Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Science. 2014 Apr 25;344(6182):416-20. doi: 10.1126/science.1248575.
Extensive genomic diversity within coexisting members of a microbial species has been revealed through selected cultured isolates and metagenomic assemblies. Yet, the cell-by-cell genomic composition of wild uncultured populations of co-occurring cells is largely unknown. In this work, we applied large-scale single-cell genomics to study populations of the globally abundant marine cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus. We show that they are composed of hundreds of subpopulations with distinct "genomic backbones," each backbone consisting of a different set of core gene alleles linked to a small distinctive set of flexible genes. These subpopulations are estimated to have diverged at least a few million years ago, suggesting ancient, stable niche partitioning. Such a large set of coexisting subpopulations may be a general feature of free-living bacterial species with huge populations in highly mixed habitats.
通过选择培养的分离物和宏基因组组装,揭示了共存微生物物种内广泛的基因组多样性。然而,共存细胞的野生未培养群体的单细胞基因组组成在很大程度上是未知的。在这项工作中,我们应用大规模单细胞基因组学来研究全球丰富的海洋蓝细菌聚球藻的种群。我们表明,它们由数百个具有不同“基因组骨干”的亚群组成,每个骨干由一组不同的核心基因等位基因组成,这些等位基因与一小部分独特的灵活基因相连。这些亚群估计已经分化了至少几百万年,表明存在古老而稳定的生态位分隔。如此庞大的共存亚群可能是在高度混合的栖息地中具有庞大种群的自由生活细菌物种的普遍特征。