Becraft Eric D, Dodsworth Jeremy A, Murugapiran Senthil K, Thomas Scott C, Ohlsson J Ingemar, Stepanauskas Ramunas, Hedlund Brian P, Swingley Wesley D
Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, United States.
Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, East Boothbay, ME, United States.
Front Microbiol. 2017 Oct 31;8:2082. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.02082. eCollection 2017.
Recent progress based on single-cell genomics and metagenomic investigations of archaea in a variety of extreme environments has led to significant advances in our understanding of the diversity, evolution, and metabolic potential of archaea, yet the vast majority of archaeal diversity remains undersampled. In this work, we coordinated single-cell genomics with metagenomics in order to construct a near-complete genome from a deeply branching uncultivated archaeal lineage sampled from Great Boiling Spring (GBS) in the U.S. Great Basin, Nevada. This taxon is distantly related (distinct families) to an archaeal genome, designated "Novel Archaeal Group 1" (NAG1), which was extracted from a metagenome recovered from an acidic iron spring in Yellowstone National Park (YNP). We compared the metabolic predictions of the NAG1 lineage to better understand how these archaea could inhabit such chemically distinct environments. Similar to the NAG1 population previously studied in YNP, the NAG1 population from GBS is predicted to utilize proteins as a primary carbon source, ferment simple carbon sources, and use oxygen as a terminal electron acceptor under oxic conditions. However, GBS NAG1 populations contained distinct genes involved in central carbon metabolism and electron transfer, including nitrite reductase, which could confer the ability to reduce nitrite under anaerobic conditions. Despite inhabiting chemically distinct environments with large variations in pH, GBS NAG1 populations shared many core genomic and metabolic features with the archaeon identified from YNP, yet were able to carve out a distinct niche at GBS.
基于对各种极端环境中古菌的单细胞基因组学和宏基因组学研究的最新进展,使我们对古菌的多样性、进化和代谢潜力的理解有了显著进步,然而绝大多数古菌的多样性仍未得到充分采样。在这项工作中,我们将单细胞基因组学与宏基因组学相结合,以便从内华达州大盆地的大沸腾泉(GBS)采样的一个深度分支的未培养古菌谱系构建一个近乎完整的基因组。这个分类单元与一个从黄石国家公园(YNP)的酸性铁泉中回收的宏基因组中提取的古菌基因组(命名为“新型古菌群1”,即NAG1)关系较远(属于不同的科)。我们比较了NAG1谱系的代谢预测结果,以更好地了解这些古菌如何能够栖息在化学性质如此不同的环境中。与之前在YNP研究的NAG1群体相似,预计来自GBS的NAG1群体将蛋白质作为主要碳源,发酵简单碳源,并在有氧条件下将氧气作为终端电子受体。然而,GBS的NAG1群体包含参与中心碳代谢和电子传递的不同基因,包括亚硝酸还原酶,这可能赋予其在厌氧条件下还原亚硝酸盐的能力。尽管栖息在pH值变化很大的化学性质不同的环境中,但GBS的NAG1群体与从YNP鉴定出的古菌具有许多核心基因组和代谢特征,然而它们能够在GBS开拓出一个独特的生态位。