4.6 Article

Gene Loss and Horizontal Gene Transfer Contributed to the Genome Evolution of the Extreme Acidophile Ferrovum

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.00797

Keywords

acid mine drainage; acidophilic iron oxidizers; Ferrovum; comparative genomics; genome architecture; mobile genetic elements; horizontal gene transfer; genome evolution

Categories

Funding

  1. ESF as part of the junior research group GETGEOWEB [100101363]
  2. Federation of European Microbiological Societies (FEMS)
  3. CONICYT
  4. Fondecyt [1130683]

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Acid mine drainage (AMD), associated with active and abandoned mining sites, is a habitat for acidophilic microorganisms that gain energy from the oxidation of reduced sulfur compounds and ferrous iron and that thrive at pH below 4. Members of the recently proposed genus Ferrovurn are the first acidophilic iron oxidizers to be described within the Betaproteobacteria. Although they have been detected as typical community members in AMD habitats worldwide, knowledge of their phylogenetic and metabolic diversity is scarce. Genomics approaches appear to be most promising in addressing this lacuna since isolation and cultivation of Ferrovurn has proven to be extremely difficult and has so far only been successful for the designated type strain-Ferrovum myxofaciens P3G. In this study, the genomes of two novel strains of Ferrovurn (PN-J185 and Z-31) derived from water samples of a mine water treatment plant were sequenced. These genomes were compared with those of Ferrovum sp. JA12 that also originated from the mine water treatment plant, and of the type strain (P3G). Phylogenomic scrutiny suggests that the four strains represent three Ferrovum species that cluster in two groups (1 and 2). Comprehensive analysis of their predicted metabolic pathways revealed that these groups harbor characteristic metabolic profiles, notably with respect to motility, chemotaxis, nitrogen metabolism, biofilm formation and their potential strategies to cope with the acidic environment. For example, while the F myxofaciens strains (group 1) appear to be motile and diazotrophic, the non-motile group 2 strains have the predicted potential to use a greater variety of fixed nitrogen sources. Furthermore, analysis of their genome synteny provides first insights into their genome evolution, suggesting that horizontal gene transfer and genome reduction in the group 2 strains by loss of genes encoding complete metabolic pathways or physiological features contributed to the observed diversification.

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