Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Genome-Resolved Metagenomics Extends the Environmental Distribution of the Verrucomicrobia Phylum to the Deep Terrestrial Subsurface

2019; American Society for Microbiology; Volume: 4; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1128/msphere.00613-19

ISSN

2379-5042

Autores

Sophie L. Nixon, Rebecca A. Daly, Mikayla Borton, Lindsey Solden, Susan A. Welch, David R. Cole, Paula Mouser, Michael J. Wilkins, Kelly Wrighton,

Tópico(s)

Protist diversity and phylogeny

Resumo

The Verrucomicrobia phylum of bacteria is widespread in many different ecosystems; however, its role in microbial communities remains poorly understood. Verrucomicrobia are often low-abundance community members, yet previous research suggests they play a major role in organic carbon degradation. While Verrucomicrobia remain poorly represented in culture collections, numerous genomes have been reconstructed from metagenomic data sets in recent years. The study of genomes from across the phylum allows for an extensive assessment of their potential ecosystem roles. The significance of this work is (i) the recovery of a novel genus of Verrucomicrobia from 2.3 km in the subsurface with the ability to withstand the extreme conditions that characterize this environment, and (ii) the most extensive assessment of ecophysiological traits encoded by Verrucomicrobia genomes to date. We show that members of this phylum are specialist organic polymer degraders that can withstand a wider range of environmental conditions than previously thought.

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