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Diversity patterns and activity of uncultured marine heterotrophic flagellates unveiled with pyrosequencing.

Authors :
Logares R
Audic S
Santini S
Pernice MC
de Vargas C
Massana R
Source :
The ISME journal [ISME J] 2012 Oct; Vol. 6 (10), pp. 1823-33. Date of Electronic Publication: 2012 Apr 26.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Flagellated heterotrophic microeukaryotes have key roles for the functioning of marine ecosystems as they channel large amounts of organic carbon to the upper trophic levels and control the population sizes of bacteria and archaea. Still, we know very little on the diversity patterns of most groups constituting this evolutionary heterogeneous assemblage. Here, we investigate 11 groups of uncultured flagellates known as MArine STramenopiles (MASTs). MASTs are ecologically very important and branch at the base of stramenopiles. We explored the diversity patterns of MASTs using pyrosequencing (18S rDNA) in coastal European waters. We found that MAST groups range from highly to lowly diversified. Pyrosequencing (hereafter '454') allowed us to approach to the limits of taxonomic diversity for all MAST groups, which varied in one order of magnitude (tens to hundreds) in terms of operational taxonomic units (98% similarity). We did not evidence large differences in activity, as indicated by ratios of DNA:RNA-reads. Most groups were strictly planktonic, although we found some groups that were active in sediments and even in anoxic waters. The proportion of reads per size fraction indicated that most groups were composed of very small cells (∼2-5 μm). In addition, phylogenetically different assemblages appeared to be present in different size fractions, depths and geographic zones. Thus, MAST diversity seems to be highly partitioned in spatial scales. Altogether, our results shed light on these ecologically very important but poorly known groups of uncultured marine flagellates.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1751-7370
Volume :
6
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The ISME journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
22534609
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ismej.2012.36