TY - JOUR
T1 - Freshwater Chlorobia exhibit metabolic specialization among cosmopolitan and endemic populations
AU - Garcia, Sarahi L.
AU - Mehrshad, Maliheh
AU - Buck, Moritz
AU - Tsuji, Jackson M.
AU - Neufeld, Josh D.
AU - McMahon, Katherine D.
AU - Bertilsson, Stefan
AU - Greening, Chris
AU - Peura, Sari
N1 - Funding Information:
The work was primarily funded by Science for Life Laboratory, the Olsson-Borgh, Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundations (grant KAW 2013.0091), and Kungl. Vetenskapsakademiens stiftelser (BS2018-0108). K.D.M. acknowledges funding from the United States National Science Foundation Microbial Observatories Program (MCB-0702395), the Long-Term Ecological Research Program (NTL-LTER DEB-1440297), and an INSPIRE award (DEB-1344254). J.D.N. acknowledges Discovery Grant and Strategic Partnership Grant for Projects funding from the National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC). C.G. is supported by a National Health & Medical Research Council EL2 Fellowship (APP1178715). S.B. acknowledges funding from the Swedish Research Council and the Swedish Research Council Formas. The authors acknowledge additional support and resources from the National Genomics Infrastructure in Stockholm funded by the Science for Life Laboratory, the Swedish Research Council, and SNIC/Uppsala Multidisciplinary Center for Advanced Computational Science for assistance with massively parallel sequencing and access to the UPPMAX computational infrastructure (project SNIC2020/5-19). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2021 Garcia et al.
Copyright:
Copyright 2021 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/5
Y1 - 2021/5
N2 - Photosynthetic bacteria from the class Chlorobia (formerly phylum Chlorobi) sustain carbon fixation in anoxic water columns. They harvest light at extremely low intensities and use various inorganic electron donors to fix carbon dioxide into biomass. Until now, most information on the functional ecology and local adaptations of Chlorobia members came from isolates and merely 26 sequenced genomes that may not adequately represent natural populations. To address these limitations, we analyzed global metagenomes to profile planktonic Chlorobia cells from the oxyclines of 42 freshwater bodies, spanning subarctic to tropical regions and encompassing all four seasons. We assembled and compiled over 500 genomes, including metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), single-amplified genomes (SAGs), and reference genomes from cultures, clustering them into 71 metagenomic operational taxonomic units (mOTUs or “species”). Of the 71 mOTUs, 57 were classified within the genus Chlorobium, and these mOTUs represented up to;60% of the microbial communities in the sampled anoxic waters. Several Chlorobium-associated mOTUs were globally distributed, whereas others were endemic to individual lakes. Although most clades encoded the ability to oxidize hydrogen, many lacked genes for the oxidation of specific sulfur and iron substrates. Surprisingly, one globally distributed Scandinavian clade encoded the ability to oxidize hydrogen, sulfur, and iron, suggesting that metabolic versatility facilitated such widespread colonization. Overall, these findings provide new insight into the biogeography of the Chlorobia and the metabolic traits that facilitate niche specialization within lake ecosystems. IMPORTANCE The reconstruction of genomes from metagenomes has helped explore the ecology and evolution of environmental microbiota. We applied this approach to 274 metagenomes collected from diverse freshwater habitats that spanned oxic and anoxic zones, sampling seasons, and latitudes. We demonstrate widespread and abundant distributions of planktonic Chlorobia-associated bacteria in hypolimnetic waters of stratified freshwater ecosystems and show they vary in their capacities to use different electron donors. Having photoautotrophic potential, these Chlorobia members could serve as carbon sources that support metalimnetic and hypolimnetic food webs.
AB - Photosynthetic bacteria from the class Chlorobia (formerly phylum Chlorobi) sustain carbon fixation in anoxic water columns. They harvest light at extremely low intensities and use various inorganic electron donors to fix carbon dioxide into biomass. Until now, most information on the functional ecology and local adaptations of Chlorobia members came from isolates and merely 26 sequenced genomes that may not adequately represent natural populations. To address these limitations, we analyzed global metagenomes to profile planktonic Chlorobia cells from the oxyclines of 42 freshwater bodies, spanning subarctic to tropical regions and encompassing all four seasons. We assembled and compiled over 500 genomes, including metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), single-amplified genomes (SAGs), and reference genomes from cultures, clustering them into 71 metagenomic operational taxonomic units (mOTUs or “species”). Of the 71 mOTUs, 57 were classified within the genus Chlorobium, and these mOTUs represented up to;60% of the microbial communities in the sampled anoxic waters. Several Chlorobium-associated mOTUs were globally distributed, whereas others were endemic to individual lakes. Although most clades encoded the ability to oxidize hydrogen, many lacked genes for the oxidation of specific sulfur and iron substrates. Surprisingly, one globally distributed Scandinavian clade encoded the ability to oxidize hydrogen, sulfur, and iron, suggesting that metabolic versatility facilitated such widespread colonization. Overall, these findings provide new insight into the biogeography of the Chlorobia and the metabolic traits that facilitate niche specialization within lake ecosystems. IMPORTANCE The reconstruction of genomes from metagenomes has helped explore the ecology and evolution of environmental microbiota. We applied this approach to 274 metagenomes collected from diverse freshwater habitats that spanned oxic and anoxic zones, sampling seasons, and latitudes. We demonstrate widespread and abundant distributions of planktonic Chlorobia-associated bacteria in hypolimnetic waters of stratified freshwater ecosystems and show they vary in their capacities to use different electron donors. Having photoautotrophic potential, these Chlorobia members could serve as carbon sources that support metalimnetic and hypolimnetic food webs.
KW - Chlorobia
KW - Freshwater
KW - Photosynthetic bacteria
KW - Planktonic
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85105666753&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1128/mSystems.01196-20
DO - 10.1128/mSystems.01196-20
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85105666753
VL - 6
JO - mSystems
JF - mSystems
SN - 2379-5077
IS - 3
M1 - e01196-20
ER -