Shaw Claire, Brooke Charles, Hawley Erik, Connolly Morgan P, Garcia Javier A, Harmon-Smith Miranda, Shapiro Nicole, Barton Michael, Tringe Susannah G, Glavina Del Rio Tijana, Culley David E, Castenholz Richard, Hess Matthias
Systems Microbiology and Natural Products Laboratory, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, United States.
Bayer, Pittsburg, PA, United States.
Front Microbiol. 2020 Nov 6;11:572131. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.572131. eCollection 2020.
Cyanobacteria are found in most illuminated environments and are key players in global carbon and nitrogen cycling. Although significant efforts have been made to advance our understanding of this important phylum, still little is known about how members of the cyanobacteria affect and respond to changes in complex biological systems. This lack of knowledge is in part due to our dependence on pure cultures when determining the metabolism and function of a microorganism. We took advantage of the Culture Collection of Microorganisms from Extreme Environments (CCMEE), a collection of more than 1,000 publicly available photosynthetic co-cultures maintained at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, and assessed via 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing if samples readily available from public culture collection could be used in the future to generate new insights into the role of microbial communities in global and local carbon and nitrogen cycling. Results from this work support the existing notion that culture depositories in general hold the potential to advance fundamental and applied research. Although it remains to be seen if co-cultures can be used at large scale to infer roles of individual organisms, samples that are publicly available from existing co-cultures depositories, such as the CCMEE, might be an economical starting point for such studies. Access to archived biological samples, without the need for costly field work, might in some circumstances be one of the few remaining ways to advance the field and to generate new insights into the biology of ecosystems that are not easily accessible. The current COVID-19 pandemic, which makes sampling expeditions almost impossible without putting the health of the participating scientists on the line, is a very timely example.
蓝藻细菌存在于大多数有光照的环境中,是全球碳氮循环的关键参与者。尽管人们已付出巨大努力来增进对这一重要门类的了解,但对于蓝藻细菌成员如何影响复杂生物系统的变化以及如何做出反应,我们仍然知之甚少。这种知识的匮乏部分归因于我们在确定微生物的代谢和功能时依赖纯培养物。我们利用了极端环境微生物培养物保藏中心(CCMEE),这是一个保存在太平洋西北国家实验室的、拥有1000多种公开可用光合共培养物的集合,并通过16S rRNA扩增子测序评估了从公共培养物保藏中心 readily available 的样本未来是否可用于深入了解微生物群落在全球和局部碳氮循环中的作用。这项工作的结果支持了现有的观点,即一般来说培养物保藏库有推动基础研究和应用研究的潜力。尽管共培养物能否大规模用于推断单个生物体的作用还有待观察,但从现有的共培养物保藏库(如CCMEE)中公开可得的样本可能是此类研究的一个经济的起点。在某些情况下,无需进行昂贵的实地工作就能获取存档的生物样本,可能是推动该领域发展并深入了解难以进入的生态系统生物学的少数剩余途径之一。当前的新冠疫情就是一个非常及时的例子,在不危及参与科学家健康的情况下,几乎不可能进行采样考察。