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Roles of bacteriophages, plasmids and CRISPR immunity in microbial community dynamics revealed using time-series integrated meta-omics

Authors :
Martinez Arbas, Susana(*)
Narayanasamy, Shaman(*)
Herold, Malte
Lebrun, Laura
Hoopmann, Michael R.
Li, Sujun
Lam, Tony J.
Kunath, Benoît
Hicks, Nathan D.
Liu, Cindy M.
Price, Lance B.
Laczny, Cedric Christian
Gillece, John D.
Schupp, James M.
Keim, Paul S.
Moritz, Robert L.
Faust, Karoline
Tang, Haixu
Ye, Yuzhen
Skupin, Alexander
May, Patrick
Muller, Emilie E. L.
Wilmes, Paul
Martinez Arbas, Susana(*)
Narayanasamy, Shaman(*)
Herold, Malte
Lebrun, Laura
Hoopmann, Michael R.
Li, Sujun
Lam, Tony J.
Kunath, Benoît
Hicks, Nathan D.
Liu, Cindy M.
Price, Lance B.
Laczny, Cedric Christian
Gillece, John D.
Schupp, James M.
Keim, Paul S.
Moritz, Robert L.
Faust, Karoline
Tang, Haixu
Ye, Yuzhen
Skupin, Alexander
May, Patrick
Muller, Emilie E. L.
Wilmes, Paul
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Viruses and plasmids (invasive mobile genetic elements (iMGEs)) have important roles in shaping microbial communities, but their dynamic interactions with CRISPR-based immunity remain unresolved. We analysed generation-resolved iMGE–host dynamics spanning one and a half years in a microbial consortium from a biological wastewater treatment plant using integrated meta-omics. We identified 31 bacterial metagenome-assembled genomes encoding complete CRISPR–Cas systems and their corresponding iMGEs. CRISPR-targeted plasmids outnumbered their bacteriophage counterparts by at least fivefold, highlighting the importance of CRISPR-mediated defence against plasmids. Linear modelling of our time-series data revealed that the variation in plasmid abundance over time explained more of the observed community dynamics than phages. Community-scale CRISPR-based plasmid–host and phage–host interaction networks revealed an increase in CRISPR-mediated interactions coinciding with a decrease in the dominant ‘Candidatus Microthrix parvicella’ population. Protospacers were enriched in sequences targeting genes involved in the transmission of iMGEs. Understanding the factors shaping the fitness of specific populations is necessary to devise control strategies for undesirable species and to predict or explain community-wide phenotypes.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1229975944
Document Type :
Electronic Resource