4.8 Article

Niche adaptation promoted the evolutionary diversification of tiny ocean predators

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2020955118

关键词

protists; MAST-4; biogeography; ecoevolution; phagocytosis

资金

  1. Spanish National Program Formacion de Personal Investigador 2016 (Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion, Spain) [BES-2016-076317]
  2. Ramon y Cajal fellowship (Ministerio de Economia y Empresa, Spain) [RYC-2013-12554]
  3. project INTERACTOMICS (Unveiling Core Ecological Interactions in Marine Microbial Communities Using Omics Approaches) (MINECO, Spain) [CTM2015-69936-P]
  4. MicroEcoSystems (Research Council of Norway) [240904]
  5. MINIME (Microbial Evolution and Population Genomics in a Changing Ocean) (Agencia Estatal de Investigacion Spain) [PID2019-105775RB-I00]
  6. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under Marie SkodowskaCurie Grant [675752]
  7. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [675752] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The research reveals significant differences in distribution and genomic content among the oceanic unicellular eukaryotic predator MAST-4, suggesting potential correlation with adaptation to temperature and prey type.
Unicellular eukaryotic predators play a crucial role in the functioning of the ocean ecosystem by recycling nutrients and energy that are channeled to upper trophic levels. Traditionally, these evolutionarily diverse organisms have been combined into a single functional group (heterotrophic flagellates), overlooking their organismal differences. Here, we investigated four evolutionarily related species belonging to one cosmopolitan group of uncultured marine picoeukaryotic predators: marine stramenopiles (MAST)-4 (species A, B, C, and E). Co-occurrence and distribution analyses in the global surface ocean indicated contrasting patterns in MAST-4A and C, suggesting adaptation to different temperatures. We then investigated whether these spatial distribution patterns were mirrored by MAST-4 genomic content using single-cell genomics. Analyses of 69 single cells recovered 66 to 83% of the MAST-4A/B/C/E genomes, which displayed substantial interspecies divergence. MAST-4 genomes were similar in terms of broad gene functional categories, but they differed in enzymes of ecological relevance, such as glycoside hydrolases (GHs), which are part of the food degradation machinery in MAST-4. Interestingly, MAST-4 species featuring a similar GH composition (A and C) coexcluded each other in the surface global ocean, while species with a different set of GHs (B and C) appeared to be able to coexist, suggesting further niche diversification associated with prey digestion. We propose that differential niche adaptation to temperature and prey type has promoted adaptive evolutionary diversification in MAST-4. We show that minute ocean predators from the same phylogenetic group may have different biogeography and genomic content, which needs to be accounted for to better comprehend marine food webs.

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