Ecological and Genomic Attributes of Novel Bacterial Taxa That Thrive in Subsurface Soil Horizons

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Issue Date
2019-10-01Author
Brewer, Tess E.
Aronson, Emma L.
Arogyaswamy, Keshav
Billings, Sharon A.
Botthoff, Jon K.
Campbell, Ashley N.
Dove, Nicholas C.
Fairbanks, Dawson
Gallery, Rachel E.
Hart, Stephen C.
Kaye, Jason
King, Gary
Logan, Geoffrey
Lohse, Kathleen A.
Maltz, Mia R.
Mayorga, Emilio
O’Neill, Caitlin
Owens, Sarah M.
Packman, Aaron
Pett-Ridge, Jennifer
Plante, Alain F.
Richter, Daniel D.
Silver, Whendee L.
Yang, Wendy H.
Fierer, Noah
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Rights
This is a work of the U.S. Government and is not subject to copyright protection in the United States. Foreign copyrights may apply.
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Show full item recordAbstract
While most bacterial and archaeal taxa living in surface soils remain undescribed, this problem is exacerbated in deeper soils, owing to the unique oligotrophic conditions found in the subsurface. Additionally, previous studies of soil microbiomes have focused almost exclusively on surface soils, even though the microbes living in deeper soils also play critical roles in a wide range of biogeochemical processes. We examined soils collected from 20 distinct profiles across the United States to characterize the bacterial and archaeal communities that live in subsurface soils and to determine whether there are consistent changes in soil microbial communities with depth across a wide range of soil and environmental conditions. We found that bacterial and archaeal diversity generally decreased with depth, as did the degree of similarity of microbial communities to those found in surface horizons. We observed five phyla that consistently increased in relative abundance with depth across our soil profiles: Chloroflexi, Nitrospirae, Euryarchaeota, and candidate phyla GAL15 and Dormibacteraeota (formerly AD3). Leveraging the unusually high abundance of Dormibacteraeota at depth, we assembled genomes representative of this candidate phylum and identified traits that are likely to be beneficial in low-nutrient environments, including the synthesis and storage of carbohydrates, the potential to use carbon monoxide (CO) as a supplemental energy source, and the ability to form spores. Together these attributes likely allow members of the candidate phylum Dormibacteraeota to flourish in deeper soils and provide insight into the survival and growth strategies employed by the microbes that thrive in oligotrophic soil environments.
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Citation
Brewer TE, Aronson EL, Arogyaswamy K, Billings SA, Botthoff JK, Campbell AN, Dove NC, Fairbanks D, Gallery RE, Hart SC, Kaye J, King G, Logan G, Lohse KA, Maltz MR, Mayorga E, O’Neill C, Owens SM, Packman A, Pett-Ridge J, Plante AF, Richter DD, Silver WL, Yang WH, Fierer N. 2019. Ecological and genomic attributes of novel bacterial taxa that thrive in subsurface soil horizons. mBio 10:e01318-19. https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01318-19.
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