Published September 23, 2011 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Substrate Type Determines Metagenomic Profiles from Diverse Chemical Habitats

  • 1. Flinders University
  • 2. University of Technology Sydney
  • 3. University of Chicago
  • 4. San Diego State University

Description

Environmental parameters drive phenotypic and genotypic frequency variations in microbial communities and thus control the extent and structure of microbial diversity. We tested the extent to which microbial community composition changes are controlled by shifting physiochemical properties within a hypersaline lagoon. We sequenced four sediment metagenomes from the Coorong, South Australia from samples which varied in salinity by 99 Practical Salinity Units (PSU), an order of magnitude in ammonia concentration and two orders of magnitude in microbial abundance. Despite the marked divergence in environmental parameters observed between samples, hierarchical clustering of taxonomic and metabolic profiles of these metagenomes showed striking similarity between the samples (>89%). Comparison of these profiles to those derived from a wide variety of publically available datasets demonstrated that the Coorong sediment metagenomes were similar to other sediment, soil, biofilm and microbial mat samples regardless of salinity (>85% similarity). Overall, clustering of solid substrate and water metagenomes into discrete similarity groups based on functional potential indicated that the dichotomy between water and solid matrices is a fundamental determinant of community microbial metabolism that is not masked by salinity, nutrient concentration or microbial abundance.

Files

journal.pone.0025173.pdf

Files (709.4 kB)

Name Size Download all
Article
md5:1653383d4f393b575f4f32d7dfc18bd2
687.0 kB Preview Download
md5:cf489228d1dbec59092879f1038932c6
22.3 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0025173
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10786

Funding

Australian Research Council
Discovery Grant

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Ecology and Evolution