Nearly Identical 16S rRNA Sequences Recovered from Lakes in North America and Europe Indicate the Existence of Clades of Globally Distributed Freshwater Bacteria
Abstract:We compared bacterial 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequences recovered from Lake Loosdrecht, the Netherlands, to reported sequences from lakes in Alaska and New York State. In each of the three lake systems, which differ in pH and trophic state, some sequence types were found without related sequences (sequence identity < 90%) in the data sets from the other two systems. Two sequences in the Actinomycetes and Verrucomicrobia radiations were more closely related to sequences from the New York lakes data set than to a… Show more
“…However, there are amino-acid differences between the PRs in this clade. This echoes similar findings of Zwart et al (1998), describing 16S rRNA clades consisting of highly related proteobacteria isolated from different continents. The similarity of PRs isolated from lakes in different parts of the world suggests that these genes are dispersed globally and that they may encode unique functional capabilities enabling successful competition in a wide range of freshwater environments.…”
Section: Sampling Location Primerssupporting
confidence: 91%
“…We, therefore, assigned clades 6 and 7 as SAR11-related clades (Figure 1). Non-marine SAR11s (alphaproteobacterial cluster LD12) were first reported in an arctic lake (Bahr et al, 1996) and are readily detected in other freshwater systems (Zwart et al, 1998(Zwart et al, , 2003Crump et al, 1999). PRs from clades 6 and 7 could be from bacteria related to alphaproteobacterial cluster LD12.…”
Proteorhodopsins (PRs) are light-driven proton pumps that have been found in a variety of marine environments. The goal of this study was to search for PR presence in different freshwater and brackish environments and to explore the diversity of non-marine PR protein. Here, we show that PRs exist in distinctly different aquatic environments, ranging from clear water lakes to peat lakes and in the Baltic Sea. Some of the PRs observed in this study formed unique clades that were not previously observed in marine environments, whereas others were similar to PRs found in non-marine samples of the Global Ocean Sampling (GOS) expedition. Furthermore, the similarity of several PRs isolated from lakes in different parts of the world suggests that these genes are dispersed globally and that they may encode unique functional capabilities enabling successful competition in a wide range of freshwater environments. Phylogenomic analysis of genes found on these GOS scaffolds suggests that some of the freshwater PRs are found in freshwater Flavobacteria and freshwater SAR11-like bacteria.
“…However, there are amino-acid differences between the PRs in this clade. This echoes similar findings of Zwart et al (1998), describing 16S rRNA clades consisting of highly related proteobacteria isolated from different continents. The similarity of PRs isolated from lakes in different parts of the world suggests that these genes are dispersed globally and that they may encode unique functional capabilities enabling successful competition in a wide range of freshwater environments.…”
Section: Sampling Location Primerssupporting
confidence: 91%
“…We, therefore, assigned clades 6 and 7 as SAR11-related clades (Figure 1). Non-marine SAR11s (alphaproteobacterial cluster LD12) were first reported in an arctic lake (Bahr et al, 1996) and are readily detected in other freshwater systems (Zwart et al, 1998(Zwart et al, , 2003Crump et al, 1999). PRs from clades 6 and 7 could be from bacteria related to alphaproteobacterial cluster LD12.…”
Proteorhodopsins (PRs) are light-driven proton pumps that have been found in a variety of marine environments. The goal of this study was to search for PR presence in different freshwater and brackish environments and to explore the diversity of non-marine PR protein. Here, we show that PRs exist in distinctly different aquatic environments, ranging from clear water lakes to peat lakes and in the Baltic Sea. Some of the PRs observed in this study formed unique clades that were not previously observed in marine environments, whereas others were similar to PRs found in non-marine samples of the Global Ocean Sampling (GOS) expedition. Furthermore, the similarity of several PRs isolated from lakes in different parts of the world suggests that these genes are dispersed globally and that they may encode unique functional capabilities enabling successful competition in a wide range of freshwater environments. Phylogenomic analysis of genes found on these GOS scaffolds suggests that some of the freshwater PRs are found in freshwater Flavobacteria and freshwater SAR11-like bacteria.
“…This idea has been supported by studies of aquatic systems (e.g. [Zwart et al, 1998], [Glöckner et al, 2000] and [Zwart et al, 2002]), although there is also evidence that at least some extremophiles have much more restricted distributions ( [Papke et al, 2003] and [Whitaker et al, 2003]). Our ability to detect three OTUs across lakes using Q-PCR, even at low abundance, is consistent with the idea of widespread species distribution.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Similar approaches have revealed a considerable number of unidentified prokaryotes and eukaryotes in freshwater sources (e.g. [Bahr et al, 1996], [Zwart et al, 1998], [Glöckner et al, 2000] and [Crump et al, 2003]), confirming that most microbial species are not routinely cultured ( [Ward et al, 1990] and [Torsvik et al, 2002]). …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…In fact, several recent papers have discussed the possibility that microbial species are globally distributed (e.g. [Zwart et al, 1998], [Zwart et al, 2002], [Finlay, 2002], [Fenchel, 2003], [Papke et al, 2003] and [Whitaker et al, 2003]). …”
Biofilm Components
Formation and Structure of Biofilms
Identification of Biofilm Bacteria
Assessment of Metabolic Activities
Community Interactions
Examples of Natural Biofilms
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