Maintenance of Sympatric and Allopatric Populations in Free-Living Terrestrial Bacteria

Due to the promiscuous exchange of genetic material and asexual reproduction, delineating microbial species (and, by extension, populations) remains challenging. Because of this, the vast majority of microbial studies assessing population structure often compare divergent strains from disparate envi...

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Main Authors: Alexander B. Chase, Philip Arevalo, Eoin L. Brodie, Martin F. Polz, Ulas Karaoz, Jennifer B. H. Martiny
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2019-10-01
Series:mBio
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.02361-19
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spelling doaj-3968a35b9416493b9a528ff310c18ca92021-07-02T11:22:47ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymBio2150-75112019-10-01105e02361-1910.1128/mBio.02361-19Maintenance of Sympatric and Allopatric Populations in Free-Living Terrestrial BacteriaAlexander B. ChasePhilip ArevaloEoin L. BrodieMartin F. PolzUlas KaraozJennifer B. H. MartinyDue to the promiscuous exchange of genetic material and asexual reproduction, delineating microbial species (and, by extension, populations) remains challenging. Because of this, the vast majority of microbial studies assessing population structure often compare divergent strains from disparate environments under varied selective pressures. Here, we investigated the population structure within a single bacterial ecotype, a unit equivalent to a eukaryotic species, defined as highly clustered genotypic and phenotypic strains with the same ecological niche. Using a combination of genomic and computational analyses, we assessed the phylogenetic structure, extent of recombination, and flexible gene content of this genomic diversity to infer patterns of gene flow. To our knowledge, this study is the first to do so for a dominant soil bacterium. Our results indicate that bacterial soil populations, similarly to those in other environments, are structured by gene flow discontinuities and exhibit distributional patterns consistent with both isolation by distance and isolation by environment. Thus, both dispersal limitation and local environments contribute to the divergence among closely related soil bacteria as observed in macroorganisms.For free-living bacteria and archaea, the equivalent of the biological species concept does not exist, creating several obstacles to the study of the processes contributing to microbial diversification. These obstacles are particularly high in soil, where high bacterial diversity inhibits the study of closely related genotypes and therefore the factors structuring microbial populations. Here, we isolated strains within a single Curtobacterium ecotype from surface soil (leaf litter) across a regional climate gradient and investigated the phylogenetic structure, recombination, and flexible gene content of this genomic diversity to infer patterns of gene flow. Our results indicate that microbial populations are delineated by gene flow discontinuities, with distinct populations cooccurring at multiple sites. Bacterial population structure was further delineated by genomic features allowing for the identification of candidate genes possibly contributing to local adaptation. These results suggest that the genetic structure within this bacterium is maintained both by ecological specialization in localized microenvironments (isolation by environment) and by dispersal limitation between geographic locations (isolation by distance).https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.02361-19curtobacteriumpopulation structuregene flowmicrobial ecologyecotype
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexander B. Chase
Philip Arevalo
Eoin L. Brodie
Martin F. Polz
Ulas Karaoz
Jennifer B. H. Martiny
spellingShingle Alexander B. Chase
Philip Arevalo
Eoin L. Brodie
Martin F. Polz
Ulas Karaoz
Jennifer B. H. Martiny
Maintenance of Sympatric and Allopatric Populations in Free-Living Terrestrial Bacteria
mBio
curtobacterium
population structure
gene flow
microbial ecology
ecotype
author_facet Alexander B. Chase
Philip Arevalo
Eoin L. Brodie
Martin F. Polz
Ulas Karaoz
Jennifer B. H. Martiny
author_sort Alexander B. Chase
title Maintenance of Sympatric and Allopatric Populations in Free-Living Terrestrial Bacteria
title_short Maintenance of Sympatric and Allopatric Populations in Free-Living Terrestrial Bacteria
title_full Maintenance of Sympatric and Allopatric Populations in Free-Living Terrestrial Bacteria
title_fullStr Maintenance of Sympatric and Allopatric Populations in Free-Living Terrestrial Bacteria
title_full_unstemmed Maintenance of Sympatric and Allopatric Populations in Free-Living Terrestrial Bacteria
title_sort maintenance of sympatric and allopatric populations in free-living terrestrial bacteria
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mBio
issn 2150-7511
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Due to the promiscuous exchange of genetic material and asexual reproduction, delineating microbial species (and, by extension, populations) remains challenging. Because of this, the vast majority of microbial studies assessing population structure often compare divergent strains from disparate environments under varied selective pressures. Here, we investigated the population structure within a single bacterial ecotype, a unit equivalent to a eukaryotic species, defined as highly clustered genotypic and phenotypic strains with the same ecological niche. Using a combination of genomic and computational analyses, we assessed the phylogenetic structure, extent of recombination, and flexible gene content of this genomic diversity to infer patterns of gene flow. To our knowledge, this study is the first to do so for a dominant soil bacterium. Our results indicate that bacterial soil populations, similarly to those in other environments, are structured by gene flow discontinuities and exhibit distributional patterns consistent with both isolation by distance and isolation by environment. Thus, both dispersal limitation and local environments contribute to the divergence among closely related soil bacteria as observed in macroorganisms.For free-living bacteria and archaea, the equivalent of the biological species concept does not exist, creating several obstacles to the study of the processes contributing to microbial diversification. These obstacles are particularly high in soil, where high bacterial diversity inhibits the study of closely related genotypes and therefore the factors structuring microbial populations. Here, we isolated strains within a single Curtobacterium ecotype from surface soil (leaf litter) across a regional climate gradient and investigated the phylogenetic structure, recombination, and flexible gene content of this genomic diversity to infer patterns of gene flow. Our results indicate that microbial populations are delineated by gene flow discontinuities, with distinct populations cooccurring at multiple sites. Bacterial population structure was further delineated by genomic features allowing for the identification of candidate genes possibly contributing to local adaptation. These results suggest that the genetic structure within this bacterium is maintained both by ecological specialization in localized microenvironments (isolation by environment) and by dispersal limitation between geographic locations (isolation by distance).
topic curtobacterium
population structure
gene flow
microbial ecology
ecotype
url https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.02361-19
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