNA mobilization, distinguishing conjugation from other transfer modes that rely on free DNA uptake. Conjugative plasmids are classified into self-transmissible types, which carry all necessary transfer genes, and mobilizable plasmids, which possess an oriT and minimal relaxase but require a helper conjugative for pilus and T4SS provision. The , found in K-12, exemplifies a self-transmissible IncF , enabling efficient transfer within and contributing to in laboratory and natural strains. Another prominent example is the RP4 (IncP group), a broad-host-range conjugative that facilitates the spread of resistance genes, such as those conferring resistance to ampicillin, kanamycin, and , across diverse via its versatile T4SS. These s underscore conjugation's role in disseminating adaptive traits, particularly in clinical and environmental settings where cell contact is frequent.

Transduction and viral vectors

Transduction is a mechanism of horizontal gene transfer mediated by viruses, in which genetic material from a donor cell is packaged into viral particles and delivered to a recipient cell. This process plays a significant role in bacterial evolution by disseminating genes, including those conferring antibiotic resistance, across populations. In prokaryotes, transduction is primarily carried out by bacteriophages, while in eukaryotes, certain viruses like retroviruses serve similar functions as vectors. The two main types are generalized and specialized transduction, distinguished by how host DNA is incorporated into the phage genome. Generalized transduction occurs when a lytic or temperate bacteriophage mistakenly packages random fragments of the host's chromosomal DNA instead of its own viral genome during assembly. This random packaging typically involves phages using a "headful" mechanism, where DNA is loaded into the capsid until full, sometimes starting from host sequences near a pac-like site. Upon infection of a new host, the packaged host DNA is injected and can recombine into the recipient's genome, transferring any bacterial gene with roughly equal probability. Key examples include bacteriophage P1 in Escherichia coli, which can package and transduce any part of the 4.6 Mb genome, and phage T4, which has been used experimentally for high-efficiency gene transfer in enterobacteria. In Salmonella enterica, phage P22 facilitates generalized transduction of antibiotic resistance genes, such as tetracycline resistance, contributing to the spread of multidrug resistance in clinical isolates. Specialized transduction is limited to lysogenic phages that integrate into specific sites on the host as prophages. During induction and excision, imprecise recombination can incorporate adjacent host genes into the phage genome, creating defective phages that carry both viral and host DNA. These phages propagate only the specific host genes near the integration site and transfer them at to new hosts upon infection. The paradigmatic example is bacteriophage λ in E. coli, which integrates near the gal operon and can transduce gal genes (involved in galactose metabolism) via faulty excision, producing λdgal particles that lysogenize recipients with the bacterial genes. In eukaryotes, retroviruses act as viral vectors for horizontal gene transfer by reverse-transcribing host RNA or DNA into the genome and packaging cellular sequences into virions. This can lead to interspecies transfer, as seen in endogenous retroviruses capturing host genes like FAM8A1. Bacteriophages also bridge species barriers in HGT; for instance, filamentous phages in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, such as the Pf family, enable high-frequency transduction by chronically producing noninfectious particles that package and disseminate host DNA without cell lysis, promoting biofilm formation and virulence gene spread in chronic infections like cystic fibrosis. Overall, viruses facilitate HGT across microbial and eukaryotic domains, enhancing adaptability but also complicating antibiotic resistance management.

Transposition and mobile elements

Transposons, also known as insertion sequences (IS elements) and transposon (Tn) elements in prokaryotes, are that facilitate horizontal gene transfer (HGT) by enabling the intracellular relocation of DNA segments, which can subsequently be transmitted between organisms. These elements encode enzymes that catalyze their excision from a donor site and insertion into a new genomic location, often capturing adjacent genes that confer adaptive advantages, such as antibiotic resistance. This mobility contributes to genomic plasticity and the spread of beneficial traits across microbial populations and beyond. DNA transposons, the predominant type involved in prokaryotic HGT, employ a cut-and-paste mechanism: binds to sequences at the transposon ends, excises the entire element from the donor DNA, and integrates it into a target site through a staggered cleavage that repairs to form short direct repeats. In contrast, retrotransposons, more common in eukaryotes, use a copy-and-paste strategy: the element is transcribed into , reverse-transcribed into (cDNA) by an element-encoded , and then inserted via an integrase-like activity, leaving the original copy intact.00517-X)01193-9) This replicative mode amplifies the element's copy number, enhancing opportunities for HGT. A classic bacterial example is the Tn5 transposon, a composite structure flanked by two IS50 elements that enclose genes conferring resistance to aminoglycosides like kanamycin and neomycin, as well as . Tn5's mobility allows it to "hop" between plasmids and chromosomes, promoting HGT of these resistance genes through processes like conjugation. In eukaryotes, the Activator/Dissociation (Ac/Ds) system in , identified by in the 1940s and 1950s, illustrates autonomous (Ac) and non-autonomous (Ds) elements that transpose via a cut-and-paste mechanism, influencing and potentially enabling transfer across lineages. Composite transposons like Tn5 exemplify how such elements package resistance genes between mobile IS flanks, accelerating their dissemination via HGT in bacterial communities under selective pressure. Transposon integration occurs without requiring to the target DNA; instead, transposase induces a staggered double-strand break at a preferred but non-specific site, followed by host repair machinery that generates 2–12 target site duplications (TSDs) flanking the inserted element. This homology-independent insertion broadens the range of viable target sites, facilitating rapid adaptation and inter-organismal when combined with delivery mechanisms like conjugation.

Extracellular vesicles and novel vectors

In , outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) serve as a mechanism for horizontal gene transfer (HGT) by encapsulating DNA within their structure, which protects it from environmental nucleases and enables delivery to recipient cells through membrane fusion. These vesicles, typically 20–250 nm in diameter, are released during cell growth or stress and can carry DNA, chromosomal fragments, or antibiotic resistance genes, facilitating inter- and intraspecies transfer. The DNA within OMVs remains stable in extracellular environments, allowing for long-distance dissemination in biofilms or aquatic habitats where free DNA would degrade rapidly. A well-documented example involves , where OMVs from plasmid-bearing donor cells transfer β-lactamase genes to recipient A. baylyi and strains at frequencies of 10⁻⁶ to 10⁻⁸, demonstrating efficient plasmid mobilization under stress conditions like or high temperature. This process enhances bacterial adaptability by disseminating non-conjugative s that classical mechanisms might overlook. In eukaryotes, extracellular vesicles (EVs) analogous to exosomes have been implicated in HGT, particularly in fungi, where they transport nucleic acids and proteins that may integrate into recipient genomes. For instance, fungal EVs from phytopathogens like species carry mRNAs and DNAs that interact with host , potentially enabling gene exchange during , though direct DNA integration remains under investigation. These vesicles, enriched in bioactive cargos, support inter-kingdom communication and may drive evolutionary innovations in fungal pangenomes. Recent studies from 2025 highlight the distinct HGT potential of EVs in microbial , revealing their role in enriching horizontally transferred gene clusters within bacterial pangenomes and promoting adaptability in dynamic environments like marine habitats. Unlike viral vectors, EVs provide a non-lytic, of transfer that sustains population-level without host . Another novel vector is gene transfer agents (GTAs), virus-like particles produced by such as Rhodobacter capsulatus, which package random host DNA fragments into tailed capsids for non-specific delivery to nearby cells. GTAs, encoded by dedicated genomic islands, mediate HGT at rates comparable to transduction but operate independently of cycles, contributing to in alphaproteobacterial communities. This mechanism underscores the diversity of non-viral particles in facilitating HGT beyond traditional pathways.

Detection methods

Computational approaches

Computational approaches to detecting horizontal gene transfer (HGT) primarily rely on analyzing genomic sequences for anomalies that suggest foreign origins, divided into parametric and non-parametric methods. Parametric methods examine intrinsic sequence features that deviate from the host genome's average composition, such as guanine-cytosine (GC) content, codon usage bias, and dinucleotide frequencies. These approaches assume that transferred genes retain compositional signatures from their donor, making them detectable as outliers; for instance, genes with atypical GC content or codon preferences are flagged as potential HGT candidates. A benchmark study of parametric methods demonstrated that tetranucleotide-based analyses outperform GC content and dinucleotide approaches in both sensitivity and specificity for identifying transfers, though parametric methods may generate false positives in highly variable genomes. Non-parametric methods, in contrast, focus on extrinsic evidence like phylogenetic incongruence, where a gene's evolutionary history conflicts with the species tree. These often involve sequence similarity searches using tools like BLAST to compare query genes against reference databases, identifying hits that suggest distant origins; the alien index (AI), calculated from the ratio of best BLAST scores to distant versus close relatives, quantifies this "foreignness" with AI > 0 indicating potential HGT. reconciliation further refines detection by mapping gene trees onto species trees to infer transfers as events explaining topological mismatches, as implemented in software like Notung, which supports duplication-transfer-loss (DTL) models. Such methods excel at capturing transfers without relying on composition, but require robust orthology inference. Several specialized tools integrate these strategies for genome-wide analysis. HGTector automates HGT prediction by analyzing BLAST hit distributions across taxonomic groups, ranking candidates based on statistical anomalies in homology patterns, and has been applied to identify thousands of putative transfers in bacterial genomes. employs a scoring system combining BLAST E-values with phylogenetic distances to prioritize atypical proteins, effectively ranking HGT candidates in large datasets like archaeal and bacterial proteomes. Sequence similarity searches, a of these tools, identify a substantial fraction in prokaryotic cases of HGT events by detecting high-identity matches to distantly related taxa, though efficacy drops in eukaryotes due to confounding factors like incomplete lineage sorting and . A typical for computational HGT detection begins with annotation to predict protein-coding genes, followed by ortholog identification via reciprocal best BLAST hits or clustering tools like OrthoMCL. Parametric scans are then applied to annotated sequences to compute composition metrics, flagging outliers for further non-parametric validation through phylogenetic reconstruction and . This pipeline, as exemplified in scalable tools like PreHGT, balances speed and accuracy by combining initial parametric filtering with similarity-based refinement, enabling high-throughput analysis of prokaryotic and eukaryotic while minimizing false discoveries. Experimental confirmation remains essential for validating predictions.

Experimental validation

Experimental validation of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) events typically involves laboratory techniques that directly test DNA uptake, transfer, integration, and localization in recipient organisms, often building on computational predictions of potential transfers. These methods provide empirical evidence to confirm suspected HGT by demonstrating the functional acquisition and stable incorporation of foreign genetic material. Transformation assays, which mimic natural DNA uptake, are commonly used to validate the potential for HGT via free DNA. In these experiments, recipient cells are exposed to exogenous DNA under controlled conditions, such as electroporation, where an electric pulse facilitates DNA entry into competent cells like Escherichia coli or Bacillus thuringiensis. Successful transformation is quantified by selecting for antibiotic resistance or other markers encoded on the transferred DNA, confirming uptake and expression rates that align with observed natural HGT frequencies. Conjugation, a direct cell-to-cell transfer mechanism, is validated through mating-out experiments, where donor and recipient bacterial strains are co-cultured on filters or solid media to promote mobilization. Transconjugants—recipients that have acquired donor genes—are identified by selective plating for dual resistance markers, with transfer frequencies calculated as the ratio of transconjugants to donor cells, often ranging from 10^{-5} to 10^{-1} depending on plasmid type and compatibility. These assays confirm HGT by isolating and sequencing the transferred elements in recipients. Phylogenetic tests provide indirect but robust validation by constructing gene trees for candidate transferred sequences and comparing them to reference species trees; significant discordance, such as unexpected clustering of the gene with distant taxa, indicates HGT. Tools like T-REX or reconciliation methods quantify this incongruence statistically, with p-values below 0.05 supporting transfer events after controlling for incomplete lineage sorting. Early studies employed isotope labeling to track DNA during transformation, using ³²P-labeled donor DNA to monitor uptake and integration in recipients like Haemophilus influenzae. Pioneering work by Fox and Goodgal demonstrated physical incorporation of labeled fragments into recipient chromosomes, with radioactivity assays showing up to 10% of input DNA integrated, ruling out mere adsorption. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) localizes transferred genes within recipient chromosomes, using fluorescent probes against the foreign sequence to visualize integration sites via microscopy. For instance, in the sea slug Elysia chlorotica, FISH confirmed the algal prk gene's chromosomal insertion, appearing as distinct signals colocalizing with host DNA. To rule out contamination, Southern blots serve as essential controls, hybridizing restriction-digested genomic DNA with probes specific to the transferred sequence to detect integration patterns. Stable, high-molecular-weight bands in blots from multiple generations confirm chromosomal incorporation over transient plasmid presence or external DNA artifacts, as seen in validations of Agrobacterium T-DNAs in sweet potato.

Recent advances in detection

Since 2023, there has been a notable surge in computational tools for detecting horizontal gene transfer (HGT), driven by advancements in and novel analytical frameworks that address limitations in traditional methods. This growth reflects increasing genomic data availability from metagenomes and pangenomes, enabling more precise identification of HGT events in complex microbial communities. AI-based approaches have emerged as a key innovation, particularly models that integrate graph-based representations to uncover HGT patterns. For instance, a 2025 knowledge graph framework models relationships between genes, organisms, and (AMR) patterns to detect HGT events driving AMR dissemination among , offering improved interpretability over sequence-only classifiers. These models leverage graph convolutional networks and random forests to predict HGT with higher resolution in diverse datasets. Topological data analysis (TDA) has also advanced HGT detection by applying to resistome data, distinguishing non-hierarchical structures indicative of HGT from vertical inheritance patterns. A 2025 study on clinically relevant bacteria, such as and , used TDA on presence-absence matrices of AMR genes to identify loops (1-holes) in datasets from isolates and simulated populations, confirming HGT events without relying on full genomic sequences. This method proved effective in the CAMDA 2023 challenge dataset, detecting 40 such features in genomes. In metagenomic contexts, recent pipelines incorporate binning with HGT-specific predictors to identify transferred genes across microbial taxa. A 2023 workflow for genomes used dRep for binning into genomospecies (≥95% ANI) and comparative analysis to detect 6,545 co-shared genes (≥99% identity) across 138 genera, highlighting reservoirs like Phocaeicola spp. for and resistance elements. Similarly, simulations of extracellular vesicle (EV)-mediated HGT in marine habitats, analyzed via long-read sequencing of EV-enriched fractions, revealed distinct genetic cargoes—enriched in —compared to viral-like particles, aiding detection of inter-species transfers. Despite these advances, challenges persist, including false positives from viral integrations like prophages, which mimic HGT signals in composition analyses and complicate validation in AI-driven tools.

Occurrence in prokaryotes

Bacterial systems

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a major driver of in , with estimates indicating that 1.6% to 14.5% of genes in bacterial genomes have been acquired through this process across various . This prevalence varies across bacterial groups, with lower rates often observed in ; for instance, analyses of genomes reveal HGT contributions to pathogenicity through specific genes that enhance survival. A prominent example of HGT in is the spread of resistance genes, such as the vanA cluster, which confers resistance and is mobilized via conjugation on transposon Tn1546 embedded in plasmids. This cluster has disseminated across enterococcal and staphylococcal species, enabling rapid adaptation to clinical antibiotics and contributing to multidrug-resistant outbreaks. Similarly, in species, HGT transfers virulence factors like extracellular proteases, hemolysins, and toxin-encoding genes, enhancing pathogenicity; for example, in , horizontally acquired genes for these factors promote tissue damage and immune evasion in hosts. In , prophage-mediated HGT introduces genes (ctxAB), transforming non-pathogenic strains into epidemic-causing variants. Environmental contexts significantly influence HGT rates in bacteria, with biofilms serving as hotspots that enhance conjugation frequencies by up to 100-fold compared to planktonic cells, due to close cell proximity and extracellular DNA persistence. In such structured communities, plasmids carrying resistance or virulence genes transfer efficiently, accelerating their spread in infections and natural settings like medical devices. Soil bacteria exhibit high natural transformation rates, facilitated by abundant free DNA from lysed cells and mineral surfaces that protect genetic material, leading to frequent uptake of metabolic and adaptive genes in diverse microbial consortia. This is evident in soil-borne pathogens, where HGT networks exchange carbon metabolism genes, promoting ecological resilience. Recent research highlights how HGT drives the evolution of molecular weapons in bacterial warfare, reshaping competitive dynamics as recognized in 2025 studies. For instance, transfer of toxin-immunity gene plasmids, such as those encoding colicins in Escherichia coli, occurs rarely under intense competition but proliferates when metabolic niches relax nutrient pressures, allowing recipients to thrive and alter community structures without imposing costs on donors. These events, often via conjugation or transduction, benefit weapon dissemination across strains, fostering antagonism in microbiomes like the gut.

Archaeal systems

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is particularly prevalent in , especially among hyperthermophilic species, where it facilitates adaptation to extreme environments. Analyses of complete archaeal genomes reveal that the percentage of horizontally transferred genes ranges from approximately 1.6% to 14.5%, with higher rates observed in nonpathogenic compared to . This elevated prevalence is linked to hyperthermophily and anaerobic conditions, which promote gene sharing between and , as these environments select for mechanisms that enhance genetic exchange and survival. In hyperthermophilic , HGT contributes to genomic plasticity, allowing rapid acquisition of traits for high-temperature stability. Mechanisms of HGT in archaea differ from those in bacteria but share some parallels, such as conjugation-like processes mediated by type IV pili. In Sulfolobales, type IV pili (part of the Ups system) enable cell aggregation and DNA exchange, particularly under stress like UV exposure, promoting repair and recombination; key genes include upsA and upsB for pilin subunits and upsE for ATPase activity. Natural transformation is another prominent mechanism, observed in naturally competent species like Sulfolobus acidocaldarius and S. solfataricus, where type IV-like pili facilitate uptake of linear environmental DNA, with transformation efficiency enhanced by DNA-damaging agents. These pili-based systems underscore archaea's reliance on surface structures for HGT, contrasting with bacterial type IV secretion systems but functionally analogous in promoting intercellular DNA transfer. Notable examples of HGT in include methanogens acquiring bacterial genes for carbon fixation. In methanogenic , components of the –Ljungdahl pathway, which fixes CO₂ into , exhibit signatures of HGT from bacterial donors, enabling efficient autotrophic growth in anaerobic niches. Such transfers have shaped the metabolic versatility of methanogens, integrating bacterial innovations into archaeal pathways. Recent studies from 2025 highlight HGT's role in enabling adaptations in . In hypersaline settings (up to 35% NaCl), like Haloferax volcanii and Halomicroarcula spp. have acquired bacterial genes for KCl transporters and glycine-betaine synthesis via HGT, bolstering and tolerance to polyextreme conditions such as those in salt lakes. These acquisitions provide a faster evolutionary route to stress resistance than de novo mutations, underscoring HGT as a key driver of ecological success in haloarchaeal lineages.

Occurrence in eukaryotes

Intracellular transfers

Intracellular horizontal gene transfer in eukaryotes primarily involves the movement of genetic material between s and the nucleus, as well as rarer exchanges between s themselves. This process, often termed endosymbiotic gene transfer (EGT), originated from the ancient endosymbioses that gave rise to mitochondria and chloroplasts, where genes from the engulfed prokaryotic endosymbionts were relocated to the host nucleus to facilitate function through nuclear-encoded proteins imported back into the s. Over evolutionary time, this transfer has reduced genomes significantly; for instance, in animals, the mitochondrial genome retains only 13 protein-coding genes out of an ancestral α-proteobacterial complement estimated at over 1,000 genes, with the majority now residing in the nucleus. In , approximately 18% of nuclear genes involved in function trace their origins to the cyanobacterial of chloroplasts, highlighting the scale of EGT in shaping eukaryotic s. A key manifestation of ongoing intracellular transfer is the insertion of mitochondrial DNA fragments into the nuclear genome, known as nuclear mitochondrial DNA segments (NUMTs). These non-functional insertions serve as molecular fossils of recent EGT events and are widespread across eukaryotes, with thousands identified in mammalian nuclear genomes, often accumulating post-speciation. In plants like Arabidopsis thaliana, ancient EGT has integrated numerous plastid and mitochondrial genes into the nucleus, with evidence of both historical transfers from the primary endosymbiosis and more recent intracellular gene transfers (IGTs) from the plastome to the nuclear genome occurring dynamically over the past few million years. NUMTs in A. thaliana include fragments of mitochondrial coding regions, underscoring the persistence of this mechanism in seed plants. Transfers between organelles, such as from mitochondria to chloroplasts, are exceptionally rare compared to nucleus-directed EGT. In , mitochondrion-to-plastid DNA transfers (MTPTs) have been documented in only a handful of cases, including the common milkweed (), where mitochondrial sequences were integrated into the plastid genome, potentially via during . These events contrast with the more frequent plastid-to-mitochondrion transfers observed in angiosperms. Evidence of ongoing intracellular transfer persists in model organisms like (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), where NUMT accumulation continues at low but detectable rates, limited by nuclear nucleases such as EndoG (Nuc1) that degrade extranuclear DNA to prevent excessive integration. Experimental studies in have captured de novo NUMT insertions, often involving long mitochondrial fragments (>10 kb), demonstrating that EGT remains an active, albeit inefficient, process in unicellular eukaryotes.

Inter-kingdom transfers

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) between kingdoms, particularly between prokaryotes and eukaryotes, has been documented in various symbiotic, parasitic, and environmental interactions, contributing to adaptive innovations across taxa.00646-6) These transfers often involve genes that confer novel metabolic or defensive capabilities, with evidence suggesting that approximately 1-5% of genes in certain eukaryotic genomes, such as those of protists and , originate from prokaryotic sources.30206-7) In multicellular eukaryotes, the rate is generally lower but significant in lineages exposed to frequent microbial contacts, like and parasitic plants. A prominent direction of inter-kingdom HGT is from bacteria to eukaryotes, exemplified by transfers from endosymbiotic bacteria like Wolbachia to insect hosts. In Drosophila species, fragments of the Wolbachia genome, including genes involved in metabolism and replication, have integrated into the host nuclear genome, persisting through vertical inheritance and potentially influencing host physiology. Similarly, in the whitefly Bemisia tabaci, diverse bacterial genes related to amino acid synthesis and stress response have been horizontally acquired, supporting a three-way symbiosis with other endosymbionts and enhancing the insect's nutritional capabilities under plant-feeding conditions.00646-6) Although cases like the bacterial nylonase gene from Flavobacterium degrading synthetic nylon oligomers have not been directly linked to eukaryotic transfers in verified studies, analogous bacterial enzyme acquisitions in arthropods underscore the role of HGT in enabling novel xenobiotic metabolism. Transfers from eukaryotes to prokaryotes are less common but have been investigated in agricultural contexts, such as the potential movement of herbicide resistance genes from transgenic plants to soil or gut bacteria. These events highlight barriers like DNA degradation but indicate low feasibility under typical conditions, with implications for environmental gene flow and co-resistance dissemination via bacterial conjugation. Inter-kingdom HGT between fungi and animals is illustrated by the acquisition of fungal carotenoid biosynthesis genes in aphids. In the pea aphid (Acyrthosiphon pisum) and two-spotted spider mite (Tetranychus urticae), genes such as carotene desaturase and lycopene cyclase were laterally transferred from fungi, enabling de novo carotenoid production for pigmentation and possibly photoprotection, independent of dietary sources. Phylogenetic analyses confirm the fungal origin, with subsequent gene duplication and functional integration into the arthropod genome. Rare plant-to-animal transfers have been observed in bdelloid rotifers, desiccation-tolerant invertebrates with high HGT prevalence. These rotifers have incorporated plant-derived genes, including those for stress response and biosynthesis, comprising up to 8-14% of their genome as foreign DNA, aiding survival in harsh environments through mechanisms like DNA uptake during anhydrobiosis. Such acquisitions from plants, alongside bacterial and fungal sources, exemplify bdelloids' exceptional genomic plasticity. In , bacterial HGT to informs 2025 applications, particularly leveraging CRISPR-Cas systems—originally acquired via ancient prokaryotic transfers—for precise editing and gene drives. These tools, derived from bacterial immune mechanisms, enable targeted modifications in crops, such as herbicide tolerance or pest resistance, while emerging Fanzor endonucleases from bacterial origins offer RNA-guided alternatives to , enhancing drive efficiency in plant systems for . This underscores HGT's dual role in natural and engineered .

Factors influencing HGT

Promoting compounds and environments

Sublethal doses of antibiotics can induce bacterial competence, facilitating the uptake of exogenous DNA and thereby promoting horizontal gene transfer (HGT). For instance, subinhibitory concentrations of fluoroquinolones trigger the SOS response, which enhances DNA transfer rates by increasing expression of genes involved in recombination and repair. Similarly, other antibiotics such as tetracyclines and beta-lactams at low levels stimulate conjugative plasmid transfer and transformation efficiency in various bacterial species. In Vibrio species, quorum sensing signals, including competence-related autoinducers like CAI-1, coordinate population density-dependent competence development, enabling natural transformation as a form of HGT during environmental transitions. High-density environments, such as biofilms, significantly enhance conjugation-mediated HGT by promoting close cell-to-cell contact and stabilizing transfer. In biofilms, conjugation frequencies can increase up to 100-fold compared to planktonic cells, driven by the structured matrix that facilitates donor-recipient interactions. Extreme conditions, including high and elevated temperatures, also boost HGT rates, allowing microbes to rapidly acquire adaptive genes for survival; for example, halophilic in hypersaline environments exhibit elevated transformation and transduction under osmotic stress. in hot springs similarly accelerates gene exchange, contributing to thermotolerance adaptations in and . Nutrient limitation acts as a key trigger for bacterial transformation, with starvation conditions inducing competence in species like Bacillus subtilis and Haemophilus influenzae to scavenge DNA as a nutrient source while enabling HGT. This response is evolutionarily conserved, as exogenous DNA uptake under nutrient stress supports both metabolic recovery and genetic diversification.

Promiscuous DNA elements

Promiscuous DNA elements refer to mobile genetic sequences originating from organelles, such as mitochondria and plastids, that are transferred to the nuclear genome, facilitating a form of intracellular horizontal gene transfer. These elements promote HGT by enabling the integration of organellar DNA into the nucleus, which can contribute to genomic complexity and, in rare cases, functional gene acquisition that enhances evolutionary adaptability. The primary types of these elements are nuclear mitochondrial DNA segments (NUMTs), which are copies of integrated into the nuclear genome, and nuclear plastid DNA (NUPTs), consisting of chloroplast or plastid DNA fragments similarly incorporated. NUMTs often include pseudogenes that mirror mitochondrial sequences but accumulate mutations over time, while NUPTs exhibit similar characteristics but derive from photosynthetic organelles in plants and algae. Both types are widespread across eukaryotes, with NUMTs documented in animals, fungi, and , and NUPTs predominantly in photosynthetic lineages. The mechanisms underlying their insertion primarily involve (NHEJ) during nuclear at double-strand breaks, often utilizing microhomologies of 1–7 base pairs or blunt-end ligation to integrate organellar fragments without . This process allows promiscuous DNA to "escape" organelles and embed into the nuclear genome, promoting horizontal gene transfer by enabling the dissemination of organellar sequences across cellular compartments. In humans, NUMTs constitute approximately 0.008–0.017% of the nuclear genome, totaling 250–540 kilobases across ~755 insertions. NUPTs in plants like rice and cotton can include insertions up to 135 kilobases.

Artificial horizontal gene transfer

Laboratory techniques

Laboratory techniques for inducing horizontal gene transfer (HGT) in controlled environments primarily mimic natural mechanisms such as transformation, conjugation, and transduction, adapted for precise genetic manipulation. Electroporation is a widely used physical method for bacterial transformation, where an electric field creates transient pores in the cell membrane, facilitating the uptake of exogenous DNA. This technique, developed in the late 1980s, achieves high-efficiency transformation in Escherichia coli and other prokaryotes by optimizing pulse parameters like voltage and capacitance, often yielding up to 10^9 transformants per microgram of DNA. For conjugation-like transfer in plants, Agrobacterium tumefaciens serves as a biological vector, naturally transferring T-DNA from its Ti plasmid into host plant cells, where it integrates into the nuclear genome. In laboratory settings, disarmed strains of A. tumefaciens, lacking tumor-inducing genes, are engineered with binary vectors to deliver desired transgenes, enabling stable transformation in dicotyledonous and monocotyledonous species. This method, refined since the early 1980s, relies on co-cultivation of bacterial suspensions with plant explants, followed by selection on antibiotic media, and has become the standard for plant genetic engineering. Conjugation setups, particularly triparental , facilitate plasmid transfer between that are otherwise conjugation-deficient. In this approach, a donor strain harboring a mobilizable is mixed with a recipient strain and a helper strain carrying a conjugative (e.g., pRK2013, which provides transfer functions like Tra proteins), allowing indirect mobilization of the target across barriers. This technique, established in the and optimized with broad-host-range helpers, is essential for transferring genes into environmental or in the lab. In eukaryotes, viral vectors such as lentiviral systems emulate transduction for HGT, delivering genetic material into non-dividing cells like neurons or stem cells. Derived from HIV-1, self-inactivating lentiviral vectors package recombinant genomes that reverse-transcribe and integrate into the host via the viral integrase, achieving long-term expression with titers exceeding 10^8 transducing units per milliliter. Introduced in 1996, these vectors are pseudotyped with vesicular stomatitis virus G protein for broad and are routinely used in mammalian cell lines and animal models. Post-transfer integration can be enhanced using CRISPR-Cas9, which creates site-specific double-strand breaks to promote or of transferred DNA into the . In laboratory protocols, CRISPR-Cas9 ribonucleoproteins or plasmids are co-delivered with the donor DNA during or viral transduction, enabling precise insertion with efficiencies up to 30% in human cells, as demonstrated in homology-independent targeted integration systems. This tool, adapted since 2013, minimizes off-target effects and supports scarless gene editing after HGT events. Safety protocols for these techniques mandate appropriate levels for genetically modified organisms (GMOs) to prevent unintended release or exposure. Laboratories handling low-risk GMOs, such as non-pathogenic bacterial transformants, operate at Biosafety Level 1 (BSL-1), featuring standard microbiological practices and no special containment equipment. Higher-risk experiments, like those involving viral vectors or pathogenic recipients, require BSL-2 facilities with cabinets, , and procedures, as outlined in federal guidelines; BSL-3 is reserved for aerosol-transmissible GMOs posing serious hazards. Risk assessments determine the level, ensuring compliance with institutional biosafety committees.

Biotechnological applications

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) principles underpin several biotechnological applications, particularly in where viral vectors facilitate the targeted delivery of therapeutic genes into host cells, mimicking natural transduction mechanisms observed in and eukaryotes. (AAV) vectors, for instance, have become a cornerstone in clinical gene therapies due to their low and ability to achieve long-term in non-dividing cells, as demonstrated in treatments for inherited retinal diseases and . These vectors enable the horizontal-like transfer of corrective genes, such as those encoding functional proteins to replace defective alleles, with over 300 ongoing clinical trials leveraging AAV as of 2025. However, in 2025, safety concerns emerged with reports of patient deaths due to in AAV trials for conditions like . In , HGT-inspired strategies enhance by enabling the dynamic exchange of genetic modules within microbial consortia, stabilizing synthetic pathways for production and pharmaceutical synthesis. For example, engineered horizontal transfer of pathway genes via conjugative plasmids allows division of labor in bacterial communities, where specialized subpopulations exchange metabolic intermediates, improving yields of compounds like compared to monocultures. This approach draws from natural HGT to program gene stability and adaptability in engineered ecosystems, reducing the need for static genetic circuits. A prominent example of HGT in agriculture involves the transfer of Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) toxin genes from bacteria into crop plants, conferring resistance to lepidopteran pests without the need for chemical insecticides. Since the 1990s, this engineering has been applied to nearly 100 million hectares of maize and cotton globally as of 2017, reducing pesticide use by an estimated 37%. Although the genes propagate vertically in transgenic lines, their bacterial origin exemplifies artificial inter-kingdom HGT harnessed for sustainable farming. Recent advancements as of 2025 include CRISPR-based gene drives in plants that leverage HGT-like mechanisms to bias inheritance of desirable traits, such as or pest resistance, ensuring rapid dissemination through populations. The ClvR system, developed in 2024, uses species-specific homing to achieve high transmission rates in plants such as . In (AMR) mitigation, reverse HGT strategies employ conjugative plasmids to transfer sensitivity-restoring alleles into resistant bacterial populations, facilitating the evolutionary reversal of resistance mutations in pathogens like Escherichia coli. These methods have shown promise in lab models, reducing minimum inhibitory concentrations by 4- to 16-fold in mixed cultures. HGT-inspired vaccines utilize bacterial conjugation to deliver antigen-encoding DNA directly into host cells, eliciting robust immune responses against pathogens. Conjugation-based systems, such as those using engineered Escherichia coli as vectors, transfer plasmid-borne antigens via type IV secretion, achieving mucosal immunization efficiency comparable to viral vectors in animal models. Ethical concerns surrounding these applications center on unintended gene flow risks to ecosystems, where engineered HGT could lead to the proliferation of transgenes in wild relatives or microbial communities, potentially disrupting biodiversity. Regulatory frameworks emphasize containment strategies, such as drive thresholds below 50% inheritance to prevent escape, yet debates persist on long-term ecological impacts from large-scale deployments.

Evolutionary implications

Challenges to phylogeny

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) introduces reticulate evolution, where genetic material flows across lineages rather than strictly vertically, blurring the hierarchical branches of traditional phylogenetic trees and complicating the reconstruction of organismal histories. This non-tree-like pattern arises because HGT events create anastomoses—merging points—between divergent branches, resulting in networks of inheritance that deviate from the bifurcating structure assumed by cladistic models. In response to these challenges, W. Ford Doolittle proposed the "web of life" model in 1999, emphasizing a reticulated phylogeny over a strictly branching tree, particularly for prokaryotes where HGT is rampant. A striking example of this phylogenetic disruption is observed in eukaryotes, where numerous genes trace their origins to or through HGT, forming complex lateral gene transfer (LGT) networks that obscure vertical descent signals. For instance, analyses of eukaryotic genomes reveal that a substantial portion of genes involved in core cellular functions, such as and information processing, were acquired from prokaryotic donors outside of endosymbiotic events like mitochondrial or plastid origins. These transfers create mosaic genomes that defy simple tree-based representations, as individual gene phylogenies often conflict with the organismal tree. In prokaryotes, the scale of HGT exacerbates these issues, with estimates suggesting that 2% to 60% of genes in their genomes have been affected by lateral transfers, rendering strict cladograms unreliable for capturing evolutionary relationships. This high prevalence means that many genomic datasets contain conflicting signals, where up to half or more of the genes in some lineages show histories incongruent with the species tree, leading to polyphyletic groupings and reduced resolution in phylogenetic analyses. To mitigate these challenges, researchers employ strategies like constructing supertrees from concatenated alignments of genes exhibiting minimal HGT signals, such as universal genes screened for lateral transfers. These methods prioritize vertically inherited core genes to approximate the organismal phylogeny while acknowledging the reticulate backdrop.

Role in adaptation and innovation

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) enables rapid in microorganisms by allowing the quick acquisition of beneficial traits that would otherwise require slow mutational . In bacterial populations, HGT via plasmids and facilitates the spread of antibiotic resistance genes, conferring survival advantages in environments with antimicrobial pressures. Similarly, virulence factors, such as toxin-encoding genes, are frequently transferred horizontally, enhancing pathogenicity in host-associated and contributing to the emergence of new disease threats. These processes underscore HGT's role in accelerating adaptive responses to selective pressures like chemical stressors or host defenses. A prominent example of HGT-driven is the transfer of genes enhancing thermotolerance in thermophilic organisms. In hyperthermophilic and inhabiting high-temperature environments, such as deep-sea vents, HGT has introduced heat-shock protein genes that stabilize cellular proteins under extreme , enabling survival beyond 80°C. Recent 2025 analyses highlight how HGT potentiates adaptations to diverse extreme conditions, including acidity, salinity, and pressure, by integrating foreign genes that confer immediate fitness benefits without relying on de novo mutations. Beyond mere survival, HGT fosters evolutionary innovation by enabling the assembly of novel metabolic pathways. For instance, certain wood-decaying fungi have acquired bacterial lignin-degrading enzymes through inter-kingdom HGT, allowing them to break down recalcitrant plant polymers that were previously inaccessible and thus expanding their ecological niches in forest ecosystems. This transfer integrates prokaryotic catabolic capabilities into eukaryotic genomes, driving innovations in utilization and nutrient cycling. In 2025 studies, HGT of "weapons genes"—such as those encoding or contact-dependent inhibition systems—has been shown to benefit recipient bacterial strains by reshaping competitive interactions in microbial communities, often increasing the fitness of both the and its host through enhanced warfare capabilities. Theoretical models from the same year predict the and mode of HGT across varied ecologies, revealing that transfer rates accelerate in dense, stressed populations, thereby promoting bursts of adaptive while varying by environmental connectivity. In microbial communities, HGT can induce alternative stable states, where exchange shifts community composition toward resilient configurations, as demonstrated by 2025 theoretical frameworks modeling multi-species dynamics under .

References

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