| Literature DB >> 30510549 |
Svetlana E Belova1, Nikolai V Ravin2, Timofey A Pankratov3, Andrey L Rakitin2, Anastasia A Ivanova1, Alexey V Beletsky2, Andrey V Mardanov2, Jaap S Sinninghe Damsté4,5, Svetlana N Dedysh1.
Abstract
Members of the Acidobacteria are among the most efficient colonizers of acidic terrestrial habitats but the key traits underlying their environmental fitness remain to be understood. We analyzed indigenous assemblages of Acidobacteria in a lichen-covered acidic (pH 4.1) soil of forested tundra dominated by uncultivated members of subdivision 1. An isolate of these bacteria with cells occurring within saccular chambers, strain SBC82T, was obtained. The genome of strain SBC82T consists of a 7.11-Mb chromosome and four megaplasmids, and encodes a wide repertoire of enzymes involved in degradation of chitin, cellulose, and xylan. Among those, four secreted chitinases affiliated with the glycoside hydrolase family GH18 were identified. Strain SBC82T utilized amorphous chitin as a source of carbon and nitrogen; the respective enzyme activities were detected in tests with synthetic substrates. Chitinolytic capability was also confirmed for another phylogenetically related acidobacterium isolated from a Sphagnum peat bog, strain CCO287. As revealed by metatranscriptomic analysis of chitin-amended peat, 16S rRNA reads from these acidobacteria increased in response to chitin availability. Strains SBC82T and CCO287 were assigned to a novel genus and species, Acidisarcina polymorpha gen. nov., sp. nov. Members of this genus colonize acidic soils and peatlands and specialize in degrading complex polysaccharides.Entities:
Keywords: Acidisarcina; Acidobacteria; chitinase; chitinolytic ability; genome annotation; lichen-covered tundra
Year: 2018 PMID: 30510549 PMCID: PMC6252331 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.02775
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 1(a) The forested tundra site examined in this study: pine forest with ground vegetation cover composed of reindeer lichens. (b) Community composition of the Acidobacteria within three individual plots of the forested tundra based on Illumina paired-end sequencing of 16S rRNA gene fragments. The proportion of reads assigned to isolate SBS82-like bacteria was determined based on the sequence identity threshold of 97%.
Sequencing statistics and various alpha-diversity metrics for the subset of 16S rRNA gene fragments assigned to the Acidobacteria.
| Sample No | Raw reads | Filtered reads∗ | Reads from | Diversity indices | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chao1 | Shannon | Observed species∗∗ | Menhinick | Good’s coverage estimator | ||||
| 1 | 128,572 | 112,642 | 29264 | 837.8 | 5.4 | 550 | 3.2 | 0.992 |
| 2 | 402,892 | 356,887 | 91919 (34000) | 1070.8 (1014.7) | 5.6 (5.6) | 974 (685) | 3.2 (3.7) | 0.997 (0.992) |
| 3 | 151,288 | 136,837 | 36224 | 855.2 | 5.3 | 612 | 3.2 | 0.993 |
FIGURE 2(a,b) Phase-contrast images of cells of strain SBC82T grown for 7 days (a) and 2 weeks (b) in the liquid medium MA supplemented with glucose (a) and xylan (b) as carbon sources. (c) Electron micrograph of an ultrathin section of a cell aggregate from a glucose-grown culture. (d) Enlarged view of outer membrane vesicles formed by invaginations of cytoplasmic membrane. CM, cytoplasmic membrane; OM, outer membrane; PG, peptidoglycan layer; MV, membrane vesicles; N, nucleoid; C, saccular chambers; F, fibril-like structures. Bars, 5 μm (a,b), 1 μm (c), and 0.1 μm (d).
FIGURE 3Unrooted 16S rRNA gene-based neighbor-joining tree showing the phylogenetic relationship of strains SBC82T and CCO287 to representative members of the family Acidobacteriaceae. The tree was calculated based on 1,380 nt positions using the ARB program package (Ludwig et al., 2004). The significance levels of interior branch points obtained in the neighbor-joining analysis were determined by bootstrap analysis (based on 1,000 data resamplings) using PHYLIP (Felsenstein, 1989). Bootstrap values of >90% are shown. Black circles indicate that the corresponding nodes were also recovered in the maximum-likelihood and maximum-parsimony trees. Bar, 0.05 substitutions per nucleotide position.
Fatty acid composition (%) released after acid hydrolysis of cell material of strains SBC82T and CCO287.
| Fatty acids | SBC82T | CCO287 |
|---|---|---|
| C14:0 | 0.4 | 0.4 |
| iso-C15:0 |
|
|
| C16:1ω7 |
|
|
| C16:1ω7 | 0.2 | 1.1 |
| C16:0 |
|
|
| iso-C17:1ω7 | 2.5 | 2.3 |
| iso-C17:0 | 1.5 | 2.4 |
| ai-C17:0 | 0.7 | 0.5 |
| C17:1ω8 | 0.6 | 0.3 |
| C18:2 | – | 0.4 |
| C18:1ω9 | 2.8 |
|
| C18:0 | 0.9 | 1.2 |
| C20:0 | 0.2 | 0.6 |
| C22:1ω9 | – | 0.3 |
| C22:0 | 1.6 | 1.3 |
| 13,16-Dimethyl octacosanedioic (iso-diabolic acid) |
|
|
Relative abundances a of intact polar lipids of strains SBC82T and CCO287.
| IPLb | SBC82T | CCO287 |
|---|---|---|
| Unknown IPL (m/z 751) | ++ | + |
| PE | + + + | + + + |
| OL | + | + + + |
| P-hex | ++ | ++ |
Cell numbers of SBC82T determined by whole-cell hybridizations with Cy3-labeled probe HoAc1402 after 20 days of incubation with chitin as a source of carbon and nitrogen or as a source of carbon.
| Experiment | Incubation with chitin | Incubation with chitin and | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| +chitin | -chitin | +chitin, | -chitin, | |
| I | 182.7 ± 34.9 | 0.3 ± 0.1 | 228.8 ± 33.4 | 0.4 ± 0.3 |
| II | 238.2 ± 25.5 | 0.4 ± 0.3 | 305.8 ± 35.3 | 0.7 ± 0.4 |
| III | 164.9 ± 28.8 | 0.3 ± 0.1 | 214.9 ± 29.0 | 0.5 ± 0.2 |
FIGURE 4Specific detection of cells of strain SBC82T on micro-particles of amorphous chitin used in growth experiments as a sole source of carbon and nitrogen. The cultures were pictured after 20 days of incubation. Phase-contrast images (a), the respective epifluorescent micrographs of whole-cell hybridizations with Cy3-labeled probe HoAc1402 (b), and DAPI-staining (c) are shown. Rows (1) and (2) demonstrate different fields of view. Enlarged images in row (2) demonstrate characteristic cellular aggregates of strain SBC82T. Bars, 10 μm.
Major characteristics that distinguish the genus Acidisarcina from the most closely related genera of the family Acidobacteriaceae.
| Characteristic |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Motility | − | V | + | + | + | − | + |
| Capsule | + | + | V | + | – | + | − |
| Pigment | None to light pink | None to pink | None to pink | None | None | Pink | Orange |
| Anaerobic growth | − | − | − | − | + | − | + |
| pH range | 4.0–7.7 | 2.3–7.3 | 3.5–8.5 | 3.0–6.0 | 3.0–7.5 | 3.0–8.0 | 3.0–6.0 |
| pH optimum | 4.8–7.0 | 4.0–5.0 | 4.0–6.0 | 4.0–5.0 | 4.5–5.0 | 4.0–4.5 | ND |
| Cellulose degradation | + | − | − | + | + | − | − |
| Major fatty acids | 13,16-Dimethyl octacosanedioic acid, iso-C15:0, C16:1ω8 | 13,16-Dimethyl octacosanedioic acid, iso-C15:0 | 13,16-Dimethyl octacosanedioic acid, iso-C15:0, iso-C17:1ω7c, iso-C17:0 | iso-C15:0, C15:0, C16:1ω7c, C18:0 | 13,16-Dimethyl octacosanedioic acid, iso-C15:0, iso-C17:1ω8 | iso-C15:0, iso-C18:1ω9 | 13,16-Dimethyl octacosanedioic acid, iso-C15:0, C18:1ω9 |
| G+C content (mol %) | 56.8 | 51.7–60.0 | 58.5–59.9 | 57.3 | 57.6 | 56.3–59.5 | 57.2–60.8 |
FIGURE 5Distribution of Acidisarcina species in the environment. The diagram depicts origin of environmental 16S rRNA gene sequences with >95% identity to Acidisarcina polymorpha SBC82T, which were extracted from the Joint Genome Institute Integrated Microbial Genomes database (16S rRNA Public Assembled Metagenomes). More detailed information about these sequences is given in Supplementary Table S3.
The presence of chitinases and N-acetyl-beta-hexosaminidases in Acidobacteria.
| Acidobacterium (subdivision number) | Number of genes | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| GH18 family chitinase | GH19 family chitinase | GH20 family | |
| 5 | – | 3 | |
| 1 | – | 3 | |
| 4 | – | 3 | |
| – | – | 3 | |
| 1 | – | 2 | |
| 2 | – | 4 | |
| 1 | – | 2 | |
| 2 | – | 2 | |
| 5 | – | 4 | |
| 8 | – | 6 | |
| 2 | – | 7 | |
| 1 | – | 1 | |
| 1 | – | 3 | |
| 1 | 3 | – | |
| 7 | – | 3 | |
| 3 | – | 3 | |
| 3 | 1 | 3 | |
| 5 | 1 | 3 | |