Habitat adaptation drives speciation of a Streptomyces species with distinct habitats and disparate geographic origins

 

Enregistré dans:
Détails bibliographiques
Auteurs: Wang, Jiao, Li, Yisong, Pinto Tomás, Adrián A., Cheng, Kun, Huang, Ying
Format: artículo original
Date de publication:2022
Description:Microbial diversification is driven by geographic and ecological factors, but how the relative importance of these factors varies among species, geographic scales, and habitats remains unclear. Streptomyces, a genus of antibiotic-producing, spore-forming, and widespread bacteria, offers a robust model for identifying the processes underlying population differentiation. We examined the population structure of 37 Streptomyces olivaceus strains isolated from various sources, showing that they diverged into two habitat-associated (free-living and insect-associated) and geographically disparate lineages. More frequent gene flow within than between the lineages confirmed genetic isolation in S. olivaceus. Geographic isolation could not explain the genetic isolation; instead, habitat type was a strong predictor of genetic distance when controlling for geographic distance. The identification of habitat-specific genetic variations, including genes involved in regulation, resource use, and secondary metabolism, suggested a significant role of habitat adaptation in the diversification process. Physiological assays revealed fitness trade-offs under different environmental conditions in the two lineages. Notably, insect-associated isolates could outcompete free-living isolates in a free-iron-deficient environment. Furthermore, substrate (e.g., sialic acid and glycogen) utilization but not thermal traits differentiated the two lineages. Overall, our results argue that adaptive processes drove ecological divergence among closely related streptomycetes, eventually leading to dispersal limitation and gene flow barriers between the lineages. S. olivaceus may best be considered a species complex consisting of two cryptic species.
Pays:Kérwá
Institution:Universidad de Costa Rica
Repositorio:Kérwá
Langue:Inglés
OAI Identifier:oai:kerwa.ucr.ac.cr:10669/86833
Accès en ligne:https://journals.asm.org/doi/pdf/10.1128/mbio.02781-21
https://hdl.handle.net/10669/86833
Access Level:acceso abierto
Mots-clés:Actinobacteria
Ecología Microbiana
Genética de poblaciones
Streptomyces
Gene flow
Habitat adaptation
Lifestyle
Population genetics
Speciation