Abstract

Traditional taxonomy in biology assumes that life is organized in a simple tree. Attempts to classify microorganisms in this way in the genomics era led microbiologists to look for finite sets of 'core' genes that uniquely group taxa as clades in the tree. However, the diversity revealed by large-scale whole genome sequencing is calling into question the long-held model of a hierarchical tree of life, which leads to questioning of the definition of a species. Large-scale studies of microbial genome diversity reveal that the cumulative number of new genes discovered increases with the number of genomes studied as a power law and subsequently leads to the lack of evidence for a unique core genome within closely related organisms. Sampling 'enough' new genomes leads to the discovery of a replacement or alternative to any gene. This power law behaviour points to an underlying self-organizing critical process that may be guided by mutation and niche selection. Microbes in any particular niche exist within a local web of organism interdependence known as the microbiome. The same mechanism that underpins the macro-ecological scaling first observed by MacArthur and Wilson also applies to microbial communities. Recent metagenomic studies of a food microbiome demonstrate the diverse distribution of community members, but also genotypes for a single species within a more complex community. Collectively, these results suggest that traditional taxonomic classification of bacteria could be replaced with a quasispecies model. This model is commonly accepted in virology and better describes the diversity and dynamic exchange of genes that also hold true for bacteria. This model will enable microbiologists to conduct population-scale studies to describe microbial behaviour, as opposed to a single isolate as a representative.

Highlights

  • For over 280 years biologists have classified living organisms using a system first proposed by Carl Linnaeus

  • For the first time, microbiologists are engaged in describing the diversity of microbial life on earth utilizing technological advances in high-throughput sequencing and whole genome sequences (WGS)

  • To obtain a bacterial genome, microbiologists use pure culture techniques to grow and isolate colonies that were commonly called ‘clonal’, prior to WGS, because the handful of selected biochemical tests were identical among the isolates

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Summary

Introduction

For over 280 years biologists have classified living organisms using a system first proposed by Carl Linnaeus. For the 866 individual Salmonella genomes obtained and re-assembled, the log of the genome diversity grows approximately linearly with the log of the number of isolates (Fig. 4.1a), indicating a power law relationship with the average rate of cumulative gene discovery, N, increasing with the number of isolates, η, as shown in Equation 4.1: N ∝ η0.468 ± 0.001 (Salmonella)

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