4.7 Article

Trophic Specialization Results in Genomic Reduction in Free-Living Marine Idiomarina Bacteria

Journal

MBIO
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.02545-18

Keywords

genome; Idiomarina; marine bacteria; trophic specialization

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key R & D Program of China [2018YFC1406703]
  2. National Science Foundation of China [31630012, 31870101, 91851205, U1706207]
  3. Program of Shandong for Taishan Scholars [TS20090803]
  4. AoShan Talents Cultivation Program - Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology [2017ASTCP-OS14]
  5. Young Scholars Program of Shandong University [2016WLJH36]

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The streamlining hypothesis is generally used to explain the genomic reduction events related to the small genome size of free-living bacteria like marine bacteria SAR11. However, our current understanding of the correlation between bacterial genome size and environmental adaptation relies on too few species. It is still unclear whether there are other paths leading to genomic reduction in free-living bacteria. The genome size of marine free-living bacteria of the genus Idiomarina belonging to the order Alteromonadales (Gammaproteobacteria) is much smaller than the size of related genomes from bacteria in the same order. Comparative genomic and physiological analyses showed that the genomic reduction pattern in this genus is different from that of the classical SAR11 lineage. Genomic reduction reconstruction and substrate utilization profile showed that Idiomarina spp. lost a large number of genes related to carbohydrate utilization, and instead they specialized on using proteinaceous resources. Here we propose a new hypothesis to explain genomic reduction in this genus; we propose that trophic specialization increasing the metabolic efficiency for using one kind of substrate but reducing the substrate utilization spectrum could result in bacterial genomic reduction, which would be not uncommon in nature. This hypothesis was further tested in another free-living genus, Kangiella, which also shows dramatic genomic reduction. These findings highlight that trophic specialization is potentially an important path leading to genomic reduction in some marine free-living bacteria, which is distinct from the classical lineages like SAR11. IMPORTANCE The streamlining hypothesis is usually used to explain the genomic reduction events in free-living bacteria like SAR11. However, we find that the genomic reduction phenomenon in the bacterial genus Idiomarina is different from that in SAR11. Therefore, we propose a new hypothesis to explain genomic reduction in this genus based on trophic specialization that could result in genomic reduction, which would be not uncommon in nature. Not only can the trophic specialization hypothesis explain the genomic reduction in the genus Idiomarina, but it also sheds new light on our understanding of the genomic reduction processes in other free-living bacterial lineages.

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