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1.
Environ Microbiol ; 25(12): 3075-3086, 2023 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37664956

RESUMO

Desiccation impacts a suite of physiological processes in microbes by elevating levels of damaging reactive oxygen species and inducing DNA strand breaks. In response to desiccation-induced stress, microbes have evolved specialized mechanisms to help them survive. Here, we performed a 128-day lab desiccation experiment on nine strains from three clades of an abundant soil bacterium, Curtobacterium. We sequenced RNA from each strain at three time points to investigate their response. Curtobacterium was highly resistant to desiccation, outlasting both Escherichia coli and a famously DNA damage-resistant bacterium, Deinococcus radiodurans. However, within the genus, there were also 10-fold differences in survival rates among strains. Transcriptomic profiling revealed responses shared within the genus including up-regulation of genes involved in DNA damage repair, osmolyte production, and efflux pumps, but also up-regulation of pathways and genes unique to the three clades. For example, trehalose synthesis gene otsB, the chaperone groEL, and the oxygen scavenger katA were all found in either one or two clades but not the third. Here, we provide evidence of considerable variation in closely related strains, and further elucidation of the phylogenetic conservation of desiccation tolerance remains an important goal for microbial ecologists.


Assuntos
Dano ao DNA , Dessecação , Filogenia , Reparo do DNA , Bactérias
2.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 88(6): e0242921, 2022 03 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35108096

RESUMO

Global change experiments often observe shifts in bacterial community composition based on 16S rRNA gene sequences. However, this genetic region can mask a large amount of genetic and phenotypic variation among bacterial strains sharing even identical 16S regions. As such, it remains largely unknown whether variation at the sub-16S level, sometimes termed microdiversity, responds to environmental perturbations and whether such changes are relevant to ecosystem processes. Here, we investigated microdiversity within Curtobacterium, the dominant bacterium found in the leaf litter layer of soil, to simulated drought and nitrogen addition in a field experiment. We first developed and validated Curtobacterium-specific primers of the groEL gene to assess microdiversity within this lineage. We then tracked the response of this microdiversity to simulated global change in two adjacent plant communities, grassland and coastal sage scrub (CSS). Curtobacterium microdiversity responded to drought but not nitrogen addition, indicating variation within the genus of drought tolerance but not nitrogen response. Further, the response of microdiversity to drought depended on the ecosystem, suggesting that litter substrate selects for a distinct composition of microdiversity that is constrained in its response, perhaps related to tradeoffs in resource acquisition traits. Supporting this interpretation, a metagenomic analysis revealed that the composition of Curtobacterium-encoded carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZymes) varied distinctly across the two ecosystems. Identifying the degree to which relevant traits are phylogenetically conserved may help to predict when the aggregated response of a 16S-defined taxon masks differential responses of finer-scale bacterial diversity to global change. IMPORTANCE Microbial communities play an integral role in global biogeochemical cycling, but our understanding of how global change will affect microbial community structure and functioning remains limited. Microbiome analyses typically aggregate large amounts of genetic diversity which may obscure finer variation in traits. This study found that fine-scale diversity (or microdiversity) within the bacterial genus Curtobacterium was affected by simulated global changes. However, the degree to which this was true depended on the type of global change, as the composition of Curtobacterium microdiversity was affected by drought, but not by nitrogen addition. Further, these changes were associated with variation in carbon degradation traits. Future work might improve predictions of microbial community responses to global change by considering microdiversity.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Microbiota , Bactérias/genética , RNA Ribossômico 16S/genética , Solo , Microbiologia do Solo
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