Ecological relevance of flagellar motility in soil bacterial communities

Author:

Ramoneda Josep12,Fan Kunkun3,Lucas Jane M4,Chu Haiyan35,Bissett Andrew6,Strickland Michael S7,Fierer Noah18

Affiliation:

1. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES), University of Colorado , 80309 Boulder, CO , United States

2. Spanish Research Council (CSIC), Center for Advanced Studies of Blanes (CEAB) , 17300 Blanes , Spain

3. Laboratory of Soil and Sustainable Agriculture, Institute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences , 210008 Nanjing , China

4. Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies , 12545 Millbrook, NY , United States

5. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences , 101408 Beijing , China

6. CSIRO , 7000 Hobart, Tasmania , Australia

7. Department of Soil and Water Systems, University of Idaho , 83843 Moscow, ID , United States

8. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado , 80309 Boulder, CO , United States

Abstract

Abstract Flagellar motility is a key bacterial trait as it allows bacteria to navigate their immediate surroundings. Not all bacteria are capable of flagellar motility, and the distribution of this trait, its ecological associations, and the life history strategies of flagellated taxa remain poorly characterized. We developed and validated a genome-based approach to infer the potential for flagellar motility across 12 bacterial phyla (26 192 unique genomes). The capacity for flagellar motility was associated with a higher prevalence of genes for carbohydrate metabolism and higher maximum potential growth rates, suggesting that flagellar motility is more prevalent in environments with higher carbon availability. To test this hypothesis, we applied a method to infer the prevalence of flagellar motility in whole bacterial communities from metagenomic data and quantified the prevalence of flagellar motility across four independent field studies that each captured putative gradients in soil carbon availability (148 metagenomes). We observed a positive relationship between the prevalence of bacterial flagellar motility and soil carbon availability in all datasets. Since soil carbon availability is often correlated with other factors that could influence the prevalence of flagellar motility, we validated these observations using metagenomic data from a soil incubation experiment where carbon availability was directly manipulated with glucose amendments. This confirmed that the prevalence of bacterial flagellar motility is consistently associated with soil carbon availability over other potential confounding factors. This work highlights the value of combining predictive genomic and metagenomic approaches to expand our understanding of microbial phenotypic traits and reveal their general environmental associations.

Funder

Swiss National Science Foundation

US National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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