Abstract

BackgroundMembers of the Bacillus pumilus group (abbreviated as the Bp group) are quite diverse and ubiquitous in marine environments, but little is known about correlation with their terrestrial counterparts. In this study, 16 marine strains that we had isolated before were sequenced and comparative genome analyses were performed with a total of 52 Bp group strains. The analyses included 20 marine isolates (which included the 16 new strains) and 32 terrestrial isolates, and their evolutionary relationships, differentiation, and environmental adaptation.ResultsPhylogenomic analysis revealed that the marine Bp group strains were grouped into three species: B. pumilus, B. altitudinis and B. safensis. All the three share a common ancestor. However, members of B. altitudinis were observed to cluster independently, separating from the other two, thus diverging from the others. Consistent with the universal nature of genes involved in the functioning of the translational machinery, the genes related to translation were enriched in the core genome. Functional genomic analyses revealed that the marine-derived and the terrestrial strains showed differences in certain hypothetical proteins, transcriptional regulators, K+ transporter (TrK) and ABC transporters. However, species differences showed the precedence of environmental adaptation discrepancies. In each species, land specific genes were found with possible functions that likely facilitate survival in diverse terrestrial niches, while marine bacteria were enriched with genes of unknown functions and those related to transcription, phage defense, DNA recombination and repair.ConclusionOur results indicated that the Bp isolates show distinct genomic features even as they share a common core. The marine and land isolates did not evolve independently; the transition between marine and non-marine habitats might have occurred multiple times. The lineage exhibited a priority effect over the niche in driving their dispersal. Certain intra-species niche specific genes could be related to a strains adaptation to its respective marine or terrestrial environment(s). In summary, this report describes the systematic evolution of 52 Bp group strains and will facilitate future studies toward understanding their ecological role and adaptation to marine and/or terrestrial environments.

Highlights

  • Bacillus are Gram-positive, aerobic or facultative anaerobic, rod-shaped bacteria that can produce highly resistant dormant endospores in response to various environmental stresses (Nicholson et al, 2000; Ravel and Fraser, 2005; Gioia et al, 2007; Earl et al, 2008; Setlow, 2014; Checinska et al, 2015)

  • The Bacillus pumilus group, abbreviated as the Bp group in this report, is a large group of Bacillus composed of B. pumilus, B. safensis, B. altitudinis, B. xiamenensis, B. zhangzhouensis, and B. australimaris (Liu et al, 2016)

  • The results showed that the bacteria of this group could be divided into six clades, and the three large clades were represented by B. altitudinis, B. safensis, and B. pumilus, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Bacillus are Gram-positive, aerobic or facultative anaerobic, rod-shaped bacteria that can produce highly resistant dormant endospores in response to various environmental stresses (Nicholson et al, 2000; Ravel and Fraser, 2005; Gioia et al, 2007; Earl et al, 2008; Setlow, 2014; Checinska et al, 2015). Over one thousand marine Bacillus strains have been deposited in our collections, approximately one-fifth of which belong to the Bp clade. They are frequently isolated from marine environments ranging from coastal and pelagic water columns to deep sea sediments, and most of these isolates have been preliminarily identified as either one of the three species of B. pumilus, B. safensis, and B. altitudinis based on 16S rRNA gene analysis (unpublished data). Members of the Bacillus pumilus group (abbreviated as the Bp group) are quite diverse and ubiquitous in marine environments, but little is known about correlation with their terrestrial counterparts. The analyses included 20 marine isolates (which included the 16 new strains) and 32 terrestrial isolates, and their evolutionary relationships, differentiation, and environmental adaptation

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