4.3 Article

Evidence for polyploidy in the globally important diazotroph Trichodesmium

Journal

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 363, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/femsle/fnw244

Keywords

Trichodesmium; cyanobacteria; polyploidy; nifH; nitrogenase; diazotroph

Categories

Funding

  1. UK Natural Environment Research Council
  2. National Oceanography Centre
  3. UoS GSNOCS PhD Scholarship
  4. Natural Environmental Research Council
  5. DFG [R02138/5-1]
  6. BMBF (SO-PRAN) grants
  7. NERC [noc010009] Funding Source: UKRI

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Polyploidy is a well-described trait in some prokaryotic organisms; however, it is unusual in marine microbes from oligotrophic environments, which typically display a tendency towards genome streamlining. The biogeochemically significant diazotrophic cyanobacterium Trichodesmium is a potential exception. With a relatively large genome and a comparatively high proportion of non-protein-coding DNA, Trichodesmium appears to allocate relatively more resources to genetic material than closely related organisms and microbes within the same environment. Through simultaneous analysis of gene abundance and direct cell counts, we show for the first time that Trichodesmium spp. can also be highly polyploid, containing as many as 100 genome copies per cell in field-collected samples and >600 copies per cell in laboratory cultures. These findings have implications for the widespread use of the abundance of the nifH gene (encoding a subunit of the N-2-fixing enzyme nitrogenase) as an approach for quantifying the abundance and distribution of marine diazotrophs. Moreover, polyploidy may combine with the unusual genomic characteristics of this genus both in reflecting evolutionary dynamics and influencing phenotypic plasticity and ecological resilience.

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