Microbial species and intraspecies units exist and are maintained by ecological cohesiveness coupled to high homologous recombination

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Authors

Conrad, Roth E.
Brink, Catherine E.
Viver, Tomeu
Rodriguez-R, Luis M.
Aldeguer-Riquelme, Borja
Hatt, Janet K.
Venter, S.N. (Stephanus Nicolaas)
Rossello-Mora, Ramon
Amann, Rudolf I.
Konstantinidis, Konstantinos T.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Nature Research

Abstract

Recent genomic analyses have revealed that microbial communities are predominantly composed of persistent, sequence-discrete species and intraspecies units (genomovars), but themechanisms that create andmaintain these units remain unclear. By analyzing closely-related isolate genomes from the same or related samples and identifying recent recombination events using a novel bioinformaticsmethodology,we showthat high ecological cohesiveness coupled to frequent-enough and unbiased (i.e., not selection-driven) horizontal gene flow, mediated by homologous recombination, often underlie these diversity patterns. Ecological cohesiveness was inferred based on greater similarity in temporal abundance patterns of genomes of the same vs. different units, and recombination was shown to affect all sizable segments of the genome (i.e., be genome-wide) and have two times or greater impact on sequence evolution than point mutations. These results were observed in both Salinibacter ruber, an environmental halophilic organism, and Escherichia coli, themodel gut-associated organism and an opportunistic pathogen, indicating that they may be more broadly applicable to the microbial world. Therefore, our results represent a departure compared to previous models of microbial speciation that invoke either ecology or recombination, but not necessarily their synergistic effect, and answer an important question for microbiology: what a species and a subspecies are.

Description

CODE AVAILABILITY : Our main analysis workflow is available at: https://github.com/ rotheconrad/F100_Prok_Recombination. (https://doi.org/10.5281/ zenodo.13922077) and https://github.com/rotheconrad/Population- Genome-Simulator (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13922083); and for Supplementary analysis/figures, https://github.com/catbrink/ Explaining-ANI-gaps-Code-for-supplementary-figures.git.
DATA AVAILABILITY : Accession codes for the genomic sequence datasets analyzed in this study are provided in Supplementary Data 1. Other data are available in the main text or the Supplementary Information document.

Keywords

Genomes, Recombination, Diversity patterns, Microbial communities, SDG-15: Life on land

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-15:Life on land

Citation

Conrad, R.E., Brink, C.E., Viver, T. et al. 2024, 'Microbial species and intraspecies units exist and are maintained by ecological cohesiveness coupled to high homologous recombination', Nature Communications, vol. 15, art. 9906, pp. 1-12, https://DOI.org/10.1038/s41467-024-53787-0