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1.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 100(3)2024 Feb 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38337180

RESUMEN

Alpha-diversity indices are an essential tool for describing and comparing biodiversity. Microbial ecologists apply indices originally intended for, or adopted by, macroecology to address questions relating to taxonomy (conserved marker) and function (metagenome-based data). In this Perspective piece, I begin by discussing the nature and mathematical quirks important for interpreting routinely employed alpha-diversity indices. Secondly, I propose a metagenomic alpha-diversity index (MD) that measures the (dis)similarity of protein-encoding genes within a community. MD has defined limits, whereby a community comprised mostly of similar, poorly diverse protein-encoding genes pulls the index to the lower limit, while a community rich in divergent homologs and unique genes drives it toward the upper limit. With data acquired from an in silico and three in situ metagenome studies, I derive MD and typical alpha-diversity indices applied to taxonomic (ribosomal rRNA) and functional (all protein-encoding) genes, and discuss their relationships with each other. Not all alpha-diversity indices detect biological trends, and taxonomic does not necessarily follow functional biodiversity. Throughout, I explain that protein Richness and MD provide complementary and easily interpreted information, while probability-based indices do not. Finally, considerations regarding the unique nature of microbial metagenomic data and its relevance for describing functional biodiversity are discussed.


Asunto(s)
Biodiversidad , Metagenoma , ARN Ribosómico , Ecosistema
2.
Appl Microbiol Biotechnol ; 107(21): 6717-6730, 2023 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37672072

RESUMEN

Ammonia (NH3) inhibition represents a major limitation to methane production during anaerobic digestion of organic material in biogas reactors. This process relies on co-operative metabolic interactions between diverse taxa at the community-scale. Despite this, most investigations have focused singularly on how methanogenic Archaea respond to NH3 stress. With a high-NH3 pre-adapted and un-adapted community, this study investigated responses to NH3 inhibition both at the community-scale and down to individual taxa. The pre-adapted community performed methanogenesis under inhibitory NH3 concentrations better than the un-adapted. While many functionally important phyla were shared between the two communities, only taxa from the pre-adapted community were robust to NH3. Functionally important phyla were mostly comprised of sensitive taxa (≥ 50%), yet all groups, including methanogens, also possessed tolerant individuals (10-50%) suggesting that potential mechanisms for tolerance are non-specific and widespread. Hidden Markov Model-based phylogenetic analysis of methanogens confirmed that NH3 tolerance was not restricted to specific taxonomic groups, even at the genus level. By reconstructing covarying growth patterns via network analyses, methanogenesis by the pre-adapted community was best explained by continued metabolic interactions (edges) between tolerant methanogens and other tolerant taxa (nodes). However, under non-inhibitory conditions, sensitive taxa re-emerged to dominate the pre-adapted community, suggesting that mechanisms of NH3 tolerance can be disadvantageous to fitness without selection pressure. This study demonstrates that methanogenesis under NH3 inhibition depends on broad-scale tolerance throughout the prokaryotic community. Mechanisms for tolerance seem widespread and non-specific, which has practical significance for the development of robust methanogenic biogas communities. KEY POINTS: • Ammonia pre-adaptation allows for better methanogenesis under inhibitory conditions. • All functionally important prokaryote phyla have some ammonia tolerant individuals. • Methanogenesis was likely dependent on interactions between tolerant individuals.

3.
Astrobiology ; 22(10): 1222-1238, 2022 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36084088

RESUMEN

Water is necessary for all life on Earth. Water is so critical that organisms have developed strategies to survive in hyperarid environments. These regions with extremely low water availability are also unique analogs in which to study the physico-chemical conditions of extraterrestrial environments such as Mars. We have identified a daily, sustainable cycle of water vapor adsorption (WVA) and desorption that measurably affects soil water content (SWC) in the hyperarid region of the Atacama Desert in southern Perú. We pair field-based soil temperature and relative humidity soil profiles with laboratory simulations to provide evidence for a daily WVA cycle. Using our WVA model, we estimate that one adsorptive period-one night-increases SWC by 0.2-0.3 mg/g of soil (∼30 µm rainfall). We can plausibly rule out other water inputs during our field campaign that could account for this water input, and we provide evidence that this WVA cycle is driven by solar heating and maintained by atmospheric water vapor. The WVA may also serve to retain water from infrequent rain events in these soils. If the water provided by WVA in these soils is bioavailable, it could have significant implications for the microorganisms that are endemic to hyperarid environments.


Asunto(s)
Clima Desértico , Suelo , Adsorción , Microbiología del Suelo , Vapor
4.
FEMS Microbiol Lett ; 369(1)2022 09 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35998308

RESUMEN

Despite adoption of high-throughput sequencing of PCR-amplified microbial taxonomic markers for ecological analyses, distinct approaches for preparing amplicon libraries exist. One approach utilises long fusion primers and a single PCR (one-step) while another utilises shorter primers in a first reaction, before transferring diluted amplicons to a second reaction for barcode index incorporation (two-step). We investigated whether transferring diluted amplicons risked creating artificially simplified, poorly diverse communities. In soils from three sites with paired cropland and forest, one-step yielded higher alpha-diversity indices, including detection of two-four times more unique taxa. Modelling expected taxa per sequence observation predicted that one-step reaches full coverage by 104 sequences per sample while two-step needs 105-109. Comparisons of rank abundance demonstrated that two-step covered only 38%-69% of distributions. Beta-diversity showed better separation of communities in response to land use change under one-step, although both approaches showed a significant effect. Driving differences was underestimation of relatively minor taxa with the two-step procedure. These taxa were low in abundance, yet play important roles in carbon cycling, secondary metabolite production, anaerobic metabolism, and bacterial predation. We conclude that one-step amplicon libraries are advisable for studies focussed on diversity or relatively minor yet functionally important taxa.


Asunto(s)
Microbiología del Suelo , Suelo , Cartilla de ADN , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa/métodos , ARN Ribosómico 16S/genética
5.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 97(10)2021 10 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34555173

RESUMEN

Crop harvest followed by a fallow period can act as a disturbance on soil microbial communities. Cropping systems intended to improve alpha-diversity of communities may also confer increased compositional stability during succeeding growing seasons. Over a single growing season in a long-term (18 year) agricultural field experiment incorporating conventional (CON), conservation (CA), organic (ORG) and integrated (INT) cropping systems, temporal changes in prokaryote, fungal and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) communities were investigated overwinter, during crop growth and at harvest. While certain prokaryote phyla were influenced by cropping system (e.g. Acidobacteria), the community as a whole was primarily driven by temporal changes over the growing season as distinct overwinter and crop-associated communities, with the same trend observed regardless of cropping system. Species-rich prokaryote communities were most stable over the growing season. Cropping system exerted a greater effect on fungal communities, with alpha-diversity highest and temporal changes most stable under CA. CON was particularly detrimental for alpha-diversity in AMF communities, with AMF alpha-diversity and stability improved under all other cropping systems. Practices that promoted alpha-diversity tended to also increase the similarity and temporal stability of soil fungal (and AMF) communities during a growing season, while prokaryote communities were largely insensitive to management.


Asunto(s)
Micorrizas , Suelo , Agricultura , Raíces de Plantas , Estaciones del Año , Microbiología del Suelo
6.
Sci Total Environ ; 798: 149239, 2021 Dec 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34325138

RESUMEN

Air carries a diverse load of particulate microscopic biological matter in suspension, either aerosolized or aggregated with dust particles, the aerobiome, which is dispersed by winds from sources to sinks. The aerobiome is known to contain microbes, including pathogens, as well as debris or small-sized propagules from plants and animals, but its variability and composition has not been studied comprehensibly. To gain a dynamic insight into the aerobiome existing over a mixed-use dryland setting, we conducted a biologically comprehensive, year-long survey of its composition and dynamics for particles less than 10 µm in diameter based on quantitative analyses of DNA content coupled to genomic sequencing. Airborne biological loads were more dependent on seasonal events than on meteorological conditions and only weakly correlated with dust loads. Core aerobiome species could be understood as a mixture of high elevation (e.g. Microbacteriaceae, Micrococcaceae, Deinococci), and local plant and soil sources (e.g. Sphingomonas, Streptomyces, Acinetobacter). Despite the mixed used of the land surrounding the sampling site, taxa that contributed to high load events were largely traceable to proximal agricultural practices like cotton and livestock farming. This included not only the predominance of specific crop plant signals over those of native vegetation, but also that of their pathogens (bacterial, viral and eukaryotic). Faecal bacterial loads were also seasonally important, possibly sourced in intensive animal husbandry or manure fertilization activity, and this microbial load was enriched in tetracycline resistance genes. The presence of the native opportunistic pathogen, Coccidioides spp., by contrast, was detected only with highly sensitive techniques, and only rarely. We conclude that agricultural activity exerts a much stronger influence that the native vegetation as a mass loss factor to the land system and as an input to dryland aerobiomes, including in the dispersal of plant, animal and human pathogens and their genetic resistance characteristics.


Asunto(s)
Agricultura , Suelo , Animales , Humanos , Estiércol , Plantas , Estaciones del Año
7.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 97(5)2021 05 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33960387

RESUMEN

Functional, physiological traits are the underlying drivers of niche differentiation. A common framework related to niches occupied by terrestrial prokaryotes is based on copiotrophy or oligotrophy, where resource investment is primarily in either rapid growth or stress tolerance, respectively. A quantitative trait-based approach sought relationships between taxa, traits and niche in terrestrial prokaryotes. With 175 taxa from 11 Phyla and 35 Families (n = 5 per Family), traits were considered as discrete counts of shared genome-encoded proteins. Trait composition strongly supported non-random functional distributions as preferential clustering of related taxa via unweighted pair-group method with arithmetic mean. Trait similarity between taxa increased as taxonomic rank decreased. A suite of Random Forest models identified traits significantly enriched or depleted in taxonomic groups. These traits conveyed functions related to rapid growth, nutrient acquisition and stress tolerance consistent with their presence in copiotroph-oligotroph niches. Hierarchical clustering of traits identified a clade of competitive, copiotrophic Families resilient to oxidative stress versus glycosyltransferase-enriched oligotrophic Families resistant to antimicrobials and environmental stress. However, the formation of five clades suggested a more nuanced view to describe niche differentiation in terrestrial systems is necessary. We suggest considering traits involved in both resource investment and acquisition when predicting niche.


Asunto(s)
Ecosistema , Humanos , Fenotipo
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