病毒、囊泡和其他生物纳米粒子:深埋2千米深、2000万年历史的煤层群落的亚细胞生物圈

Donald Pan, Shun’ichi Ishii, Miho Hirai, Miyuki Ogawara, Wenjing Zhang, Eiji Tasumi, Fumio Inagaki, Hiroyuki Imachi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

水平基因转移是微生物适应和进化的重要驱动力。转导生物纳米颗粒,如病毒颗粒,被认为是水平基因转移的关键促进因素。在海底深处的沉积物中,能量可能非常有限,只能支持极其缓慢的代谢。在这种低能量、孤立的环境中,微生物群落可以生存数百万年,但地下微生物的适应和进化机制仍然是一个谜。病毒颗粒在任何有生命存在的地方都被发现,包括地下深处的环境。虽然微生物在地球的地下丰富而活跃,但病毒在塑造和影响这些生长缓慢的群落方面的作用直到最近才开始被探索。在这里,我们分析了深埋的微生物群落,这些微生物来自日本下田海底2公里以下的褐煤煤层(IODP Expedition 337),该煤层已被埋了2000万年。我们从由褐煤岩心样品播种的生物反应器富集中收获细胞(>0.2µm)和生物纳米颗粒(<0.2µm)。我们对来自细胞和纳米颗粒的DNA进行了测序,随后分析了宏基因组。在纳米颗粒宏基因组中,重建了许多完整的新型病毒基因组。将病毒基因组与原核生物的MAGs(宏基因组组装基因组)进行比较发现,许多病毒基因组已被整合到细菌基因组的前噬菌体中,这表明病毒-宿主相互作用可能发生在海底深处。此外,溶原性可能是病毒在深埋的低能环境中生存的重要机制。宿主基因被病毒颗粒包裹,显示了病毒特化和一般转导的潜力。不仅是病毒颗粒,也有证据表明膜囊泡和基因转移剂可能参与了这个深层地下群落的转导。生物纳米颗粒介导的水平基因转移可能是深层地下微生物群落适应的重要机制,并可能为深入了解深层地下微生物群落形成的可能进化过程提供线索。这些结果也可能揭示地下病毒感染的本质,潜在地揭示生命在极端能量限制下的长期持久性,以及病毒如何在地质时间尺度上存活下来。
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Viruses, Vesicles, and other Biological Nanoparticles: The Sub-cellular Biosphere of a Deeply Buried 2km-Deep, 20-Million-Year-Old Coalbed Community
Horizontal gene transfer is an important driver of adaptation and evolution in microorganisms. Transducing biological nanoparticles such as viral particles are believed to be key facilitators of horizontal gene transfer. In deep subseafloor sediments, energy can be highly limiting, supporting only extremely slow metabolisms. In such low-energy, isolated environments where communities may subsist for millions of years, the mechanisms of subsurface microbial adaptation and evolution remain a mystery. Virus particles have been found everywhere that life has been found, including deep subsurface environments. Although microorganisms are abundant and active in the Earth's subsurface, the role of viruses in shaping and influencing these slow-growing communities is only recently starting to be explored. Here, we analyzed the deeply buried microbial community from a lignite coalbed layer 2km below the seafloor offshore Shimokita, Japan (IODP Expedition 337) that had been buried for 20 million years. We harvested cells (&gt;0.2µm) and biological nanoparticles (&lt;0.2µm) from a bioreactor enrichment seeded by lignite core samples. We sequenced DNA from the cells and nanoparticles and subsequently analyzed the metagenomes. Within the nanoparticle metagenome, numerous complete novel virus genomes were reconstructed. Comparison of the virus genomes to the prokaryotic MAGs (metagenome assembled genomes) revealed that many of the virus genomes had been integrated prophage within bacterial genomes, suggesting the potential for virus-host interactions to occur in the deep subseafloor. Additionally, lysogeny may be an important survival mechanism for viruses in deeply buried, low-energy environments. Host genes were found to be packaged by viral particles, demonstrating the potential for specialized and general transduction by viruses. Not only viral particles, but there was also evidence that membrane vesicles and gene transfer agents may participate in transduction in this deep subsurface community. Horizontal gene transfer mediated by biological nanoparticles may be an important mechanism of adaptation for deep subsurface microbial communities and may provide insight into possible evolutionary processes shaping microbial communities in the deep subsurface. These results may also shed some light onto the nature of viral infection in the subsurface, potentially revealing insights about the long-term persistence of life under extreme energy limitation and how viruses may survive this over geological timescales.
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