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Virus diversity and activity is driven by snowmelt and host dynamics in a high-altitude watershed soil ecosystem.
- Source :
- Microbiome; vol 11, iss 1
- Publication Year :
- 2023
-
Abstract
- BACKGROUND: Viruses impact nearly all organisms on Earth, including microbial communities and their associated biogeochemical processes. In soils, highly diverse viral communities have been identified, with a global distribution seemingly driven by multiple biotic and abiotic factors, especially soil temperature and moisture. However, our current understanding of the stability of soil viral communities across time and their response to strong seasonal changes in environmental parameters remains limited. Here, we investigated the diversity and activity of environmental soil DNA and RNA viruses, focusing especially on bacteriophages, across dynamics seasonal changes in a snow-dominated mountainous watershed by examining paired metagenomes and metatranscriptomes. RESULTS: We identified a large number of DNA and RNA viruses taxonomically divergent from existing environmental viruses, including a significant proportion of fungal RNA viruses, and a large and unsuspected diversity of positive single-stranded RNA phages (Leviviricetes), highlighting the under-characterization of the global soil virosphere. Among these, we were able to distinguish subsets of active DNA and RNA phages that changed across seasons, consistent with a seed-bank viral community structure in which new phage activity, for example, replication and host lysis, is sequentially triggered by changes in environmental conditions. At the population level, we further identified virus-host dynamics matching two existing ecological models: Kill-The-Winner which proposes that lytic phages are actively infecting abundant bacteria, and Piggyback-The-Persistent which argues that when the host is growing slowly, it is more beneficial to remain in a dormant state. The former was associated with summer months of high and rapid microbial activity, and the latter with winter months of limited and slow host growth. CONCLUSION: Taken together, these results suggest that the high diversity of viruses in soils is likely as
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Journal :
- Microbiome; vol 11, iss 1
- Notes :
- application/pdf, Microbiome vol 11, iss 1
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1410327426
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource