Abstract
The SAR11 clade of Alphaproteobacteria is the most abundant group of planktonic cells in the near-surface epipelagic waters of the ocean, but the mechanisms underlying its exceptional success have not been fully elucidated. Here, we applied a metagenomic approach to explore microdiversity patterns by measuring the accumulation of synonymous and nonsynonymous mutations as well as homologous recombination in populations of SAR11 from different aquatic habitats (marine epipelagic, bathypelagic, and surface freshwater). The patterns of mutation accumulation and recombination were compared to those of other groups of representative marine microbes with multiple ecological strategies that share the same marine habitat, namely, Cyanobacteria (Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus), Archaea ("Candidatus Nitrosopelagicus" and Marine Group II Thalassoarchaea), and some heterotrophic marine bacteria (Alteromonas and Erythrobacter). SAR11 populations showed widespread recombination among distantly related members, preventing divergence leading to a genetically stable population. Moreover, their high intrapopulation sequence diversity with an enrichment in synonymous replacements supports the idea of a very ancient divergence and the coexistence of multiple different clones. However, other microbes analyzed seem to follow different evolutionary dynamics where processes of diversification driven by geographic and ecological instability produce a higher number of nonsynonymous replacements and lower intrapopulation sequence diversity. Together, these data shed light on some of the evolutionary and ecological processes that lead to the large genomic diversity in SAR11. Furthermore, this approach can be applied to other similar microbes that are difficult to culture in the laboratory, but abundant in nature, to investigate the underlying dynamics of their genomic evolution.IMPORTANCE As the most abundant bacteria in oceans, the Pelagibacterales order (here SAR11) plays an important role in the global carbon cycle, but the study of the evolutionary forces driving its evolution has lagged considerably due to the inherent difficulty of obtaining pure cultures. Multiple evolutionary models have been proposed to explain the diversification of distinct lineages within a population; however, the identification of many of these patterns in natural populations remains mostly enigmatic. We have used a metagenomic approach to explore microdiversity patterns in their natural habitats. Comparison with a collection of bacterial and archaeal groups from the same environments shows that SAR11 populations have a different evolutionary regime, where multiple genotypes coexist within the same population and remain stable over time. Widespread homologous recombination could be one of the main driving factors of this homogenization.
Highlights
The SAR11 clade of Alphaproteobacteria is the most abundant group of planktonic cells in the near-surface epipelagic waters of the ocean, but the mechanisms underlying its exceptional success have not been fully elucidated
We have studied the ecological and evolutionary processes of natural populations of SAR11
Our results are in agreement with evolutionary dynamics of some SAR11 representatives consistent with quasisexual evolution, as has been described for cyanobacterial biofilms [59], where high recombination rates between closely and distantly related lineages promote the homogenization of the populations, leading to a stable population that may remain unchanged for extended periods (Fig. 4A and B)
Summary
The SAR11 clade of Alphaproteobacteria is the most abundant group of planktonic cells in the near-surface epipelagic waters of the ocean, but the mechanisms underlying its exceptional success have not been fully elucidated. The delimitation of populations within this clade is a controversial issue, in a recent study, an improved phylogenomic classification (enriched by single-cell genomes) based on whole-genome comparisons, together with a fine ecogenomic characterization of SAR11 at a global scale, allowed discerning novel operational taxonomic units, which were called genomospecies [33]. Genomes within these genomospecies showed remarkable agreement between their phylogenomic classification and patterns of metagenomic distribution across different metagenomes, displaying a minimum pairwise average nucleotide identity (ANI) value within genomospecies of ca. Subclade Ia. was well represented, with the largest number of genomes (47, including 6 pure cultures), and due to the high read recruitment to these genomes in the available metagenomic data sets, they could be split into 6 well-defined genomospecies with different spatiotemporal abundance patterns [33]
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