Abstract

Environmental metagenomics provides snippets of genomic sequences from all organisms in an environmental sample and are an unprecedented resource of information for investigating microbial population genetics. Current analytical methods, however, are poorly equipped to handle metagenomic data, particularly of short, unlinked sequences. A custom analytical pipeline was developed to calculate dN/dS ratios, a common metric to evaluate the role of selection in the evolution of a gene, from environmental metagenomes sequenced using 454 technology of flow-sorted populations of marine Synechococcus, the dominant cyanobacteria in coastal environments. The large majority of genes (98%) have evolved under purifying selection (dN/dS<1). The metagenome sequence coverage of the reference genomes was not uniform and genes that were highly represented in the environment (i.e. high read coverage) tended to be more evolutionarily conserved. Of the genes that may have evolved under positive selection (dN/dS>1), 77 out of 83 (93%) were hypothetical. Notable among annotated genes, ribosomal protein L35 appears to be under positive selection in one Synechococcus population. Other annotated genes, in particular a possible porin, a large-conductance mechanosensitive channel, an ATP binding component of an ABC transporter, and a homologue of a pilus retraction protein had regions of the gene with elevated dN/dS. With the increasing use of next-generation sequencing in metagenomic investigations of microbial diversity and ecology, analytical methods need to accommodate the peculiarities of these data streams. By developing a means to analyze population diversity data from these environmental metagenomes, we have provided the first insight into the role of selection in the evolution of Synechococcus, a globally significant primary producer.

Highlights

  • Circumventing the need for cultured isolates, environmental metagenomics provides genetic sequences from microorganisms of entire communities

  • Environmental metagenomes have been obtained from a wide diversity of ecosystems, all driven by interest in the biogeochemistry, taxonomic diversity, evolutionary history, and ecology of the microbial community [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • The methods we report here were applied to Synechococcus populations but are of general use for examining microbial population genetics

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Circumventing the need for cultured isolates, environmental metagenomics provides genetic sequences from microorganisms of entire communities. Environmental metagenomes have been obtained from a wide diversity of ecosystems, all driven by interest in the biogeochemistry, taxonomic diversity, evolutionary history, and ecology of the microbial community [1,2,3,4,5,6]. The sampling and analyses of environmental metagenomes can be customized to examine taxonomic groupings at any phylogenetic or ecological scale. This is an unprecedented resource, especially for microbial population biology. Environmental metagenomes contain a census of the true population diversity, genome-wide, without bias with respect to culturability

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call