Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiological Sciences, North Dakota State University, Fargo, North Dakota, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Escherichia coli
is deposited into soil with feces and exhibits subsequent population decline with concomitant environmental selection. Environmentally persistent strains exhibit longer survival times during this selection process, and some strains have adapted to soil and sediments. A georeferenced collection of
E. coli
isolates was developed comprising 3,329 isolates from 1,428 soil samples that were collected from a landscape spanning the transition from the grasslands to the eastern deciduous forest biomes. The isolate collection and sample database were analyzed together to discover how land cover, site characteristics, and soil chemistry influence the prevalence of cultivable
E. coli
in surface soil. Soils from forests and pasture lands had equally high prevalences of
E. coli
. Edge interactions were also observed among land cover types, with proximity to forests and pastures affecting the likelihood of
E. coli
isolation from surrounding soils.
E. coli
is thought to be more prevalent in sediments with high moisture, but this was observed only in grass- or crop-dominated lands in this study. Because differing
E. coli
phylogroups are thought to have differing ecology profiles, isolates were also typed using a novel single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping assay. Phylogroup B1 was the dominant group isolated from soil, as has been reported in all other surveys of environmental
E. coli
. Although differences were small, isolates belonging to phylogroups B2 and D were associated with wooded areas, slightly more acidic soils, and soil sampling after rainfall events. In contrast, isolates from phylogroups B1 and E were associated with pasture lands.
IMPORTANCE
The consensus is that complex niches or life cycles should select for complex genomes in organisms. There is much unexplained biodiversity in
E. coli
, and its cycling through complex extrahost environments may be a cause. In order to understand the evolutionary processes that lead to adaptation for survival and growth in soil, an isolate collection that associates soil conditions and isolate genome sequences is required. An equally important question is whether traits selected in soil or other extrahost habitats can be transmitted to
E. coli
residing in hosts via gene flow. The new findings about the distribution of
E. coli
in soil at the landscape scale (i) enhance our capability to study how extrahost environments influence the evolution of
E. coli
and other bacteria, (ii) advance our knowledge of the environmental biology of this microbe, and (iii) further affirm the emerging scientific consensus that
E. coli
in waterways originates from nonpoint sources not associated with human activity or livestock farming.
Funder
Hatch Act Federal Formula Funds
National Science Foundation
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology