Evolution of snow algae, from cosmopolitans to endemics, revealed by DNA analysis of ancient ice

Author:

Segawa Takahiro1ORCID,Yonezawa Takahiro2,Matsuzaki Ryo34,Mori Hiroshi5ORCID,Akiyoshi Ayumi6,Navarro Francisco7,Fujita Koji8,Aizen Vladimir B9,Li Zhongqin10,Mano Shuhei11,Takeuchi Nozomu12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Life Science Research, University of Yamanashi , Yamanashi, Japan

2. Department of Animal Science, Faculty of Agriculture, Tokyo University of Agriculture , Kanagawa, Japan

3. Faculty of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Tsukuba , Ibaraki, Japan

4. Biodiversity Division, National Institute for Environmental Studies , Ibaraki, Japan

5. Advanced Genomics Center, National Institute of Genetics , Shizuoka, Japan

6. National Institute of Polar Research , Tokyo, Japan

7. Departamento de Matemática Aplicada a las Tecnologías de la Información y las Comunicaciones, ETSI de Telecomunicación, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid , Madrid, Spain

8. Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Nagoya University , Aichi, Japan

9. Department of Earth and Space Science, University of Idaho , Moscow, Idaho, USA

10. Laboratory of Cryospheric Sciences, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and National Resources/Tianshan Glaciological Station, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Gansu, China

11. The Institute of Statistical Mathematics , Tokyo, Japan

12. Department of Earth Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Chiba University , Chiba, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Recent studies of microbial biogeography have revealed the global distribution of cosmopolitans and dispersal of regional endemics, but little is known about how these processes are affected by microbial evolution. Here, we compared DNA sequences from snow/glacier algae found in an 8000-year-old ice from a glacier in central Asia with those from modern snow samples collected at 34 snow samples from globally distributed sites at the poles and mid-latitudes, to determine the evolutionary relationship between cosmopolitan and endemic phylotypes of snow algae. We further applied a coalescent theory–based demographic model to the DNA sequences. We found that the genus Raphidonema (Trebouxiophyceae) was distributed over both poles and mid-latitude regions and was detected in different ice core layers, corresponding to distinct time periods. Our results indicate that the modern cosmopolitan phylotypes belonging to Raphidonema were persistently present long before the last glacial period. Furthermore, endemic phylotypes originated from ancestral cosmopolitan phylotypes, suggesting that modern regional diversity of snow algae in the cryosphere is a product of microevolution. These findings suggest that the cosmopolitans dispersed across the world and then derived new localized endemics, which thus improves our understanding of microbial community formation by microevolution in natural environments.

Funder

MEXT | Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Institute for Fermentation, Osaka

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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