Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/3427

Key roles for freshwater Actinobacteria revealed by deep metagenomics sequencing


Thumbnail

View/Open:
 Ghai_et_al-2014-Molecular_Ecology.pdf
1,58 MB
Adobe PDF
Share:
Title:
Key roles for freshwater Actinobacteria revealed by deep metagenomics sequencing
Authors:
Ghai, Rohit
Megumi Mizuno, Carolina
Picazo, Antonio
Camacho, Antonio
Rodríguez Valera, Francisco
Department:
Departamentos de la UMH::Producción Vegetal y Microbiología
Issue Date:
2014-10-30
URI:
http://hdl.handle.net/11000/3427
Abstract:
Freshwater ecosystems are critical but fragile environments directly affecting society and its welfare. However, our understanding of genuinely freshwater microbial communities, constrained by our capacity to manipulate its prokaryotic participants in axenic cultures, remains very rudimentary. Even the most abundant components, freshwater Actinobacteria, remain largely unknown. Here, applying deep metagenomic sequencing to the microbial community of a freshwater reservoir, we were able to circumvent this traditional bottleneck and reconstruct de novo seven distinct streamlined actinobacterial genomes. These genomes represent three new groups of photoheterotrophic, planktonic Actinobacteria. We describe for the first time genomes of two novel clades, acMicro (Micrococcineae, related to Luna2,) and acAMD (Actinomycetales, related to acTH1). Besides, an aggregate of contigs belonged to a new branch of the Acidimicrobiales. All are estimated to have small genomes (approximately 1.2 Mb), and their GC content varied from 40 to 61%. One of the Micrococcineae genomes encodes a proteorhodopsin, a rhodopsin type reported for the first time in Actinobacteria. The remarkable potential capacity of some of these genomes to transform recalcitrant plant detrital material, particularly lignin-derived compounds, suggests close linkages between the terrestrial and aquatic realms. Moreover, abundances of Actinobacteria correlate inversely to those of Cyanobacteria that are responsible for prolonged and frequently irretrievable damage to freshwater ecosystems. This suggests that they might serve as sentinels of impending ecological catastrophes.
Keywords/Subjects:
Actinobacteria
Cyanobacteria
freshwater reservoir
lignin degradation
metagenomics
rhodopsins
Knowledge area:
CDU: Cultivos y producciones
Type of document:
application/pdf
Access rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.12985
Appears in Collections:
Artículos Producción vegetal y microbiología



Creative Commons ???jsp.display-item.text9???