| Literature DB >> 31603945 |
Molly C Bletz1,2, Boyke Bunk3, Cathrin Spröer3, Peter Biwer4, Silke Reiter5, Falitiana C E Rabemananjara6, Stefan Schulz4, Jörg Overmann3,7, Miguel Vences2.
Abstract
The bacterial communities colonizing amphibian skin have been intensively studied due to their interactions with pathogenic chytrid fungi that are causing drastic amphibian population declines. Bacteria of the family Alcaligenaceae, and more specifically of the genus Pigmentiphaga, have been found to be associated specifically to arboreal frogs. Here we analyze their occurrence in a previously assembled global skin microbiome dataset from 205 amphibian species. Pigmentiphaga made up about 5% of the total number of reads in this global dataset. They were mostly found in unrelated arboreal frogs from Madagascar (Mantellidae and Hyperoliidae), but also occurred at low abundances on Neotropical frogs. Based on their 16S sequences, most of the sequences belong to a clade within Pigmentiphaga not assignable to any type strains of the five described species of the genus. One isolate from Madagascar clustered with Pigmentiphaga aceris (>99% sequence similarity on 16S rRNA gene level). Here, we report the full genome sequence of this bacterium which, based on 16S sequences of >97% similarity, has previously been found on human skin, floral nectar, tree sap, stream sediment and soil. Its genome consists of a single circular chromosome with 6,165,255 bp, 5,300 predicted coding sequences, 57 tRNA genes, and three rRNA operons. In comparison with other known Pigmentiphaga genomes it encodes a higher number of genes associated with environmental information processing and cellular processes. Furthermore, it has a biosynthetic gene cluster for a nonribosomal peptide syntethase, and bacteriocin biosynthetic genes can be found, but clusters for β-lactones present in other comparative Pigmentiphaga genomes are lacking.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31603945 PMCID: PMC6788695 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223747
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Distribution of Pigmentiphaga spp. across amphibian hosts.
relative abundance within amphibian skin microbiomes across host eco-morphology classes (A), countries (B), and phylogeny of arboreal and scansorial amphibian hosts (C).
Fig 2Maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree of selected Pigmentiphaga based on DNA sequences of up to 1478 bp of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene.
Sequences of amphibian skin bacteria from an Illumina-based amplicon survey[6] are colored purple; isolates from amphibian skin are colored blue. Red color highlights the sequences of the P. aceris strain used for genome sequencing. Sequences from type or reference strains are boldfaced. Alcaligenes faecalis, the type species of the type genus of Alcaligenaceae, was used as the outgroup. results of a bootstrap analysis (100 replicates) are marked by gray (bootstrap proportion >50%) and black circles (>70%). Note that due to the inclusion of many short sequences from Illumina amplicon analysis, most nodes did not receive strong bootstrap support.
NCBI database matches (97–100% sequence identity) to the 16S rRNA gene of Pigmentiphaga aceris (strain Mada1488).
| Accession # | Description | Query cover | Percent match | Isolation Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HM276147.1 | Uncultured bacterium clone ncd518h02c1 | 89% | 99.4% | Human skin |
| NR_157990.1 | 94% | 99.3% | tree sap | |
| HM270483.1 | Uncultured bacterium clone ncd266g01c1 | 89% | 99.2% | human skin |
| FJ849553.1 | Uncultured bacterium clone SedUMA34 | 95% | 99.2% | arctic stream sediment; ultramafic lithology |
| JX067670.1 | Alcaligenaceae bacterium SAP706.3 | 98% | 99.1% | floral nectar |
| FN421876.1 | Uncultured bacterium, clone 2_F01 | 92% | 99.1% | phyllosphere of clover |
| HM316492.1 | Uncultured bacterium clone ncd307b11c1 | 89% | 99.0% | human skin |
| JX067692.1 | Alcaligenaceae bacterium SAP773.2 | 98% | 99.0% | floral nectar |
| HM316454.1 | Uncultured bacterium clone ncd306e07c1 | 89% | 99.0% | human skin |
| FJ849534.1 | Uncultured bacterium clone SedUMA17 1 | 95% | 98.4% | arctic stream sediment; ultramafic lithology |
| MH667611.1 | 94% | 97.1% | soil (USA) |
Fig 3The circular genome of 6,165,255 bp of Pigmentiphaga aceris (strain Mada1488).
In blue (circle 1) genes lying on the forward strand are shown and in red (circle 2) those on the reverse strand. In circle 3 tRNA genes are shown in brown, often clustered together with green rRNA genes. Circle 4 shows the GC content (G+C)/(A+T+G+C), whereas in circle 5 a GC skew (G−C)/(G+C) is shown. This map has been created using DNAplotter [44].