Single-Cell-Genomics-Facilitated Read Binning of Candidate Phylum EM19 Genomes from Geothermal Spring Metagenomes

Author:

Becraft Eric D.12,Dodsworth Jeremy A.34,Murugapiran Senthil K.3,Ohlsson J. Ingemar1,Briggs Brandon R.5,Kanbar Jad6,De Vlaminck Iwijn6,Quake Stephen R.6,Dong Hailiang57,Hedlund Brian P.38,Swingley Wesley D.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois, USA

2. Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, East Boothbay, Maine, USA

3. School of Life Sciences, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA

4. Department of Biology, California State University, San Bernardino, California, USA

5. Department of Geology and Environmental Earth Science, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, USA

6. Departments of Bioengineering and Applied Physics, Stanford University and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Stanford, California, USA

7. State Key Laboratory of Biogeology and Environmental Geology, China University of Geosciences, Beijing, China

8. Nevada Institute of Personalized Medicine, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT The vast majority of microbial life remains uncatalogued due to the inability to cultivate these organisms in the laboratory. This “microbial dark matter” represents a substantial portion of the tree of life and of the populations that contribute to chemical cycling in many ecosystems. In this work, we leveraged an existing single-cell genomic data set representing the candidate bacterial phylum “ Calescamantes ” (EM19) to calibrate machine learning algorithms and define metagenomic bins directly from pyrosequencing reads derived from Great Boiling Spring in the U.S. Great Basin. Compared to other assembly-based methods, taxonomic binning with a read-based machine learning approach yielded final assemblies with the highest predicted genome completeness of any method tested. Read-first binning subsequently was used to extract Calescamantes bins from all metagenomes with abundant Calescamantes populations, including metagenomes from Octopus Spring and Bison Pool in Yellowstone National Park and Gongxiaoshe Spring in Yunnan Province, China. Metabolic reconstruction suggests that Calescamantes are heterotrophic, facultative anaerobes, which can utilize oxidized nitrogen sources as terminal electron acceptors for respiration in the absence of oxygen and use proteins as their primary carbon source. Despite their phylogenetic divergence, the geographically separate Calescamantes populations were highly similar in their predicted metabolic capabilities and core gene content, respiring O 2 , or oxidized nitrogen species for energy conservation in distant but chemically similar hot springs.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

U.S. Department of Energy

Iran National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

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2. Novosphingobium mangrovi sp. nov., isolated from mangrove sediment;International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology;2023-05-19

3. Functional characterization of prokaryotic dark matter: the road so far and what lies ahead;Current Research in Microbial Sciences;2022

4. A network approach to elucidate and prioritize microbial dark matter in microbial communities;The ISME Journal;2020-09-22

5. Microbial single-cell omics: the crux of the matter;Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology;2020-08-26

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