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Genomic and functional adaptation in surface ocean planktonic prokaryotes.

Authors :
Yooseph, Shibu
Nealson, Kenneth H.
Rusch, Douglas B.
McCrow, John P.
Dupont, Christopher L.
Kim, Maria
Johnson, Justin
Montgomery, Robert
Ferriera, Steve
Beeson, Karen
Williamson, Shannon J.
Tovchigrechko, Andrey
Allen, Andrew E.
Zeigler, Lisa A.
Sutton, Granger
Eisenstadt, Eric
Rogers, Yu-Hui
Friedman, Robert
Frazier, Marvin
Venter, J. Craig
Source :
Nature; 11/4/2010, Vol. 468 Issue 7320, p60-66, 7p, 2 Diagrams, 2 Graphs
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

The understanding of marine microbial ecology and metabolism has been hampered by the paucity of sequenced reference genomes. To this end, we report the sequencing of 137 diverse marine isolates collected from around the world. We analysed these sequences, along with previously published marine prokaryotic genomes, in the context of marine metagenomic data, to gain insights into the ecology of the surface ocean prokaryotic picoplankton (0.1-3.0 μm size range). The results suggest that the sequenced genomes define two microbial groups: one composed of only a few taxa that are nearly always abundant in picoplanktonic communities, and the other consisting of many microbial taxa that are rarely abundant. The genomic content of the second group suggests that these microbes are capable of slow growth and survival in energy-limited environments, and rapid growth in energy-rich environments. By contrast, the abundant and cosmopolitan picoplanktonic prokaryotes for which there is genomic representation have smaller genomes, are probably capable of only slow growth and seem to be relatively unable to sense or rapidly acclimate to energy-rich conditions. Their genomic features also lead us to propose that one method used to avoid predation by viruses and/or bacterivores is by means of slow growth and the maintenance of low biomass. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
468
Issue :
7320
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
54960924
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature09530