Abstract

ABSTRACTNatural microbial communities consist of closely related taxa that may exhibit phenotypic differences and inhabit distinct niches. However, connecting genetic diversity to ecological properties remains a challenge in microbial ecology due to the lack of pure cultures across the microbial tree of life. “Candidatus Accumulibacter phosphatis” (Accumulibacter) is a polyphosphate-accumulating organism that contributes to the enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) biotechnological process for removing excess phosphorus from wastewater and preventing eutrophication from downstream receiving waters. Distinct Accumulibacter clades often coexist in full-scale wastewater treatment plants and laboratory-scale enrichment bioreactors and have been hypothesized to inhabit distinct ecological niches. However, since individual strains of the Accumulibacter lineage have not been isolated in pure culture to date, these predictions have been made solely on genome-based comparisons and enrichments with varying strain compositions. Here, we used genome-resolved metagenomics and metatranscriptomics to explore the activity of coexisting Accumulibacter strains in an engineered bioreactor environment. We obtained four high-quality genomes of Accumulibacter strains that were present in the bioreactor ecosystem, one of which is a completely contiguous draft genome scaffolded with long Nanopore reads. We identified core and accessory genes to investigate how gene expression patterns differed among the dominating strains. Using this approach, we were able to identify putative pathways and functions that may confer distinct functions to Accumulibacter strains and provide key functional insights into this biotechnologically significant microbial lineage.IMPORTANCE “Candidatus Accumulibacter phosphatis” is a model polyphosphate-accumulating organism that has been studied using genome-resolved metagenomics, metatranscriptomics, and metaproteomics to understand the EBPR process. Within the Accumulibacter lineage, several similar but diverging clades are defined by the shared sequence identity of the polyphosphate kinase (ppk1) locus. These clades are predicted to have key functional differences in acetate uptake rates, phage defense mechanisms, and nitrogen-cycling capabilities. However, such hypotheses have largely been made based on gene content comparisons of sequenced Accumulibacter genomes, some of which were obtained from different systems. Here, we performed time series genome-resolved metatranscriptomics to explore gene expression patterns of coexisting Accumulibacter clades in the same bioreactor ecosystem. Our work provides an approach for elucidating ecologically relevant functions based on gene expression patterns between closely related microbial populations.

Highlights

  • Natural microbial communities consist of closely related taxa that may exhibit phenotypic differences and inhabit distinct niches

  • During a period of stable enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) (14 months following inoculation) in which acetate was completely diminished by the start of the aerobic phase and soluble phosphate was below 1.0 mg liter21 at the end of the aerobic phase, we collected seven samples across a single cycle for RNA sequencing (Fig. 1A)

  • We integrated genome-resolved metagenomics and time series metatranscriptomics to understand gene expression patterns of coexisting Accumulibacter strains within a bioreactor ecosystem

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Summary

Introduction

Natural microbial communities consist of closely related taxa that may exhibit phenotypic differences and inhabit distinct niches. Within the Accumulibacter lineage, several similar but diverging clades are defined by the shared sequence identity of the polyphosphate kinase (ppk1) locus These clades are predicted to have key functional differences in acetate uptake rates, phage defense mechanisms, and nitrogen-cycling capabilities. The persistence of several phylogenetically distinct clades within the Accumulibacter lineage in both full-scale wastewater treatment plants and laboratory-scale enrichment bioreactors suggests that different clades may inhabit distinct ecological niches [17, 23]. This is largely supported by comparative genomics of Accumulibacter metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) msystems.asm.org 2

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