Labonté Jessica M, Swan Brandon K, Poulos Bonnie, Luo Haiwei, Koren Sergey, Hallam Steven J, Sullivan Matthew B, Woyke Tanja, Wommack K Eric, Stepanauskas Ramunas
Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, East Boothbay, ME, USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
ISME J. 2015 Nov;9(11):2386-99. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2015.48. Epub 2015 Apr 7.
Viral infections dynamically alter the composition and metabolic potential of marine microbial communities and the evolutionary trajectories of host populations with resulting feedback on biogeochemical cycles. It is quite possible that all microbial populations in the ocean are impacted by viral infections. Our knowledge of virus-host relationships, however, has been limited to a minute fraction of cultivated host groups. Here, we utilized single-cell sequencing to obtain genomic blueprints of viruses inside or attached to individual bacterial and archaeal cells captured in their native environment, circumventing the need for host and virus cultivation. A combination of comparative genomics, metagenomic fragment recruitment, sequence anomalies and irregularities in sequence coverage depth and genome recovery were utilized to detect viruses and to decipher modes of virus-host interactions. Members of all three tailed phage families were identified in 20 out of 58 phylogenetically and geographically diverse single amplified genomes (SAGs) of marine bacteria and archaea. At least four phage-host interactions had the characteristics of late lytic infections, all of which were found in metabolically active cells. One virus had genetic potential for lysogeny. Our findings include first known viruses of Thaumarchaeota, Marinimicrobia, Verrucomicrobia and Gammaproteobacteria clusters SAR86 and SAR92. Viruses were also found in SAGs of Alphaproteobacteria and Bacteroidetes. A high fragment recruitment of viral metagenomic reads confirmed that most of the SAG-associated viruses are abundant in the ocean. Our study demonstrates that single-cell genomics, in conjunction with sequence-based computational tools, enable in situ, cultivation-independent insights into host-virus interactions in complex microbial communities.
病毒感染会动态改变海洋微生物群落的组成和代谢潜力,以及宿主种群的进化轨迹,进而对生物地球化学循环产生反馈。海洋中所有微生物种群都很可能受到病毒感染的影响。然而,我们对病毒与宿主关系的了解仅限于一小部分已培养的宿主群体。在这里,我们利用单细胞测序技术,获得了在自然环境中捕获的单个细菌和古菌细胞内或附着于其上的病毒的基因组蓝图,从而无需进行宿主和病毒培养。我们综合运用了比较基因组学、宏基因组片段招募、序列异常以及序列覆盖深度和基因组回收率的不规则性等方法来检测病毒,并解读病毒与宿主的相互作用模式。在58个来自不同系统发育和地理区域的海洋细菌和古菌的单扩增基因组(SAG)中,有20个鉴定出了所有三个有尾噬菌体家族的成员。至少有四种噬菌体与宿主的相互作用具有晚期裂解感染的特征,所有这些相互作用都发生在代谢活跃的细胞中。一种病毒具有溶原性的遗传潜力。我们的发现包括首次发现的奇古菌门、海洋微生物组、疣微菌门以及γ-变形菌纲SAR86和SAR92簇的病毒。在α-变形菌纲和拟杆菌门的SAG中也发现了病毒。病毒宏基因组读数的高片段招募证实,大多数与SAG相关的病毒在海洋中含量丰富。我们的研究表明,单细胞基因组学与基于序列的计算工具相结合,能够对复杂微生物群落中宿主与病毒的相互作用进行原位、无需培养的深入了解。