| Literature DB >> 29925673 |
James B Anderson1, Dahlia Kasimer2, Wenjing Xia2, Nicolas C H Schröder2, Patrick Cichowicz2, Silvio Lioniello2, Rudrakshi Chakrabarti2, Eashwar Mohan2, Linda M Kohn2.
Abstract
One might expect yeasts in soil to be highly dispersed via water or insects, forming ephemeral, genetically heterogeneous populations subject to competition and environmental stochasticity. Here, we report persistence of genotypes of the yeast Saccharomyces paradoxus in space and time. Within 1 km2 in a mixed hardwood forest on scales from centimeters to tens of meters, we detected persistence over 3 years of native genotypes, identified by single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) genome-wide, of the wild yeast Saccharomyces paradoxus growing around Quercus rubra and Quercus alba Yeasts were recovered by enrichment in ethanol-containing medium, which measures only presence or absence, not abundance. Additional transplantation experiments employed strains marked with spontaneous defects in the URA3 gene, which also confer resistance to 5-fluoroorotic acid (5FOA). Plating soil suspensions from transplant sites on 5FOA-containing medium permitted one-step quantification of yeast CFU, with no interference from other unmarked yeasts or microorganisms. After an initial steep decrease in abundance, the yeast densities fluctuated over time, increasing in association with rainfall and decreasing in association with drought. After 18 months, the transplanted yeasts remained in place on the nine sites. In vitro transplantation experiments into nonsterile soil in petri dishes showed similar patterns of persistence and response to moisture and drought. To determine whether Saccharomyces cerevisiae, not previously recovered from soils regionally, can persist in our cold climate sites, we transplanted marked S. cerevisiae alone and in mixture with S. paradoxus in the fall of 2017. Five months later, S. cerevisiae persisted to the same extent as S. paradoxusIMPORTANCESaccharomyces yeasts are intensively studied in biological research and in their domesticated roles in brewing and baking, and yet, remarkably little is known about their mode of life in forest soils. We report here that resident genotypes of the yeast S. paradoxus are persistent on a time scale of years in their microhabitats in forest soils. We also show that resident genotypes can be replaced by transplanted yeast genotypes. The high inoculum levels in experimental transplantations rapidly decreased over time, but the transplanted genotypes persisted at low abundance. We conclude that, in forest soils, Saccharomyces yeasts exist at very low abundance and that dispersal events are rare.Entities:
Keywords: 5FOA resistance; dispersal; fungus; genetic drift; population
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29925673 PMCID: PMC6010622 DOI: 10.1128/mSphere.00211-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: mSphere ISSN: 2379-5042 Impact factor: 4.389
Identity of yeast strains recovered by enrichment culture from sites near the bases of four oak trees
| Site (tree-site- | Yeast strain/clade | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | |
| 1-1-1 | WX1/ | R1/ | DK1/ | |
| 1-1-2 | WX2/ | R2/ | DK2/ | JBA1/ |
| 1-1-3 | WX3/ | R3/ | DK3/ | |
| 1-1-4 | WX4/ | R4/ | DK4/ | |
| 1-1-5 | WX5/ | R5/ | DK5/ | |
| 1-1-6 | WX6/ | R6/ | DK6/ | |
| 1-2-1 | WX7/ | R7/ | DK7/ | |
| 1-2-2 | WX8/ | R8/ | DK8/ | |
| 1-2-3 | WX9/ | R9/ | DK9/ | |
| 1-2-4 | WX10/ | R10/ | DK10/ | JBA2/ |
| 1-2-5 | WX11/ | R11/ | DK11/ | |
| 1-2-6 | WX12/ | R12/ | DK12/ | |
| 1-3-1 | WX13/ | R13/ | DK13/ | |
| 1-3-2 | WX14/ | R14/ | DK14/ | |
| 1-3-3 | WX15/ | R15/ | DK15/ | |
| 1-3-4 | WX16/ | R16/ | DK16/ | |
| 1-3-5 | WX17/ | R17/ | DK17/ | |
| 1-3-6 | WX18/ | R18/ | DK18/ | JBA3/ |
| 2-1-1 | − | − | − | |
| 2-1-2 | − | R19/ | − | |
| 2-1-3 | − | − | − | |
| 2-1-4 | WX19/ | − | − | |
| 2-1-5 | − | R20/ | − | |
| 2-1-6 | − | R21/ | − | |
| 2-2-1 | − | − | − | |
| 2-2-2 | − | R22/ | − | |
| 2-2-3 | WX21/ | R23/ | DK19/Pm | |
| 2-2-4 | − | R24/ | − | |
| 2-2-5 | − | − | − | |
| 2-2-6 | WX22/ | − | − | |
| 2-3-1 | − | − | DK20/ | |
| 2-3-2 | − | Lt | DK21/ | |
| 2-3-3 | − | − | DK22/ | |
| 2-3-4 | − | Td | DK23/ | |
| 2-3-5 | Lt | − | − | |
| 2-3-6 | − | Td | − | |
| 3-1-1 | − | R28/ | DK24/Pk | − |
| 3-1-2 | − | R29/ | DK25/ | |
| 3-1-3 | − | − | DK26/ | |
| 3-1-4 | WX25/ | Td | DK27/ | |
| 3-1-5 | − | − | DK28/ | |
| 3-1-6 | − | R31/ | DK29/ | |
| 3-2-1 | − | − | − | |
| 3-2-2 | − | − | − | |
| 3-2-3 | − | − | DK30/ | |
| 3-2-4 | WX26/ | − | − | |
| 3-2-5 | WX27/ | − | − | |
| 3-2-6 | − | − | − | |
| 3-3-1 | − | − | − | |
| 3-3-2 | − | R32/ | DK31/ | − |
| 3-3-3 | − | − | DK32/ | |
| 3-3-4 | WX28/ | R33/ | DK33/ | |
| 3-3-5 | − | − | DK34/ | |
| 3-3-6 | WX29/ | R34/ | − | |
| 4-1-1 | WX30/ | R35/ | − | |
| 4-1-2 | WX31/ | R36/ | − | |
| 4-1-3 | WX32/ | R37/ | DK36/ | − |
| 4-1-4 | WX33/ | R38/ | DK37/ | |
| 4-1-5 | − | − | DK38/ | |
| 4-1-6 | WX34/ | R39/ | DK39/ | |
| 4-2-1 | WX35/ | R40/ | DK40/ | |
| 4-2-2 | WX36/ | R41/ | DK41/ | JBA4/ |
| 4-2-3 | WX37/ | R42/ | DK42/ | |
| 4-2-4 | WX38/ | R43/ | DK43/ | |
| 4-2-5 | WX39/ | R44/ | DK44/Pm | |
| 4-2-6 | WX40/ | R45/ | DK45/ | |
| 4-3-1 | − | − | DK46/ | |
| 4-3-2 | WX41/ | − | DK47/ | |
| 4-3-3 | WX42/ | − | DK48/ | |
| 4-3-4 | WX43/ | R46/ | DK49/ | − |
| 4-3-5 | − | R47/ | DK50/ | |
| 4-3-6 | WX44/ | Cc | DK51/ | |
Sites are indicated in the form tree-site-microsite. Four oak trees were sampled, with three sites around the base of each tree separated by buttress roots and six microsites in each site.
Strains are represented as strain name/clade membership (clades shown in boldface type). The presence of a minus symbol indicates that a sample was taken, but no yeast was recovered. In 2014, 2015, and 2016, all 72 oak microsites were sampled; in 2017, eight samples were taken. The data for 2014 and 2015 are from the report of Xia et al. (10), and the data from 2016 and 2017 are from this study. Abbreviations for non-Saccharomyces species names: Cc, Candida californica; Lt, Lachancea thermotolerans; Pk, Pichia kudriavzevii; Pm, P. mandshurica; Td, Torulaspora delbrueckii.
FIG 1 Outdoor transplantation of yeast strains and abundance over time. Three strains were each transplanted to three sites around the bases of three oak trees (three strains per tree) on 23 September 2016. The abundance values for each site were normalized against the average counts of CFU per gram of soil between weeks 3 and 8 ± standard errors (SEs). The average value for normalization (over the nine sites) was 373,440 ± 76,254 CFU/g soil (average ± SE). In the initial sampling, the colonies were too numerous to count on the dilution plates. The average relative abundance values for all nine sites ± standard errors for weeks 1 and 2 appear in the top left corner of the graph, as these values are off the scale of this graph. The bars represent rainfall amount in the week prior to sampling. Rainfall and temperature data are included in Table S2 in the supplemental material.
FIG 4 Outdoor transplantation of S. cerevisiae and S. paradoxus and relative abundance over time. (a to c) Inocula containing S. cerevisiae only (a), S. paradoxus only (b), and a mix of S. cerevisiae and S. paradoxus (c) were transplanted to three sites at the bases of three oak trees on 26 October 2017; each tree had one site of each type of inoculum. (d) Ratio of S. cerevisiae and S. paradoxus for the mixed population. Note that the counts on test plates containing 5FOA were low for the 18-week time point at a total of 12 CFU on nine plates. The values for each site were normalized against the values (CFU/gram of soil) between weeks 3 and 10 ± standard error. The average values for normalization were as follows: 738,722 ± 632,755 CFU/g of soil for S. paradoxus, 922,523 ± 592,478 CFU/g of soil for S. cerevisiae, and 1,287,051 ± 315,193 CFU/g of soil for the mix of the two yeasts (average ± SE shown). The average relative abundance values (all nine sites) for weeks 1 and 2, which were off the scale on the graph, appear in the top right corner of each graph.
FIG 2 Outdoor transplantation and relative abundance with distance in centimeters from the transplant site. On three of the nine sites for outdoor transplantation (each at a different tree and each a different strain), six diameters were measured at distance intervals (two intervals per site) at week 39 after transplantation on 21 June 2017. The values for each site were normalized against CFU per gram of soil for each of the six diameters ± standard error. The average value for normalization (over the six diameters) was 58,449 ± 14,644 CFU/g soil (average ± SE).
FIG 3 Indoor transplantation of yeast strains and abundance over time. Three strains were transplanted to each of three petri dishes containing 50 g of forest soil (nine plates total) on 12 January 2017. The values for each site were normalized against CFU/gram of soil between weeks 2 and 41 ± standard error. The average value for normalization was 612,118 ± 74,280 CFU/g soil (average ± SE). The values for the initial sampling and week 1 after transplantation appear in the top right corner of the graph.