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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 951: 175510, 2024 Aug 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39147055

RESUMO

Microbial community diversity significantly varies with seasonality. However, little is known about seasonal variation of microbial community functions in lake sediments and their associated environmental influences. In this study, metagenomic sequencing of sediments collected from winter, summer, and autumn from Caohai Lake, Guizhou Plateau, were used to evaluate the composition and function of sediment microbial communities, the potential interactions of functional genes, key genes associated with seasons, and community assembly mechanisms. The average concentrations of nitrogen (TN) and phosphorus (TP) in lake sediments were higher, which were 6.136 and 0.501 g/kg, respectively. TN and organic matter (OM) were the primary factors associated with sediment community composition and functional profiles. The diversity and structure of the microbial communities varied with seasons, and Proteobacteria relative abundances were significantly lower in summer than in other seasons (58.43-44.12 %). Seasons were also associated with the relative abundances of functional genes, and in particular korA, metF, narC, nrfA, pstC/S, and soxB genes. Network complexity was highest in the summer and key genes in the network also varied across seasons. Neutral community model analysis revealed that the assembly mechanisms related to carbon (C), nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and sulfur (S) cycle-related genes were primarily associated with random processes. In summary, diverse functional genes were identified in lake sediments and exhibited evidence for synergistic interactions (Positive proportion: 74.91-99.82 %), while seasonal factors influenced their distribution. The results of this study provide new insights into seasonal impacts on microbial-driven biogeochemical cycling in shallow lakes.

2.
Water Res ; 265: 122259, 2024 Aug 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39154398

RESUMO

As a pervasive microbial aggregate found at the water-soil interface in paddy fields, periphyton plays crucial roles in modulating nutrient biogeochemical cycling. Consequently, it effectively mitigates non-point source pollution due to its diverse composition. Despite its significance, the mechanisms governing periphyton diversity across different rice planting regions remain poorly understood. To bridge this gap, we investigated periphyton grown in 200 paddy fields spanning 25° of latitude. Initially, we analyzed local diversity and latitudinal variations in prokaryotic communities within paddy field periphyton, identifying 7 abundant taxa, 42 moderate taxa, and 39 rare taxa as the fundamental prokaryotic framework. Subsequently, to elucidate the mechanisms governing periphyton diversity across large scales, we constructed interaction models illustrating triangular relationships among local richness, assembly, and regional variation of prokaryotic subcommunities. Our findings suggest that accumulated temperature-driven environmental filtering partially influences the assembly process of prokaryotes, thereby impacting local species richness and ultimately governing regional structural variations in periphyton. Furthermore, we determined that a latitude of 39° represents the critical threshold maximizing local species richness of periphyton in paddy fields. This study advances our understanding of the factors shaping periphyton geo-imprints and provides valuable insights into predicting their responses to environmental changes, potentially influencing rice production outcomes.

3.
J Hazard Mater ; 478: 135478, 2024 Aug 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39137550

RESUMO

The microbially-mediated reduction processes have potential for the bioremediation of acid mine drainage (AMD), which represents a worldwide environment problem. However, we know little about the microbial interactions in anaerobic AMD sediments. Here we utilized genome-resolved metagenomics to uncover the nature of cooperative and competitive metabolic interactions in 90 AMD sediments across Southern China. Our analyses recovered well-represented prokaryotic communities through the reconstruction of 2625 population genomes. Functional analyses of these genomes revealed extensive metabolic handoffs which occurred more frequently in nitrogen metabolism than in sulfur metabolism, as well as stable functional redundancy across sediments resulting from populations with low genomic relatedness. Genome-scale metabolic modeling showed that metabolic competition promoted microbial co-occurrence relationships, suggesting that community assembly was dominated by habitat filtering in sediments. Notably, communities colonizing more extreme conditions tended to be highly competitive, which was typically accompanied with increased network complexity but decreased stability of the microbiome. Finally, our results demonstrated that heterotrophic Thermoplasmatota associated with ferric iron and sulfate reduction contributed most to the elevated levels of competition. Our study shed light on the cooperative and competitive metabolisms of microbiome in the hazardous AMD sediments, which may provide preliminary clues for the AMD bioremediation in the future.

4.
Environ Microbiome ; 19(1): 57, 2024 Aug 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39103916

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Lichens are micro-ecosystems relying on diverse microorganisms for nutrient cycling, environmental adaptation, and structural support. We investigated the spatial-scale dependency of factors shaping the ecological processes that govern lichen-associated bacteria. We hypothesize that lichens function as island-like habitats hosting divergent microbiomes and promoting landscape gamma-diversity. Three microenvironments -thalli, substrates, and neighboring soils- were sampled from four geographically overlapping species of Peltigera cyanolichens, spanning three bioclimatic zones in the Chilean Patagonia, to determine how bacterial diversity, assembly processes, ecological drivers, interaction patterns, and niche breadth vary among Peltigera microenvironments on a broad geographical scale. RESULTS: The hosts' phylogeny, especially that of the cyanobiont, alongside climate as a secondary factor, impose a strong ecological filtering of bacterial communities within Peltigera thalli. This results in deterministically assembled, low diverse, and phylogenetically convergent yet structurally divergent bacterial communities. Host evolutionary and geographic distances accentuate the divergence in bacterial community composition of Peltigera thalli. Compared to soil and substrate, Peltigera thalli harbor specialized and locally adapted bacterial taxa, conforming sparse and weak ecological networks. CONCLUSIONS: The findings suggest that Petigera thalli create fragmented habitats that foster landscape bacterial gamma-diversity. This underscores the importance of preserving lichens for maintaining a potential reservoir of specialized bacteria.

5.
Heliyon ; 10(15): e35239, 2024 Aug 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39161838

RESUMO

Heart failure (HF) is an increasingly prevalent disease in humans; it induces multiple symptoms and damages health. The animal gut microbiota has critical roles in host health, which might be related to HF symptoms. Currently, several options are used to treat HF, including non-invasive ventilation (NIV). However, studies on gut microbiota responses to acute HF and associated treatments effects on gut communities in patients are scarce. Here, short-term (1 week after treatments) and long-term (3 months after treatment) variations in gut microbiota variations in rats with acute HF treated were examined NIV through high-throughput sequencing of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene. Through comparison of gut microbiota alpha diversity, it was observed lower gut microbiota richness and diversity in animals with acute HF than in normal animals. Additionally, beta-diversity analysis revealed significant alterations in the gut microbiota composition induced by acute HF, as reflected by increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes (F/B) ratios and Proteobacteria enrichment. When network analysis results were combined with the null model, decreased stability and elevated deterministic gut microbiota assemblies were observed in animals with acute HF. Importantly, in both short- and long-term periods, NIV was found to restore gut microbiota dysbiosis to normal states in acute HF rats. Finally, it was shown that considerable gut microbiota variations existed in rats with acute HF, that underlying microbiota mechanisms regulated these changes, and confirmed that NIV is suitable for HF treatment. In future studies, these findings should be validated with different model systems or clinical samples.

6.
Front Microbiol ; 15: 1424568, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39091307

RESUMO

Environmental heterogeneity partly drives microbial succession in arthropods, while the microbial assembly mechanisms during environmental changes remain largely unknown. Here, we explored the temporal dynamics and assembly mechanisms within both bacterial and fungal communities in Liriomyza huidobrensis (Blanchard) during the transition from field to laboratory conditions. We observed a decrease in bacterial diversity and complexity of bacterial-fungal co-occurrence networks in leaf miners transitioning from wild to captive environments. Both neutral and null models revealed that stochastic processes, particularly drift (contributing over 70%), play a crucial role in governing bacterial and fungal community assembly. The relative contribution of ecological processes such as dispersal, drift, and selection varied among leaf miners transitioning from wild to captive states. Furthermore, we propose a hypothetical scenario for the assembly and succession of microbial communities in the leaf miner during the short- and long-term transition from the wild to captivity. Our findings suggest that environmental heterogeneity determines the ecological processes governing bacterial and fungal community assembly in leaf miners, offering new insights into microbiome and mycobiome assembly mechanisms in invasive pests amidst environmental change.

7.
Ecol Evol ; 14(8): e70069, 2024 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39091331

RESUMO

The abandoned pond-to-mangrove restoration project provides greater advantages than tidal flats afforestation in restoring mangrove ecosystem services and will be the primary method for mangrove restoration in the future. The existing methods for abandoned pond-to-mangrove restoration include artificial restoration through 'dike-breaking, filling with imported soil and tree planting' and natural restoration through 'dike-breaking and natural succession'. However, little is known about which restoration strategy (natural or artificial restoration) provides more benefits to the biodiversity of mangrove macrobethos. Given a prevailing view suggested that artificial restoration should be the preferred approach for accelerating recovery of biodiversity and vegetation structure in tropical regions, we hypothesised higher macrobenthic biodiversity and more complex community structure in artificial restoration than in natural restoration. To test this hypothesis, macrobenthic biodiversity and ecological processes were monitored in a typical abandoned pond-to-mangrove area of Dongzhaigang Bay, China, where artificial and natural restoration methods were used concurrently. Differences in macrobenthic biodiversity, community structure and ecological processes were compared using diversity indices, complex network analysis and null models. Similar species composition and ecological niche overlap and width among macrobenthos were observed at artificial and natural restoration sites. The biotic heterogeneity and interaction among macrobenthos were higher at the natural restoration sites than at the artificial restoration sites. Macrobenthos community assembly at natural and artificial restoration sites was both determined by deterministic processes, with environmental filtering dominating, which explained 52% and 54% of the variations in macrobenthic community structures respectively. Although our findings did not validate the research hypothesis, higher biotic heterogeneity and species interaction among macrobenthos could support natural restoration as the primary method for abandoned pond-to-mangrove projects, because it is a nature-based solution for mangrove restoration.

8.
Water Res ; 262: 122109, 2024 Sep 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39096537

RESUMO

The Eastern Route of the South-to-North Water Diversion Project (ER-SNWDP) represents a crucial initiative aimed at alleviating water scarcity in China's northern region. Understanding the dynamics governing the composition and assembly processes of micro-eukaryotic communities within the canal during different water diversion periods holds paramount significance for the effective management of the ER-SNWDP. Our study systematically tracks the dynamics of the micro-eukaryotic community and its assembly processes along the 1045.4 km of canals and four impounded lakes, totaling 3455 km2, constituting the ER-SNWDP during a complete water diversion cycle, utilizing high-throughput sequencing, bioinformatics tools, and null modeling algorithms. The primary objectives of this study are to elucidate the spatial-temporal succession of micro-eukaryotic communities as the water diversion progresses, to delineate the relative importance of deterministic and stochastic processes in community assembly, and to identify the pivotal factors driving changes in micro-eukaryotic communities. Our findings indicate notable variations in the composition and diversity of micro-eukaryotic communities within the ER-SNWDP across different water diversion periods and geographic locations (P < 0.05). This variation is influenced by a confluence of temporal and environmental factors, with limited impacts from water diversion. In essence, the assembly of micro-eukaryotic communities within the ER-SNWDP primarily stemmed from heterogeneous selection driven by deterministic processes. Water diversion exhibited a tendency to decrease community beta diversity while augmenting the influence of stochastic processes in community assembly, albeit this effect attenuated over time. Furthermore, our analysis identified several pivotal environmental parameters, notably including nitrite-nitrogen, nitrate-nitrogen, orthophosphate, and water temperature, as exerting significant effects on micro-eukaryotic communities across different water diversion periods. Collectively, our study furnishes the inaugural comprehensive exploration of the dynamics, assembly processes, and influencing factors governing micro-eukaryotic communities within the ER-SNWDP, thus furnishing indispensable insights to inform the water quality management of this important project.


Assuntos
Lagos , China , Eucariotos , Abastecimento de Água
9.
Mol Ecol ; : e17506, 2024 Aug 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39161118

RESUMO

The Ornithodoros moubata (Om) soft tick, a vector for diseases like tick-borne human relapsing fever and African swine fever, poses challenges to conventional control methods. With diminishing insecticide efficacy, harnessing the tick's microbiota through innovative approaches like microbiota-driven vaccination emerges as a promising strategy for sustainable and targeted disease control. This study investigated the intricate relationship between Pseudomonas, a keystone taxon in the Om microbiome, and its impact on tick fitness, microbiome structure and network dynamics. Utilizing in silico analyses and empirical vaccination experiments, the role of Pseudomonas within microbial networks in the tick midguts (MG) and salivary glands (SG) of Om was studied. Additionally, the consequences of anti-microbiota vaccines targeting Pseudomonas and Lactobacillus on tick fitness, microbiome diversity and community assembly were explored. The result of the study shows that in Om, Pseudomonas plays a central role in microbial networks, influencing keystone species despite being categorized as peripheral (interacting with 47 different taxa, 13 of which are keystone species). Anti-microbiota vaccination targeting Pseudomonas and Lactobacillus yields distinct effects on tick fitness, with Pseudomonas vaccination significantly impacting female tick survival, while Lactobacillus significantly reduced oviposition and fertility. Microbiome changes post-vaccination reveal diversity alterations, emphasizing the impact of vaccine choice. Community assembly dynamics and network robustness analyses highlight Pseudomonas' pivotal role, in influencing topological features and network resilience. The findings of the study provide comprehensive insights into the intricate dynamics of Om microbial networks and the potential of targeted microbiota-driven vaccines for tick control.

10.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; : e0045724, 2024 Aug 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39150266

RESUMO

The cell size of phytoplankton is an important defining functional trait that can serve as a driver and sentinel of phytoplankton community structure and function. However, the study of the assembly patterns and drivers of phytoplankton metacommunities with different cell sizes has not been widely carried out. In this study, we systematically investigated the biodiversity patterns, drivers, and assembly processes of the three phytoplankton cell sizes (micro: 20-200 µm; nano: 2-20 µm; pico: 0.2-2 µm) in the Za'gya Zangbo River from the source to the estuary using 18S rDNA amplicon sequencing. The results demonstrated that the alpha diversity and co-occurrence network complexity for all three sizes of phytoplankton increased to a peak downstream of the glacier sources and then decreased to the estuary. The nanophytoplankton subcommunity consistently had the highest alpha diversity and co-occurrence network complexity. On the other hand, total beta diversity followed a unimodal trend of decreasing and then increasing from source to estuary, and was dominated by species replacement components. In addition, deterministic processes driven mainly by physiochemical indices (PCIs) and biogenic elements (BGEs) dominated the assembly of micro- and nanophytoplankton subcommunities, whereas stochastic processes driven by geographical factors (GGFs) dominated the assembly of picophytoplankton subcommunities. The results explained the contradictions in previous studies of phytoplankton community assembly processes in highland aquatic ecosystems, elucidating the different contributions of deterministic and stochastic processes, and the complexity of compositional mechanisms in shaping the assembly of micro-, nano-, and picophytoplankton in this highland glacial river. IMPORTANCE: The cell size of phytoplankton is a key life-history trait and key determinant, and phytoplankton of different cell sizes are differentially affected by ecological processes. However, the study of the assembly patterns and drivers of phytoplankton metacommunities with different cell sizes has not been widely carried out. We provide an in-depth analysis of phytoplankton community diversity across three cell sizes in the glacier-fed river, describing how the pattern of phytoplankton communities differs across cell sizes in response to geochemical gradients. The results show that the smaller phytoplankton (picophytoplankton) are relatively more influenced by dispersal-based stochastic processes, whereas larger ones (microphytoplankton and nanophytoplankton) are more structured by selection-based deterministic processes.

11.
Microbiol Spectr ; : e0105324, 2024 Aug 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39162541

RESUMO

Cordyceps militaris infects insects and forms sclerotia within the insect remains, establishing insect-microbe complexes. Here, C. militaris sclerotia samples from a single location in China over a 5-year period were subjected to high-throughput DNA sequencing, and the core microbes (which were stably enriched in the sclerotia over the 5 years) were identified. Next, seven bacterial strains were isolated from the C. militaris sclerotia, their biochemical characteristics were assessed, and they were co-cultured with C. militaris to study their effects on C. militaris metabolite production and biomass. Furthermore, the effects of NH4, NO3, and peptone media on C. militaris were compared. The results showed that Rhodococcus, Phyllobacterium, Pseudomonas, Achromobacter, Ensifer, Stenotrophomonas, Sphingobacterium, Variovorax, and Acinetobacter were the core microbes. Although co-culture of C. militaris with the seven bacterial strains isolated from the sclerotia did not directly increase the cordycepin level, they all had NO3 reduction ability, and four had urea decomposition ability. Meanwhile, C. militaris in NH4 medium had an increased cordycepin level compared to C. militaris in the other two media. From this, we inferred that bacteria in the sclerotia can convert NO3 to NH4, and then cordycepin is produced using NH4, which was confirmed by RNA-seq and real-time fluorescence quantitative PCR. Thus, bacteria in the sclerotia may indirectly affect the C. militaris metabolite production by regulating nitrogen metabolism. In summary, there are stable core microbes in the C. militaris sclerotia, and they may directly and indirectly affect the growth and metabolite production of C. militaris. IMPORTANCE: The model Cordyceps species Cordyceps militaris is rich in therapeutic compounds. It has recently been demonstrated that symbiotic microbes in sclerotia affect Cordyceps' growth, development, and secondary metabolite production. In this study, core microbes were identified based on C. militaris sclerotia samples obtained from the same site over 5 years. Additionally, bacterial strains isolated from C. militaris sclerotia were found to affect metabolite production and nitrogen utilization, based on functional tests. Moreover, based on the bacterial nitrogen metabolism capacity in the sclerotia and its influence on C. militaris metabolite production, we deduced that bacteria in the sclerotia can indirectly affect C. militaris metabolite production by regulating nitrogen metabolism. This is the first report on how bacteria in the sclerotia affect C. militaris metabolite production from the perspective of the nitrogen cycle. The results increase our understanding of microbial functions in C. militaris sclerotia.

12.
Am J Bot ; : e16382, 2024 Aug 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39148360

RESUMO

PREMISE: Intraspecific variation in flower microbiome composition can mediate pollination and reproduction, and so understanding the community assembly processes driving this variation is critical. Yet the relative importance of trait-based host filtering and dispersal in shaping among-species variation in floral microbiomes remains unknown. METHODS: Within two clades of Brassicaceae, we compared diversity and composition of floral microbiomes in natural populations of focal nickel and selenium hyperaccumulator species and two of their non-accumulating relatives. We assessed the relative strengths of floral elemental composition, plant phylogenetic distance (host filtering), and geography (dispersal) in driving floral microbiome composition. RESULTS: Species in the nickel hyperaccumulator clade had strongly divergent floral microbiomes, the most of that variation driven by floral elemental composition, followed by geographic distance between plant populations and, lastly, phylogenetic distance. Conversely, within the selenium hyperaccumulator clade, floral microbiome divergence was much lower among the species and elemental composition, geography, and plant phylogeny were far weaker determinants of microbiome variation. CONCLUSIONS: Our results show that the strength of elemental hyperaccumulation's effect on floral microbiomes differs substantially among plant clades, possibly due to variation in elements as selective filters or in long-distance dispersal probability in different habitats.

13.
Sci Total Environ ; 949: 175271, 2024 Nov 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39102958

RESUMO

Plateau lakes (e.g., freshwater and saltwater lakes) are formed through intricate processes and harbor diverse microorganisms that mediate aquatic ecosystem functions. The adaptive mechanisms of lake microbiota to environmental changes and the ecological impacts of such changes on microbial community assembly are still poorly understood in plateau regions. This study investigated the structure and assembly of planktonic bacterial communities in 24 lakes across the Qinghai-Tibetan and Inner Mongolia Plateaus, with particular focus on habitat generalists, opportunists, and specialists. High-throughput sequencing of the 16S ribosomal RNA genes revealed that bacterial generalists had a lower species number (2196) but higher alpha diversity than the specialist and opportunist counterparts. Taxonomic dissimilarity and phylogenetic diversity analyses unraveled less pronounced difference in the community composition of bacterial generalists compared to the specialist and opportunist counterparts. Geographical scale (14.4 %) and water quality (12.6 %) emerged as major ecological variables structuring bacterial communities. Selection by water temperature and related variables, including mean annual temperature, elevation, longitude, and latitude, mainly shaped the assembly of bacterial generalists. Ecological drift coupled with selection by salt ions and related variables, including total phosphorus, chlorophyll a, and salinity, predominantly drove the assembly of bacterial specialists and opportunists. This study uncovers distinct bacterial responses to interacting ecological variables in diverse plateau lakes and the ecological processes structuring bacterial communities across various lake habitats under anthropogenic disturbance or climate change.


Assuntos
Bactérias , Lagos , Microbiota , Temperatura , Lagos/microbiologia , Lagos/química , Bactérias/classificação , Bactérias/genética , Salinidade , China , RNA Ribossômico 16S , Microbiologia da Água , Filogenia
14.
ISME J ; 18(1)2024 Jan 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38984791

RESUMO

The rectal-anal junction (RAJ) is the major colonization site of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) O157 in beef cattle, leading to transmission of this foodborne pathogen from farms to food chains. To date, there is limited understanding regarding whether the mucosa-attached microbiome has a profound impact on host-STEC interactions. In this study, the active RAJ mucosa-attached microbiota and its potential role in host immunity-STEC commensal interactions were investigated using RAJ mucosal biopsies collected from calves orally challenged with two STEC O157 strains with or without functional stx2a (stx2a+ or stx2a-). The results revealed that shifts of microbial diversity, topology, and assembly patterns were subjected to stx2a production post-challenge and Paeniclostridium and Gallibacterium were the keystone taxa for both microbial interactions and assembly. Additional mucosal transcriptome profiling showed stx2a-dependent host immune responses (i.e. B- and T-cell signaling and antigen processing and presentation) post-challenge. Further integrated analysis revealed that mucosa-attached beneficial microbes (i.e. Provotella, Faecalibacterium, and Dorea) interacted with host immune genes pre-challenge to maintain host homeostasis; however, opportunistic pathogenic microbes (i.e. Paeniclostridium) could interact with host immune genes after the STEC O157 colonization and interactions were stx2a-dependent. Furthermore, predicted bacterial functions involved in pathogen (O157 and Paeniclostridium) colonization and metabolism were related to host immunity. These findings suggest that during pathogen colonization, host-microbe interactions could shift from beneficial to opportunistic pathogenic bacteria driven and be dependent on the production of particular virulence factors, highlighting the potential regulatory role of mucosa-attached microbiota in affecting pathogen-commensal host interactions in calves with STEC O157 infection.


Assuntos
Infecções por Escherichia coli , Escherichia coli O157 , Mucosa Intestinal , Reto , Animais , Escherichia coli O157/imunologia , Escherichia coli O157/genética , Reto/microbiologia , Bovinos , Infecções por Escherichia coli/microbiologia , Infecções por Escherichia coli/imunologia , Infecções por Escherichia coli/veterinária , Mucosa Intestinal/microbiologia , Mucosa Intestinal/imunologia , Doenças dos Bovinos/microbiologia , Doenças dos Bovinos/imunologia , Microbioma Gastrointestinal , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno , Interações entre Hospedeiro e Microrganismos/imunologia , Toxina Shiga II/genética , Toxina Shiga II/imunologia
15.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 17219, 2024 07 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39060371

RESUMO

Fire plays a key role in grasslands, determining the distribution and evolution of species and boundaries with neighboring ecosystems. Evidence of community-wide responses to fire is largely based on taxonomic and functional descriptors, while the phylogenetic dimension is overlooked. Here we evaluated how the taxonomic and phylogenetic structure of grassland plant communities responded to a time since fire (TSF) gradient. We sampled 12 communities in Southern Brazil under varying TSF and calculated taxonomic species richness (S) and dominance (D), phylogenetic diversity (PD), and mean phylogenetic distances (MPD). We used Structural Equation Models to test the relationships between the environmental gradient and community descriptors. Communities with longer TSF presented higher PD and MPD but lower species richness and increased taxonomic dominance. These sites were dominated by monocots, specifically C4 grasses, but also presented exclusive clades, whereas recently-burned sites presented lower taxonomic dominance and more species distributed in a wider variety of clades. Our results indicate that these scenarios are interchangeable and dependent on fire management. Fire adaptation was not constrained by phylogenetic relatedness, contrasting with previous findings for tropical savannahs and indicating that temperate and tropical non-forest ecosystems from South America respond differently to fire, possibly due to different evolutionary histories.


Assuntos
Biodiversidade , Incêndios , Pradaria , Filogenia , Brasil , Plantas/classificação , Plantas/genética , Poaceae/genética , Poaceae/classificação , Ecossistema
16.
Sci Total Environ ; 948: 174812, 2024 Oct 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39019268

RESUMO

Climate change is exacerbating drought in arid and semi-arid forest ecosystems worldwide. Soil microorganisms play a key role in supporting forest ecosystem services, yet their response to changes in aridity remains poorly understood. We present results from a study of 84 forests at four south-to-north Loess Plateau sites to assess how increases in aridity level (1- precipitation/evapotranspiration) shapes soil bacterial and fungal diversity and community stability by influencing community assembly. We showed that soil bacterial diversity underwent a significant downward trend at aridity levels >0.39, while fungal diversity decreased significantly at aridity levels >0.62. In addition, the relative abundance of Actinobacteria and Ascomycota increased with higher aridity level, while the relative abundance of Acidobacteria and Basidiomycota showed the opposite trend. Bacterial communities also exhibited higher similarity-distance decay rates across geographic and environmental gradients than did fungal communities. Phylogenetic bin-based community assembly analysis revealed homogeneous selection and dispersal limitation as the two dominant processes in bacterial and fungal assembly. Dispersal limitation of bacterial communities monotonically increased with aridity levels, whereas homogeneous selection of fungal communities monotonically decreased. Importantly, aridity also increased the sensitivity of microbial communities to environmental disturbance and potentially decreased community stability, as evidenced by greater community similarity-environmental distance decay rates, narrower habitat niche breadth, and lower microbial network stability. Our study provides new insights into soil microbial drought response, with implications on the sustainability of ecosystems under environmental stress.


Assuntos
Bactérias , Mudança Climática , Florestas , Fungos , Microbiologia do Solo , Fungos/classificação , Bactérias/classificação , Microbiota , Clima Desértico , Secas , Biodiversidade , Ecossistema , Solo/química
17.
Sci Total Environ ; 948: 174822, 2024 Oct 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39029748

RESUMO

Microorganisms play a pivotal role as catalysts in the biogeochemical cycles of aquatic ecosystems within coal mining subsidence areas. Despite their importance, the succession of microbial communities with increasing mine age, particularly across different habitats, and variations in phylogenetically-based community assembly mechanisms are not well understood. To address this knowledge gap, we collected 72 samples from lake sediments, water, and surrounding topsoil (0-20 cm) at various mining stages (early: 16 years, middle: 31 years, late: 40 years). We analyzed these samples using 16S rRNA gene sequencing and multivariate statistical methods to explore the dynamics and assembly mechanisms of bacterial communities. Our findings reveal that increases in phosphorus and organic matter in sediments, correlating with mining age, significantly enhance bacterial alpha diversity while reducing species richness (P < 0.001). Homogenizing selection (49.9 %) promotes species asynchrony-complementarity, augmenting the bacterial community's ability to metabolize sulfur, phosphorus, and organic matter, resulting in more complex-stable co-occurrence networks. In soil, elevated nitrogen and organic carbon levels markedly influence bacterial community composition (Adonis R2 = 0.761), yet do not significantly alter richness or diversity (P > 0.05). The lake's high connectivity with surrounding soil leads to substantial species drift and organic matter accumulation, thereby increasing bacterial richness in later stages (P < 0.05) and enhancing the ability to metabolize dissolved organic matter, including humic-like substances, fulvic acids, and protein-like materials. The assembly of soil bacterial communities is largely governed by stochastic processes (79.0 %) with species drift (35.8 %) significantly shaping these communities over a broad spatial scale, also affecting water bacterial communities. However, water bacterial community assembly is primarily driven by stochastic processes (51.2 %), with a substantial influence from habitat quality (47.6 %). This study offers comprehensive insights into the evolution of microbial community diversity within coal mining subsidence water areas, with significant implications for enhancing environmental management and protection strategies for these ecosystems.


Assuntos
Bactérias , Minas de Carvão , Microbiota , Bactérias/classificação , RNA Ribossômico 16S , Lagos/microbiologia , Ecossistema , Microbiologia da Água , Biodiversidade , Microbiologia do Solo , Monitoramento Ambiental , Fósforo/análise , Sedimentos Geológicos/microbiologia
18.
Synth Syst Biotechnol ; 9(4): 775-783, 2024 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39021362

RESUMO

Synthetic microbial community has widely concerned in the fields of agriculture, food and environment over the past few years. However, there is little consensus on the method to synthetic microbial community from construction to functional verification. Here, we review the concept, characteristics, history and applications of synthetic microbial community, summarizing several methods for synthetic microbial community construction, such as isolation culture, core microbiome mining, automated design, and gene editing. In addition, we also systematically summarized the design concepts, technological thresholds, and applicable scenarios of various construction methods, and highlighted their advantages and limitations. Ultimately, this review provides four efficient, detailed, easy-to-understand and -follow steps for synthetic microbial community construction, with major implications for agricultural practices, food production, and environmental governance.

19.
Environ Int ; 190: 108887, 2024 Jul 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39024826

RESUMO

Bacterial community is strongly associated with activated sludge performance, but there still remains a knowledge gap regarding the rare bacterial community assembly and their influence on the system performance in industrial wastewater treatment plants (IWWTPs). Here, we investigated bacterial communities in 11 full-scale IWWTPs with similar process designs, aiming to uncover ecological processes and functional traits regulating abundant and rare communities. Our findings indicated that abundant bacterial community assembly was governed by stochastic processes; thereby, abundant taxa are generally present in wastewater treatment compartments across different industrial types. On the contrary, rare bacterial taxa were primarily driven by deterministic processes (homogeneous selection 61.9%-79.7%), thus they only exited in specific IWWTPs compartments and wastewater types. The co-occurrence networks analysis showed that the majority of keystone taxa were rare bacterial taxa, with rare taxa contributing more to network stability. Furthermore, rare bacteria rather than abundant bacteria in the oxic compartment contributed more to the degradation of xenobiotics compounds, and they were main potential drivers of pollutant removal. This study demonstrated the irreplaceable roles of rare bacterial taxa in maintaining system performance of IWWTPs, and called for environmental engineers and microbial ecologists to increase their attention on rare biosphere.

20.
Front Microbiol ; 15: 1394463, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39040899

RESUMO

Growing evidence has suggested a strong link between gut microbiota and host fitness, yet our understanding of the assembly mechanisms governing gut microbiota remains limited. Here, we collected invasive and native freshwater snails coexisting at four independent sites in Guangdong, China. We used high-throughput sequencing to study the assembly processes of their gut microbiota. Our results revealed significant differences in the diversity and composition of gut microbiota between invasive and native snails. Specifically, the gut microbiota of invasive snails exhibited lower alpha diversity and fewer enriched bacteria, with a significant phylogenetic signal identified in the microbes that were enriched or depleted. Both the phylogenetic normalized stochasticity ratio (pNST) and the phylogenetic-bin-based null model analysis (iCAMP) showed that the assembly process of gut microbiota in invasive snails was more deterministic compared with that in native snails, primarily driven by homogeneous selection. The linear mixed-effects model revealed a significant negative correlation between deterministic processes (homogeneous selection) and alpha diversity of snail gut microbiota, especially where phylogenetic diversity explained the most variance. This indicates that homogeneous selection acts as a filter by the host for specific microbial lineages, constraining the diversity of gut microbiota in invasive freshwater snails. Overall, our study suggests that deterministic assembly-mediated lineage filtering is a potential mechanism for maintaining the diversity of gut microbiota in freshwater snails.

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