Título : The hidden genetic reservoir: structural variants as drivers of marine microbial and viral microdiversity |
Autor : Haro-Moreno, Jose M. Roda-Garcia, Juan J. Molina Pardines, Carmen López-Pérez, Mario |
Editor : Springer |
Departamento: Departamentos de la UMH::Producción Vegetal y Microbiología |
Fecha de publicación: 2025 |
URI : https://hdl.handle.net/11000/39807 |
Resumen :
Background Intraspecific genetic diversity is fundamental to understanding microbial adaptation, evolution,
and contributions to ecosystem stability. However, traditional short-read metagenomics often underrepresents
this diversity, particularly structural variants (SVs), due to assembly limitations in complex natural populations. To
overcome these constraints, we employed third-generation (long-read) metagenomics to investigate the ecoevolutionary
role of SVs in microbial and viral marine populations. Our analysis focused on the cellular metagenome
fraction (0.22–5 μm size range) across distinct ecological niches within the photic zone of the marine water column.
Results Insertions and deletions emerged as the predominant SVs in the marine microbiome, occurring at similar
frequencies across genomes. These SVs were not only found within the core genome but also in the flexible genome,
serving as a source of genetic variability within genomic islands. Insertions were significantly larger, reaching more
than 2 Kb, in streamlined microbes such as Pelagibacter (SAR11 clade) or the archaeon Nitrosopumilus. In contrast,
SVs in viral populations were smaller and more uniform in size (~ 430 bp). Functionally, SVs were enriched in genes
linked to nutrient uptake, amino acid metabolism, and regulatory networks due to the presence of non-coding
RNAs. These SVs often encompassed entire genes or operons, acting as an important reservoir of niche-specific
diversity that supports the emergence of ecological lineages better adapted to environmental gradients, such as
rhodopsin-containing subpopulations in shallower waters. In viruses, SV-driven genetic plasticity facilitated host
range adaptation and the evolution of mechanisms modulating host metabolism. We identified long-term genetically
stable populations of cyanophages and pelagiphages, wherein SVs represented the primary source of genomic
diversification. Notably, certain subpopulations of pelagimyophages carry SVs encoding a pstS gene, which enhances
host phosphate uptake and increases viral replication efficiency—a beneficial adaptation in phosphate-depleted
environments such as the oligotrophic Mediterranean Sea.
Conclusions By capturing SVs directly from natural populations, this study provides new insights into microbial
evolution, phage-host interactions, and the broader implications of genomic plasticity for ecosystem resilience
in marine environments. Furthermore, these results highlight the transformative potential of third-generation
sequencing to unveil previously hidden layers of microbial and viral diversity.
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Palabras clave/Materias: Long-read sequencing Structural variants Metagenomeassembled genomes Bacteriophage PacBio CCS long-reads Microdiversity Third-generation metagenomics Marine virome |
Área de conocimiento : CDU: Ciencias aplicadas: Agricultura. Silvicultura. Zootecnia. Caza. Pesca: Agricultura. Agronomía. Maquinaria agrícola. Suelos. Edafología agrícola |
Tipo de documento : info:eu-repo/semantics/article |
Derechos de acceso: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
DOI : https://doi.org/10.1186/s40793-025-00773-8 |
Publicado en: Environmental Microbiome - Vol. 20, Issue 110 (2025) |
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos - Producción vegetal y microbiología
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