Abstract

Members of the bacterial phylum Acidobacteria are widespread in soils and sediments worldwide, and are abundant in many soils. Acidobacteria are challenging to culture in vitro, and many basic features of their biology and functional roles in the soil have not been determined. Candidatus Solibacter usitatus strain Ellin6076 has a 9.9 Mb genome that is approximately 2–5 times as large as the other sequenced Acidobacteria genomes. Bacterial genome sizes typically range from 0.5 to 10 Mb and are influenced by gene duplication, horizontal gene transfer, gene loss and other evolutionary processes. Our comparative genome analyses indicate that the Ellin6076 large genome has arisen by horizontal gene transfer via ancient bacteriophage and/or plasmid-mediated transduction, and widespread small-scale gene duplications, resulting in an increased number of paralogs. Low amino acid sequence identities among functional group members, and lack of conserved gene order and orientation in regions containing similar groups of paralogs, suggest that most of the paralogs are not the result of recent duplication events. The genome sizes of additional cultured Acidobacteria strains were estimated using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis to determine the prevalence of the large genome trait within the phylum. Members of subdivision 3 had larger genomes than those of subdivision 1, but none were as large as the Ellin6076 genome. The large genome of Ellin6076 may not be typical of the phylum, and encodes traits that could provide a selective metabolic, defensive and regulatory advantage in the soil environment.

Highlights

  • Soils contain an abundant and diverse array of bacteria that are critical for plant life and nutrient cycling in terrestrial ecosystems

  • Our results indicate that multiple mechanisms likely contributed to the large genome of Ellin6076

  • The lack of strand bias, increased number of repeats, and distribution pattern of the 126 mobile genetic elements throughout the genome of Ellin6076 suggest that horizontal transfer, followed by gene duplication, repeat-mediated recombination and intra-genome transposition may have acted to shape the structure of this genome

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Summary

Introduction

Soils contain an abundant and diverse array of bacteria that are critical for plant life and nutrient cycling in terrestrial ecosystems. Acidobacteria, one of the most widespread and abundant phyla found in soils and sediments worldwide [1,2,3], comprise up to 50% of the rRNA gene sequences from bacterial clone libraries in some soils [4] They have been found in a variety of other environments, including aquatic [5,6], extreme [7,8], and polluted environments [9], and wastewater systems [10,11]. Cultured isolates are slow growing and difficult to maintain, which has hampered their biological and physiological characterization [8,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21] Despite their widespread occurrence in nature, much about Acidobacteria biology and potential ecological roles in soil remain unknown

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