Maintenance of Sympatric and Allopatric Populations in Free-Living Terrestrial Bacteria

Author:

Chase Alexander B.12ORCID,Arevalo Philip3ORCID,Brodie Eoin L.24,Polz Martin F.3ORCID,Karaoz Ulas2ORCID,Martiny Jennifer B. H.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, California, USA

2. Earth and Environmental Sciences, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California, USA

3. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

4. Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA

Abstract

Due to the promiscuous exchange of genetic material and asexual reproduction, delineating microbial species (and, by extension, populations) remains challenging. Because of this, the vast majority of microbial studies assessing population structure often compare divergent strains from disparate environments under varied selective pressures. Here, we investigated the population structure within a single bacterial ecotype, a unit equivalent to a eukaryotic species, defined as highly clustered genotypic and phenotypic strains with the same ecological niche. Using a combination of genomic and computational analyses, we assessed the phylogenetic structure, extent of recombination, and flexible gene content of this genomic diversity to infer patterns of gene flow. To our knowledge, this study is the first to do so for a dominant soil bacterium. Our results indicate that bacterial soil populations, similarly to those in other environments, are structured by gene flow discontinuities and exhibit distributional patterns consistent with both isolation by distance and isolation by environment. Thus, both dispersal limitation and local environments contribute to the divergence among closely related soil bacteria as observed in macroorganisms.

Funder

US Department of Education

US Department of Energy

US Department of Energy, Office of Biological and Environmental Research

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

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