病毒生态位划分:北极淡水咸水湖高海拔环境梯度巨型病毒的比较基因组学。

IF 5.1 Q1 ECOLOGY
ISME communications Pub Date : 2024-12-08 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/ismeco/ycae155
Thomas M Pitot, Catherine Girard, Josephine Z Rapp, Vincent Somerville, Alexander I Culley, Warwick F Vincent, Sylvain Moineau, Simon Roux
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引用次数: 0

摘要

巨型病毒;核病毒(Nucleocytoviricota)影响着广泛的真核生物宿主的生物学和生态学,对全球生物地球化学循环具有重要意义。本文研究了加拿大努纳武特省埃尔斯米尔岛北岸高度分层的A湖GV生态位分离情况。该湖由一层被冰覆盖的淡水组成,覆盖在来自古北冰洋的盐水之上,因此它提供了广泛的环境条件和生态栖息地梯度,每个都有独特的原生生物群落和丰富的相关生物组合。上层(混合型)具有可测量的光和氧,并含有与光合原生生物相关的多种gv,表明对地表生物和非生物条件的适应。相比之下,缺乏氧气和光线的低盐水层(单聚氨氮)承载了与预测的异养原生生物相关的gv,其中一些以掠食性生活方式而为人所知,还有一些病毒基因表明适应深水厌氧条件。我们的观察结果强调了A湖中物理和化学梯度、微真核生物及其相关gv之间的耦合,并为gv直接或间接影响宿主代谢的潜力提供了见解。gv的遗传组成与其潜在寄主的代谢过程具有相似性,表明它们在湖泊生境内共同进化和生态位适应。值得注意的是,我们在较深的水层中发现了更多的病毒视紫红质,这表明它们与潜在宿主之间存在进化关系,这些宿主能够补充它们的能量需求,从而在低能量、缺氧的条件下茁壮成长。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Viral niche-partitioning: comparative genomics of giant viruses across environmental gradients in a high Arctic freshwater-saltwater lake.

Giant viruses (GVs; Nucleocytoviricota) impact the biology and ecology of a wide range of eukaryotic hosts, with implications for global biogeochemical cycles. Here, we investigated GV niche separation in highly stratified Lake A at the northern coast of Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada. This lake is composed of a layer of ice-covered freshwater that overlies saltwater derived from the ancient Arctic Ocean, and it therefore provides a broad gradient of environmental conditions and ecological habitats, each with a distinct protist community and rich assemblages of associated GVs. The upper layer (mixolimnion) had measurable light and oxygen, and contained diverse GVs linked to photosynthetic protists, indicating adaptation to surface biotic and abiotic conditions. In contrast, the saline lower layer (monimolimnion), lacking oxygen and light, hosted GVs associated with predicted heterotrophic protists, some of which are known for a predatory lifestyle, and with several viral genes suggesting adaptation to deep-water anaerobic conditions. Our observations underscore the coupling between physical and chemical gradients, microeukaryotes and their associated GVs in Lake A, and provide insight into the potential for GVs to directly and indirectly impact host metabolism. There were similarities between the genetic composition of GVs and the metabolic processes of their potential hosts, implying co-evolution and niche-adaptation within the lake habitats. Notably, we found a greater presence of viral rhodopsins in deeper water layers, suggesting an evolutionary relationship with potential hosts capable of supplementing their energetic needs to thrive in low energy, anoxic conditions.

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