| Literature DB >> 32493880 |
Abstract
Ultra-small microorganisms are ubiquitous in Earth's environments. Ultramicrobacteria, which are defined as having a cell volume of <0.1 μm3, are often numerically dominant in aqueous environments. Cultivated representatives among these bacteria, such as members of the marine SAR11 clade (e.g., "Candidatus Pelagibacter ubique") and freshwater Actinobacteria and Betaproteobacteria, possess highly streamlined, small genomes and unique ecophysiological traits. Many ultramicrobacteria may pass through a 0.2-μm-pore-sized filter, which is commonly used for filter sterilization in various fields and processes. Cultivation efforts focusing on filterable small microorganisms revealed that filtered fractions contained not only ultramicrocells (i.e., miniaturized cells because of external factors) and ultramicrobacteria, but also slender filamentous bacteria sometimes with pleomorphic cells, including a special reference to members of Oligoflexia, the eighth class of the phylum Proteobacteria. Furthermore, the advent of culture-independent "omics" approaches to filterable microorganisms yielded the existence of candidate phyla radiation (CPR) bacteria (also referred to as "Ca. Patescibacteria") and ultra-small members of DPANN (an acronym of the names of the first phyla included in this superphyla) archaea. Notably, certain groups in CPR and DPANN are predicted to have minimal or few biosynthetic capacities, as reflected by their extremely small genome sizes, or possess no known function. Therefore, filtered fractions contain a greater variety and complexity of microorganisms than previously expected. This review summarizes the broad diversity of overlooked filterable agents remaining in "sterile" (<0.2-μm filtered) environmental samples.Entities:
Keywords: candidate phyla radiation; filterable microorganisms; minimal cell; ultramicrobacteria; ultramicrocells
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32493880 PMCID: PMC7308576 DOI: 10.1264/jsme2.ME20025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbes Environ ISSN: 1342-6311 Impact factor: 2.912
An overview of ultra-small and filterable microorganisms in the environment
| Taxa | Phylum (and class | Isolation source | Cell shape | Cell size (length×width and/or volume) | Genome size (Mbp) | Physiological and ecological trait(s) or its potential | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ultramicrocells | |||||||
| derivative of | cocci | cell size reduction | n.d. | host cell invasion, starvation-associated cell size reduction | |||
| snap bean leaflet | rods | cell length reduction from ~2.5 to ~1.2 μm | 6.09 | host cell invasion, leaf environment-induced cell size reduction | |||
| Obligate ultramicrobacteria and related candidates | |||||||
| “ | coastal sea | curved rods | 0.01 μm3 | 1.31 | glycine auxotrophy, rhodopsin-based photometabolism, utilization of one-carbon compounds | ||
| “ | coastal lagoon | curved rods | 1.0×0.1 μm | 1.16 | glycine auxotrophy, rhodopsin-based photometabolism, tetrahydrafolate metabolism** | ||
| fjord estuary | short rods | 0.05–0.09 μm3 | 3.35 | utilization of various amino acids, resistance to heat shock, H2O2, and ethanol | |||
| freshwater river | curved rods | 0.7–0.8×0.3 μm; | 1.62 | rhodopsin-based photometabolism** | |||
| freshwater lake | curved rods | 0.85×0.30 μm; | 1.43 | rhodopsin-based photometabolism | |||
| freshwater pond | short rods | 0.49×0.28 μm | 1.40 | nitrate uptake and nitrite excretion system** | |||
| “ | freshwater lake | curved rods | 0.041 μm3 | 1.35 | catalase-dependent growth | ||
| “ | freshwater lake | curved rods | 0.061 μm3 | 1.46 | catalase-dependent growth | ||
| freshwater pond | straight rods | 0.7–1.2×0.4–0.5 μm | 2.16 | utilization of low-molecular-weight substrates | |||
| rice paddy soil | ellipsoids | 0.49×0.33 μm; | n.d. | utilization of sugars and sugar polymers, strict fermentative metabolism, oxygen tolerance | |||
| Facultative ultramicrobacteria | |||||||
| gut homogenate of | cocci, rods showing budding cell division | 0.3–0.5 μm (for cocci); 0.5–3.5×0.15–0.30 μm (for rods) | 1.59 | nitrogen fixation | |||
| lake sediment | cocci, rods showing budding cell division or cell septation | 0.004–0.04 μm3 (for cocci); 0.1–0.3 μm3 (for rods) | ~1.7 | ectoparasite of | |||
| Slender filamentous bacteria | |||||||
| freshwater | spirals | 0.12 μm3 (smallest width=0.2 μm) | n.d. | n.d. | |||
| desert sand | pleomorphic (rods, filaments, spirals, and spherical [or curled] cells) | various lengths×0.4–0.8 μm (for filaments) | 7.57 | multidrug resistance, incomplete denitrification** | |||
| freshwater lake | pleomorphic (rods, filaments, and spirals) | 3.6×0.6 μm (for rods) | 3.51 | antimicrobial peptides, plasmid-encoded type IV secretion systems** | |||
| freshwater pond | pleomorphic (rods and filaments) | various lengths | 3.94 | utilization of limited substrates | |||
| freshwater creek | pleomorphic (rods and filaments) | various lengths | 3.39 | violacein-like production | |||
| CPR/Patescibacteria bacteria | |||||||
| WWE3-OP11-OD1 bacteria | candidate division WWE3, “ | deep aquifer | cocci or oval-shaped | 0.009±0.002 μm3 | 0.69–1.05 | potential interaction with other bacterial cells via pili-like structures | |
| “ | “ | ciliated protist | straight rods | 1.6–1.9×0.5–0.6 μm | n.d. | endoplasmic symbiont of the ciliate | |
| TM7x bacterium | “ | human oral cavity | cocci | 0.2–0.3 μm | 0.71 | ectosymbiont of | |
| DPANN archaea | |||||||
| submarine hot vent | cocci | 0.4 μm | ~0.5 | ectosymbiont of | |||
| “ | hot spring | cocci | 0.1–0.3 μm | 0.61 | ectosymbiont of | ||
| “ | hot spring | flagellated cocci | ~0.2 μm | 0.58 | ectosymbiont of | ||
| “ | “ | hypersaline lake | cocci-like | 0.6 μm | 1.23 | possible free-living lifestyle | |
| “ | “ | hypersaline lake | cocci-like | 0.6 μm | 1.22 | possible free-living lifestyle | |
| ARMAN-2, -4, and -5 | “ | acid mine drainage | cocci | ~0.5 μm | ~1.0 | potential interaction with | |
| “ | “ | acid mine drainage | n.d. | n.d. | 0.95 | ectoparasite of | |
n.d.: no data.
* The proteobacterial class Oligoflexia is classified in the candidate phylum “Bdellovibrionota” in the Genome Taxonomy Database (GTDB).
** Putative physiological traits are inferred from their genomic and plasmid annotation.
Fig. 1.Diagram showing filterable microorganisms in the environment. (I) ultramicrocells; (II) obligate ultramicrobacteria; (III) facultative ultramicrobacteria; (IV) slender filamentous bacteria; (V) ultra-small members of CPR bacteria (also referred to as “Candidatus Patescibacteria”) and DPANN archaea indicated by the arrow in this Figure. See details in the text. This figure was created with BioRender (https://biorender.com/).
Fig. 2.Scanning electron micrograph of c-shaped cells of Aurantimicrobium minutum KNCT. Cells were cultured in organic NSY (nutrient broth, soytone, and yeast extract; Hahn ) medium for two weeks. Scale bar: 200 nm. This micrograph is an unpublished figure from the author; other micrographs of this species are shown in Nakai et al. (2013, 2015).
Fig. 3.Micrograph of pleomorphic cells of Oligoflexus tunisiensis Shr3T. Cells were cultured in R2A medium for more than two weeks. This micrograph is slightly modified from the figure originally published in Nakai and Naganuma (2015). Scale bar: 10 μm.
Fig. 4.A schematic diagram of the “middle-out” approach toward the development of minimal cells or synthetic cells. This approach, inspired by the unusual biology of ultra-small life forms, may provide a new perspective to traditional top-down or bottom-up approaches. This figure was created with BioRender (https://biorender.com/).