Linking ecology and systematics of acidobacteria: Distinct habitat preferences of the Acidobacteriia and Blastocatellia in tundra soils

The Acidobacteria is one of the major bacterial phyla in soils and peatlands. The currently explored diversity within this phylum is assigned to 15 class-level units, five of which contain described members. The ecologically relevant traits of acidobacteria from different classes remain poorly under...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2020-03, Vol.15 (3), p.e0230157-e0230157
Hauptverfasser: Ivanova, Anastasia A, Zhelezova, Alena D, Chernov, Timofey I, Dedysh, Svetlana N
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Zhelezova, Alena D
Chernov, Timofey I
Dedysh, Svetlana N
description The Acidobacteria is one of the major bacterial phyla in soils and peatlands. The currently explored diversity within this phylum is assigned to 15 class-level units, five of which contain described members. The ecologically relevant traits of acidobacteria from different classes remain poorly understood. Here, we compared the patterns of acidobacterial diversity in sandy soils of tundra, along a gradient of increasing vegetation-unfixed aeolian sand, semi-fixed surfaces with mosses and lichens, and mature soil under fully developed plant cover. The Acidobacteria-affiliated 16S rRNA gene sequences retrieved from these soils comprised 11 to 33% of total bacterial reads and belonged mostly to members of the classes Acidobacteriia and Blastocatellia, which displayed opposite habitat preferences. The relative abundance of the Blastocatellia was maximal in unfixed sands and declined in soils of vegetated plots, showing positive correlation with soil pH and negative correlation with carbon and nitrogen availability. An opposite tendency was characteristic for the Acidobacteriia. Most Blastocatellia-affiliated reads belonged to as-yet-undescribed members of the family Arenimicrobiaceae, which appears to be characteristic for dry, depleted in organic matter soil habitats. The pool of Acidobacteriia-affiliated sequences, apart from Acidobacteriaceae- and Bryobacteraceae-related reads, had a large proportion of sequences from as-yet-undescribed families, which seem to specialize in degrading plant-derived organic matter. This analysis reveals sandy soils of tundra as a source of novel acidobacterial diversity and provides an insight into the ecological preferences of different taxonomic groups within this phylum.
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An opposite tendency was characteristic for the Acidobacteriia. Most Blastocatellia-affiliated reads belonged to as-yet-undescribed members of the family Arenimicrobiaceae, which appears to be characteristic for dry, depleted in organic matter soil habitats. The pool of Acidobacteriia-affiliated sequences, apart from Acidobacteriaceae- and Bryobacteraceae-related reads, had a large proportion of sequences from as-yet-undescribed families, which seem to specialize in degrading plant-derived organic matter. This analysis reveals sandy soils of tundra as a source of novel acidobacterial diversity and provides an insight into the ecological preferences of different taxonomic groups within this phylum.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Public Library of Science</pub><pmid>32182280</pmid><doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0230157</doi><tpages>e0230157</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8903-8053</orcidid><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Acidic soils
Acidobacteria
Analysis
Bacteria
Biochemistry
Biology and life sciences
Carbon
Correlation
Earth Sciences
Ecology
Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Eolian sands
Gene sequencing
Genes
Habitat preferences
Habitats
Lichens
Mosses
Novels
Organic matter
Organic soils
Peat
Peat bogs
Peatlands
Phylogenetics
Plants
Relative abundance
RNA
rRNA 16S
Sandy soils
Soil acidity
Soil analysis
Soil chemistry
Soil microbiology
Soil microorganisms
Soil organic matter
Soil pH
Soil sciences
Soils
Systematics
Taiga & tundra
Tundra
Vegetation
title Linking ecology and systematics of acidobacteria: Distinct habitat preferences of the Acidobacteriia and Blastocatellia in tundra soils
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