Back to Search Start Over

Anomalous phylogenetic behavior of ribosomal proteins in metagenome assembled asgard archaea

Authors :
Fernando D. K. Tria
Ruixin Zhu
Chuanlun Zhang
William Martin
Shijulal Nelson-Sathi
Michael Knopp
Sriram G. Garg
Nils Kapust
Weili Lin
Sven B. Gould
Lu Fan
Source :
Genome Biology and Evolution, Genome Biol Evol
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Metagenomic studies permit the exploration of microbial diversity in a defined habitat, and binning procedures enable phylogenomic analyses, taxon description, and even phenotypic characterizations in the absence of morphological evidence. Such lineages include asgard archaea, which were initially reported to represent archaea with eukaryotic cell complexity, although the first images of such an archaeon show simple cells with prokaryotic characteristics. However, these metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) might suffer from data quality problems not encountered in sequences from cultured organisms due to two common analytical procedures of bioinformatics: assembly of metagenomic sequences and binning of assembled sequences on the basis of innate sequence properties and abundance across samples. Consequently, genomic sequences of distantly related taxa, or domains, can in principle be assigned to the same MAG and result in chimeric sequences. The impacts of low-quality or chimeric MAGs on phylogenomic and metabolic prediction remain unknown. Debates that asgard archaeal data are contaminated with eukaryotic sequences are overshadowed by the lack of evidence indicating that individual asgard MAGs stem from the same chromosome. Here, we show that universal proteins including ribosomal proteins of asgard archaeal MAGs fail to meet the basic phylogenetic criterion fulfilled by genome sequences of cultured archaea investigated to date: These proteins do not share common evolutionary histories to the same extent as pure culture genomes do, pointing to a chimeric nature of asgard archaeal MAGs. Our analysis suggests that some asgard archaeal MAGs represent unnatural constructs, genome-like patchworks of genes resulting from assembly and/or the binning process.

Details

ISSN :
17596653
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome Biology and Evolution
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5860422eb9ee95da72a831f64dd7cf77
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evaa238