Microdiverse bacterial clades prevail across Antarctic wetlands
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Date
Authors
Quiroga, María V.
Stegen, James C.
Mataloni, Gabriela
Cowan, Don A.
Lebre, Pedro Humberto
Valverde, Angel
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Abstract
Antarctica's extreme environmental conditions impose selection pressures on microbial communities. Indeed, a previous study revealed that bacterial assemblages at the Cierva Point Wetland Complex (CPWC) are shaped by strong homogeneous selection. Yet which bacterial phylogenetic clades are shaped by selection processes and their ecological strategies to thrive in such extreme conditions remain unknown. Here, we applied the phyloscore and feature-level βNTI indexes coupled with phylofactorization to successfully detect bacterial monophyletic clades subjected to homogeneous (HoS) and heterogenous (HeS) selection. Remarkably, only the HoS clades showed high relative abundance across all samples and signs of putative microdiversity. The majority of the amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) within each HoS clade clustered into a unique 97% sequence similarity operational taxonomic unit (OTU) and inhabited a specific environment (lotic, lentic or terrestrial). Our findings suggest the existence of microdiversification leading to sub-taxa niche differentiation, with putative distinct ecotypes (consisting of groups of ASVs) adapted to a specific environment. We hypothesize that HoS clades thriving in the CPWC have phylogenetically conserved traits that accelerate their rate of evolution, enabling them to adapt to strong spatio-temporally variable selection pressures. Variable selection appears to operate within clades to cause very rapid microdiversification without losing key traits that lead to high abundance. Variable and homogeneous selection, therefore, operate simultaneously but on different aspects of organismal ecology. The result is an overall signal of homogeneous selection due to rapid within-clade microdiversification caused by variable selection. It is unknown whether other systems experience this dynamic, and we encourage future work evaluating the transferability of our results.
Description
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : The sequence data are publicly available at NCBI BioProject database (ID PRJNA719989, 64 sequence data links, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/PRJNA719989). R code for nearest taxon distance (NTD) and nucleotide similarity of β-nearest ASV indexes, and the modified version of feature-level βNTI index are available at GitHub (https://github.com/mvquiroga/NullModels).
Keywords
Antarctica, Homogeneous selection, Microdiversity, Null models, Amplicon sequence variants (ASVs), Homogeneous (HoS), Heterogenous (HeS), Operational taxonomic unit (OTU), Cierva Point Wetland Complex (CPWC), SDG-15: Life on land
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-15:Life on land
Citation
Quiroga, M.V., Stegen, J.C., Mataloni, G., Cowan, D., Lebre, P.H., & Valverde, A. (2024). Microdiversebacterial clades prevail across Antarctic wetlands. Molecular Ecology, 33, e17189. https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.17189.