Phage-centric ecological interactions in aquatic ecosystems revealed through ultra-deep metagenomics

Author:

Kavagutti Vinicius S.,Andrei Adrian-Ştefan,Mehrshad Maliheh,Salcher Michaela M.,Ghai RohitORCID

Abstract

Abstract The persistent inertia in the ability to culture environmentally abundant microbes from aquatic ecosystems represents an obstacle in disentangling the complex web of ecological interactions spun by a diverse assortment of participants (pro- and eukaryotes and their viruses). In aquatic microbial communities, the numerically most abundant actors, the viruses, remain the most elusive, and especially in freshwaters their identities and ecology remain unknown. Here, using ultra-deep metagenomic sequencing from pelagic freshwater habitats, we recovered complete genomes of > 2000 phages, including small “miniphages” and large “megaphages” infecting iconic freshwater prokaryotic lineages. For instance, abundant freshwater Actinobacteria support infection by a very broad size range of phages (13–200 Kb). We describe many phages encoding genes that likely afford protection to their host from reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the aquatic environment and in the oxidative burst in protist phagolysosomes (phage-mediated ROS defense). Spatiotemporal abundance analyses of phage genomes revealed evanescence as the primary dynamic in upper water layers, where they displayed short-lived existences. In contrast, persistence was characteristic for the deeper layers where many identical phage genomes were recovered repeatedly. Phage and host abundances corresponded closely, with distinct populations displaying preferential distributions in different seasons and depths, closely mimicking overall stratification and mixis.

Funder

Grantová Agentura České Republiky

The Grant Agency of the Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia

Akademie Věd České Republiky

ERDF/ESF

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Microbiology (medical),Microbiology

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