Much remains unknown about what drives microbial community structure and diversity. Highly structured environments might offer clues. For example, it may be possible to identify metabolically similar species as groups of organisms that correlate spatially with the geochemical processes they carry out. Here, we use a 16S ribosomal RNA gene survey in a lake that has chemical gradients across its depth to identify groups of spatially correlated but phylogenetically diverse organisms. Some groups had distributions across depth that aligned with the distributions of metabolic processes predicted by a biogeochemical model, suggesting that these groups performed biogeochemical functions. A single-cell genetic assay showed, however, that the groups associated with one biogeochemical process, sulfate reduction, contained only a few organisms that have the genes required to reduce sulfate. These results raise the possibility that some of these spatially correlated groups are consortia of phylogenetically diverse and metabolically different microbes that cooperate to carry out geochemical functions.
Surveys, simulation and single-cell assays relate function and phylogeny in a lake ecosystem
S. Preheim,S. Olesen,Sarah J. Spencer,Arne C. Materna,C. Varadharajan,M. Blackburn,Jonathan Friedman,Jorge Rodríguez,H. Hemond,E. Alm
Published 2016 in Nature Microbiology
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- Publication year
2016
- Venue
Nature Microbiology
- Publication date
2016-08-15
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
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Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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