Abstract
Heme, a porphyrin ring complexed with iron, is a metalloprosthetic group of numerous proteins involved in diverse metabolic and respiratory processes across all domains of life, and is thus considered essential for respiring organisms1,2. Several microbial groups are known to lack the de novo heme biosynthetic pathway and therefore require exogenous heme from the environment3. These heme auxotroph groups are largely limited to pathogens4,5, symbionts6,7, or microorganisms living in nutrient-replete conditions8, whereas the complete absence of heme biosynthesis is extremely rare in free-living organisms9. Here, we show that the acI lineage, a predominant and ubiquitous free-living bacterial group in freshwater habitats, is auxotrophic for heme. We found that two recently cultivated acI isolates10 require exogenous heme for their growth. According to whole-genome analyses, all (n=20) isolated acI strains lacked essential enzymes necessary for heme biosynthesis, indicating that heme auxotrophy is a conserved trait in this lineage. Analyses of >24,000 representative genomes for species clusters of the Genome Taxonomy Database (GTDB) revealed that heme auxotrophy is widespread across abundant but not-yet-cultivated microbial groups, including Patescibacteria, Marinisomatota (SAR406), Actinomarinales (OM1), and marine group III Euryarchaeota. Our findings indicate that heme auxotrophy is a more common phenomenon than previously thought, and may lead to use of heme as a growth factor to increase the cultured microbial diversity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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