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Hyperactive nanobacteria with host-dependent traits pervade Omnitrophota

Published in:

Nature Microbiology 8(4) , 727-744 ( 2023)

Author(s):

Seymour, Cale O., Palmer, Marike, Becraft, Eric D., Stepanauskas, Ramunas, Friel, Ariel D., Schulz, Frederik, Woyke, Tanja, Eloe-Fadrosh, Emiley, Lai, Dengxun, Jiao, Jian-Yu, Hua, Zheng-Shuang, Liu, Lan, Lian, Zheng-Han, Li, Wen-Jun, Chuvochina, Maria, Finley, Brianna K., Koch, Benjamin J., Schwartz, Egbert, Dijkstra, Paul, Moser, Duane P., Hungate, Bruce A., Hedlund, Brian P.

DOI:

10.1038/s41564-022-01319-1

Abstract:

Candidate bacterial phylum Omnitrophota has not been isolated and is poorly understood. We analysed 72 newly sequenced and 349 existing Omnitrophota genomes representing 6 classes and 276 species, along with Earth Microbiome Project data to evaluate habitat, metabolic traits and lifestyles. We applied fluorescence-activated cell sorting and differential size filtration, and showed that most Omnitrophota are ultra-small (~0.2 μm) cells that are found in water, sediments and soils. Omnitrophota genomes in 6 classes are reduced, but maintain major biosynthetic and energy conservation pathways, including acetogenesis (with or without the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway) and diverse respirations. At least 64% of Omnitrophota genomes encode gene clusters typical of bacterial symbionts, suggesting host-associated lifestyles. We repurposed quantitative stable-isotope probing data from soils dominated by andesite, basalt or granite weathering and identified 3 families with high isotope uptake consistent with obligate bacterial predators. We propose that most Omnitrophota inhabit various ecosystems as predators or parasites.

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