The genus
Bacillus is a heterogeneous group of Gram-positive heterotrophic aerobic or facultative anaerobic bacilli that form environmentally resistant, metabolically inert spores
[
1]. These soil-borne organisms are ubiquitous, and occupy surprisingly diverse environments
[
2,
3]. Within this large genus, the
B. cereus sensu lato group consists of seven species
B. anthracis (
Ba),
B. cereus (
Bc),
B. mycoides,
B. pseudomycoides,
B. thuringiensis (
Bt),
B. weihenstephanensis (
Bw) and
B. cytotoxicus, based on classical microbial taxonomy
[
4,
5]. More recent molecular phylogenies and comparative genome sequence analysis indicate that these organisms should more accurately be viewed as a single species
[
6,
7] despite their phenotypic diversity. Indeed, the various species of the
Bc sensu lato group are phylogenetically interspersed among one another in several phylogenies
[
8-
10]. Although the population has a clonal character, there do not appear to be clonal lineages that are species-specific, with the exception of the
Ba lineage
[
11]. Some
Bc sensu lato organisms are thermophiles
[
12], while
Bw is a psychrophile
[
4]. Nevertheless, most
Bc sensu lato isolates are mesophiles, found in a breadth of locales including the soil, on plant surfaces and the mammalian gastrointestinal microflora
[
13]. Some
Bc sensu lato members appear to be nonpathogenic, while others cause diverse disease ranging from food poisoning (intoxication without colonization) to gastroenteritis
[
13], endophthalmitis
[
14], tissue abscesses
[
15,
16], and aggressively invasive systemic disease, including anthrax
[
3].
Bt strains can cause disease in insects
[
17,
18] and possibly nematodes
[
19-
21], while some
Bc strains are part of the normal insect gut flora
[
13,
22].
Thus, these organisms appear to have arisen from a common ancestor to display impressive phenotypic diversity while nevertheless occupying a close phylogenetic space. What mechanisms produced this dichotomy? Horizontal gene transfer (HGT), mobile genetic elements, and the routine processes of insertion/deletion (indel) formation have typically been invoked to explain the diversity in these organisms
[
23,
24]. Clearly, the presence of mobile genetic elements such as the virulence plasmids pXO1 and pXO2 in the
Ba lineage, and the Cry toxin plasmids in various
Bt strains, are essential for the signature phenotypes of these organisms
[
3,
25]. On the other hand, it is unclear how much of the phenotypic diversity in these organisms can be explained by these mechanisms. As a whole,
Bc sensu lato organisms have an extremely high degree of chromosomal synteny
[
26], and whole genome comparisons between these organisms reveal a highly similar gene content
[
26,
27]. Han
et al.[
27] suggested “that differential regulation [of gene content] modulates virulence rather than simple acquisition of virulence factor genes”, a conclusion confirmed by other studies
[
28]. This proposition is consistent with observations that the most evolutionarily flexible portions of the bacterial genome are regulatory sequences and transcriptional networks
[
29-
31].
We decided to explore the divergence within the
Bc sensu lato group by examining the divergence of the SigB regulons in these organisms. The
sigB locus encodes an alternative sigma factor with orthologs confined to the
Bacillus,
Staphylococcus and
Listeria genera
[
32]. In each of these, the SigB protein is responsible for transcriptionally activating the generalized stress response when induced by a variety of stressors, including heat, osmolarity, organic solvents, low pH or cell-wall active antibiotics
[
33-
35]. In these organisms, SigB appears to control virulence-related functions including biofilm formation and invasion
[
36,
37]. Some data that suggest that components of the SigB-mediated stress response vary between strains of
Listeria and of
S. aureus in a lineage-dependent manner
[
38-
40]. This suggests that part of the evolutionary differentiation that occurred within these genera included divergence of the structure of the SigB-controlled regulons.
The divergence of the SigB regulon in the
Bc sensu lato group appears to be similar. Lapidus
et al.[
4] observed that
B. cytotoxicus [formerly
Bc biovar
cytotoxis[
41]] is likely the most similar of the
Bc sensu lato organisms to the nearest common ancestor of the group, based on comparative genome analysis and 16S rRNA phylogeny. Our whole genome single-gene phylogeny
[
7] supports the placement of
B. cytotoxicus at the base of the phylogeny of the
Bc sensu lato group. Important in the present context, the
B. cytotoxicus genome lacks the entire SigB operon
[
4], including the SigB gene and the primary regulatory loci that control SigB activity, RsbV (anti-sigB antagonist) and RsbW (anti-sigB factor). Consequently, the
B. cytotoxicus genome does not encode either the sigma factor or associated SigB regulatory genes, and cannot mount a SigB-activated stress response. Lapidus
et al. suggested that an organism similar to
B. cytotoxicus was likely the ancestor of the remainder of the
Bc sensu lato lineage, which arose after receiving the SigB operon during an HGT event. Consistent with this, we were unable to find convincing evidence of SigB binding sites in the
B. cytotoxicus genome that correspond to SigB promoters in other members of the
Bc sensu lato group (see below). An alternative explanation, that
B. cytotoxicus had lost the SigB operon and other genomic information during streamlining of a larger genome
[
42,
43], is less likely. In that instance, we expect that detectable remnants of the SigB regulon (e.g., SigB promoters, pseudogenes) would remain in the
B. cytotoxicus genome. Thus, the introduction of an intact SigB operon into a
B. cytotoxicus-like ancestor, likely by HGT as suggested by Lapidus
et al., appears to have set the stage for the emergence of the SigB-controlled stress response regulon in the entire
Bc sensu lato group. From this perspective, the
B. cytotoxicus genome therefore is a convenient lens through which to view the appearance and divergence of the SigB regulon in the remainder of the
Bc sensu lato group. Exploiting experimental data derived from
Bc strain ATCC14579
[
44,
45], we used an
in silico approach to predict and compare the SigB regulons of the completed genomes of 20 members of the
Bc sensu lato group. Not surprisingly, protein coding sequence indels play an important role in the divergence of these regulons. However, changes in promoter sequence between members of the
Bc sensu lato group that ‘re-purpose’ conserved genes into/out of the SigB regulon appear to be more common than indel formation for remodeling the structure of this regulon during divergence. Four different lineages of the SigB regulon appear to have arisen during this process. One lineage appears to carry the core SigB regulon that arose after the emergence of these organisms from a
B. cytotoxicus-like ancestor. This lineage appears to have given rise to three additional groups that each appropriated different genes from a common gene pool into the SigB regulon, suggesting different strategies for the support of pathogenesis by the SigB-mediated generalized stress response.