Applied Physics Department, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States of America.
Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution for Science, Stanford, CA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Nov 14;13(11):e0205396. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0205396. eCollection 2018.
Despite extensive DNA sequencing data derived from natural microbial communities, it remains a major challenge to identify the key evolutionary and ecological forces that shape microbial populations. We have focused on the extensive microdiversity of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp., which is a dominant member of the dense phototrophic biofilms in the hot springs of Yellowstone National Park. From deep amplicon sequencing of many loci and statistical analyses of these data, we showed previously that the population has undergone an unexpectedly high degree of homologous recombination, unlinking synonymous SNP-pair correlations even on intragenic length scales. Here, we analyze the genic amino acid diversity, which provides new evidence of selection and insights into the evolutionary history of the population. Surprisingly, some features of the data, including the spectrum of distances between genic-alleles, appear consistent with primarily asexual neutral drift. Yet the non-synonymous site frequency spectrum has too large an excess of low-frequency polymorphisms to result from negative selection on deleterious mutations given the distribution of coalescent times that we infer. And our previous analyses showed that the population is not asexual. Taken together, these apparently contradictory data suggest that selection, epistasis, and hitchhiking all play essential roles in generating and stabilizing the diversity. We discuss these as well as potential roles of ecological niches at genomic and genic levels. From quantitative properties of the diversity and comparative genomic data, we infer aspects of the history and inter-spring dispersal of the meta-population since it was established in the Yellowstone Caldera. Our investigations illustrate the need for combining multiple types of sequencing data and quantitative statistical analyses to develop an understanding of microdiversity in natural microbial populations.
尽管已经从自然微生物群落中获得了广泛的 DNA 测序数据,但确定塑造微生物种群的关键进化和生态力量仍然是一个主要挑战。我们专注于蓝细菌 Synechococcus sp. 的广泛微观多样性,它是黄石国家公园温泉中密集光养生物膜的主要成员。通过对许多基因座的深度扩增子测序和对这些数据的统计分析,我们之前表明,该种群经历了出乎意料的高度同源重组,甚至在基因内长度尺度上也使同义 SNP 对相关解链。在这里,我们分析了基因氨基酸多样性,这为选择提供了新的证据,并深入了解了种群的进化历史。令人惊讶的是,数据的某些特征,包括基因等位基因之间的距离谱,似乎与主要的无性中性漂移一致。然而,非同义位点频率谱的低频多态性过多,以至于不能通过对有害突变的负选择来解释,因为我们推断的合并时间分布就是如此。并且我们之前的分析表明,该种群不是无性繁殖的。总之,这些明显矛盾的数据表明,选择、上位性和 hitchhiking 都在产生和稳定多样性方面发挥了重要作用。我们讨论了这些以及在基因组和基因水平上生态位的潜在作用。从多样性的定量性质和比较基因组数据中,我们推断了元种群自黄石火山口建立以来在历史和春季间扩散方面的情况。我们的研究说明了需要结合多种类型的测序数据和定量统计分析来发展对自然微生物种群微观多样性的理解。