4.8 Article

Methane-derived carbon flows into host-virus networks at different trophic levels in soil

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2105124118

Keywords

methanotrophy; viruses; predator; stable isotope probing

Funding

  1. AXA Research Chair
  2. France-Berkeley Fund
  3. US Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research Genomic Science Program [DE-SC0010570]
  4. Office of Science of the US DOE [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  5. Scottish Government's Rural and Environment Science and Analytical Services 2016 to 2021 program

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This study identified active interactions between individual host and virus populations in acidic and neutral pH soils fueled by methane, revealing that over one-third of enriched carbon isotopes in viruses contained homologs of genes from known methylotrophic bacteria. Viruses infecting nonmethanotrophic methylotrophs and heterotrophic predatory bacteria were also identified through shared homologous genes, showing that carbon is transferred to a diverse range of viruses within methane-fueled microbial networks.
The concentration of atmospheric methane (CH4) continues to increase with microbial communities controlling soil-atmosphere fluxes. While there is substantial knowledge of the diversity and function of prokaryotes regulating CH4 production and consumption, their active interactions with viruses in soil have not been identified. Metagenomic sequencing of soil microbial communities enables identification of linkages between viruses and hosts. However, this does not determine if these represent current or historical interactions nor whether a virus or host are active. In this study, we identified active interactions between individual host and virus populations in situ by following the transfer of assimilated carbon. Using DNA stable-isotope probing combined with metagenomic analyses, we characterized CH4-fueled microbial networks in acidic and neutral pH soils, specifically primary and secondary utilizers, together with the recent transfer of CH4-derived carbon to viruses. A total of 63% of viral contigs from replicated soil incubations contained homologs of genes present in known methylotrophic bacteria. Genomic sequences of C-13-enriched viruses were represented in over one-third of spacers in CRISPR arrays of multiple closely related Methylocystis populations and revealed differences in their history of viral interaction. Viruses infecting nonmethanotrophic methylotrophs and heterotrophic predatory bacteria were also identified through the analysis of shared homologous genes, demonstrating that carbon is transferred to a diverse range of viruses associated with CH4-fueled microbial food networks.

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