Article

Shedding light on the bacterial resistance to toxic UV filters: A comparative genomic study

Details

Citation

Lozano C, Lebaron P & Matallana-Surget S (2021) Shedding light on the bacterial resistance to toxic UV filters: A comparative genomic study. PeerJ, 9, Art. No.: e12278. https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.12278

Abstract
UV filters are toxic to marine bacteria that dominate the marine biomass. Ecotoxicology often studies the organism response but rarely integrates the toxicity mechanisms at the molecular level. In this study, in silico comparative genomics between UV filters sensitive and resistant bacteria were conducted in order to unravel the genes responsible for a resistance phenotype. The genomes of two environmentally relevant Bacteroidetes and three Firmicutes species were compared through pairwise comparison. Larger genomes were carried by bacteria exhibiting a resistant phenotype, favoring their ability to adapt to environmental stresses. While the antitoxin and CRISPR systems were the only distinctive features in resistant Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes displayed multiple unique genes that could support the difference between sensitive and resistant phenotypes. Several genes involved in ROS response, vitamin biosynthesis, xenobiotic degradation, multidrug resistance, and lipophilic compound permeability were shown to be exclusive to resistant species. Our investigation contributes to a better understanding of UV filters resistance phenotypes, by identifying pivotal genes involved in key pathways.

Keywords
UV filters; Marine bacteria; Genomic comparison

Journal
PeerJ: Volume 9

StatusPublished
FundersThe Carnegie Trust
Publication date30/11/2021
Publication date online01/11/2021
Date accepted by journal20/09/2021
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/33646
eISSN2167-8359

People (1)

Dr Sabine Matallana-Surget

Dr Sabine Matallana-Surget

Associate Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences