A global atlas of soil viruses reveals unexplored biodiversity and potential biogeochemical impacts
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Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Nature Research
Abstract
Historically neglected by microbial ecologists, soil viruses are now thought to be critical to global biogeochemical cycles. However, our understanding of their global distribution, activities and interactions with the soil microbiome remains limited. Here we present the Global Soil Virus Atlas, a comprehensive dataset compiled from 2,953 previously sequenced soil metagenomes and composed of 616,935 uncultivated viral genomes and 38,508 unique viral operational taxonomic units. Rarefaction curves from the Global Soil Virus Atlas indicate that most soil viral diversity remains unexplored, further underscored by high spatial turnover and low rates of shared viral operational taxonomic units across samples. By examining genes associated with biogeochemical functions, we also demonstrate the viral potential to impact soil carbon and nutrient cycling. This study represents an extensive characterization of soil viral diversity and provides a foundation for developing testable hypotheses regarding the role of the virosphere in the soil microbiome and global biogeochemistry.
Description
DATA AVAILABILITY : The GSV Atlas is available for download at https://doi.org/10.25584/2229733 (ref. 83). It includes all UViGs regardless of quality (File 1, 616,935 UViGs), data associated with each contig that passed QA/QC (File 2, 49,649 contigs), predicted viral protein sequences (File 3, 402,882 predicted protein sequences), data associated with each gene (File 4, 1,432,147 genes), geographic and physico-chemical data of the curated soil samples (File 5, 2,953 samples) and a readme file (File 6).
Keywords
Biogeography, Soil microbiology, Biogeochemistry, Microbial ecology
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-15: Life on land
Citation
Graham, E.B., Camargo, A.P., Wu, R. et al. 2024, 'A global atlas of soil viruses reveals unexplored biodiversity and potential biogeochemical impacts', Nature Microbiology, vol. 9, pp. 1873-1883. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-024-01686-x.