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Prevalent genome streamlining and latitudinal divergence of planktonic bacteria in the surface ocean
Edited by W. Ford Doolittle, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada, and approved May 28, 2013 (received for review March 7, 2013)

Abstract
Planktonic bacteria dominate surface ocean biomass and influence global biogeochemical processes, but remain poorly characterized owing to difficulties in cultivation. Using large-scale single cell genomics, we obtained insight into the genome content and biogeography of many bacterial lineages inhabiting the surface ocean. We found that, compared with existing cultures, natural bacterioplankton have smaller genomes, fewer gene duplications, and are depleted in guanine and cytosine, noncoding nucleotides, and genes encoding transcription, signal transduction, and noncytoplasmic proteins. These findings provide strong evidence that genome streamlining and oligotrophy are prevalent features among diverse, free-living bacterioplankton, whereas existing laboratory cultures consist primarily of copiotrophs. The apparent ubiquity of metabolic specialization and mixotrophy, as predicted from single cell genomes, also may contribute to the difficulty in bacterioplankton cultivation. Using metagenome fragment recruitment against single cell genomes, we show that the global distribution of surface ocean bacterioplankton correlates with temperature and latitude and is not limited by dispersal at the time scales required for nucleotide substitution to exceed the current operational definition of bacterial species. Single cell genomes with highly similar small subunit rRNA gene sequences exhibited significant genomic and biogeographic variability, highlighting challenges in the interpretation of individual gene surveys and metagenome assemblies in environmental microbiology. Our study demonstrates the utility of single cell genomics for gaining an improved understanding of the composition and dynamics of natural microbial assemblages.
- comparative genomics
- marine microbiology
- microbial ecology
- microbial microevolution
- operational taxonomic unit
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: rstepanauskas{at}bigelow.org.
Author contributions: B.K.S., B.T., A.S., and R.S. designed research; B.K.S., B.T., A.S., F.M.L., M.M.-G., J.M.G., H.L., J.J.W., Z.C.L., N.W.H., B.P.T., N.J.P., S.G.A., T.W., and R.S. performed research; B.K.S., B.T., A.S., T.W., and R.S. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; B.K.S., B.T., A.S., F.M.L., M.M.-G., J.M.G., H.L., J.J.W., Z.C.L., N.W.H., P.S., S.G.A., S.J.G., M.A.M., S.J.H., R.C., T.W., and R.S. analyzed data; and B.K.S. and R.S. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
Data deposition: Whole-genome sequence data for single amplified genomes used for our analyses are available in the Joint Genome Institute's Integrated Microbial Genome database, http://img.jgi.doe.gov/cgi-bin/w/main.cgi (accession nos. 643886079, 643886118, 2228664025-26, 2228664028-29, 2228664032, 2228664034, 2228664052-53, 2228664055-56, 2236347001, 2236347003, 2236347013, 2236347015, 2236347017-19, 2236347021-24, 2236347026-27, 2236347030-33, 2236347035-36, 2236347039, 2236347041, 2236347043, 2236661010, 2236661014, 2236661017-18, 2507262045, 2507262047, and 2517572139).
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1304246110/-/DCSupplemental.
Freely available online through the PNAS open access option.
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