Virus–pathogen interactions improve water quality along the Middle Route of the South-to-North Water Diversion Canal

Author:

Chen Tianyi12,Liu Tang3,Wu Zongzhi12,Wang Bingxue12,Chen Qian24,Zhang Mi25,Liang Enhang2,Ni Jinren12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Eco-environment and Resource Efficiency Research Laboratory, School of Environment and Energy, Peking University Shenzhen Graduate School , Shenzhen 518055, PR China

2. Environmental Microbiome and Innovative Genomics Laboratory, College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Peking University , Beijing 100871, PR China

3. Environmental Microbiome Engineering and Innovative Genomics Laboratory, College of Chemistry and Environmental Engineering, Shenzhen University , Shenzhen 518060, PR China

4. State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of All Materials Fluxes in River Ecosystems, Peking University , Beijing 100871, PR China

5. State Key Laboratory of Eco-hydraulics in Northwest Arid Region of China, Xi’an University of Technology , Xi’an 710048, PR China

Abstract

Abstract Bacterial pathogens and viruses are the leading causes of global waterborne diseases. Here, we discovered an interesting natural paradigm of water “self-purification” through virus–pathogen interactions over a 1432 km continuum along the Middle Route of the South-to-North Water Diversion Canal (MR-SNWDC) in China, the largest water transfer project in the world. Due to the extremely low total phosphorus (TP) content (ND-0.02 mg/L) in the MR-SNWDC, the whole canal has experienced long-lasting phosphorus (P) limitation since its operation in 2015. Based on 4443 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) and 40,261 nonredundant viral operational taxonomic units (vOTUs) derived from our recent monitoring campaign, we found that residential viruses experiencing extreme P constraints had to adopt special adaptive strategies by harboring smaller genomes to minimize nucleotide replication, DNA repair, and posttranslational modification costs. With the decreasing P supply downstream, bacterial pathogens showed repressed environmental fitness and growth potential, and a weakened capacity to maintain P acquisition, membrane formation, and ribonucleotide biosynthesis. Consequently, the unique viral predation effects under P limitation, characterized by enhanced viral lytic infections and an increased abundance of ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) genes linked to viral nuclear DNA replication cycles, led to unexpectedly lower health risks from waterborne bacterial pathogens in the downstream water-receiving areas. These findings highlighted the great potential of water self-purification associated with virus–pathogen dynamics for water-quality improvement and sustainable water resource management.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Science and Technology Key Project

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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