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Selective cell lysis pressure on rare and abundant prokaryotic taxa across a shelf-to-slope continuum in the Northern South China Sea.

Lu LiuKevin Xu ZhongQi ChenYu WangTing ZhangNianzhi JiaoQiang Zheng
Published in: Applied and environmental microbiology (2023)
Virus-induced host lysis contributes up to 40% of total prokaryotic mortality and plays crucial roles in shaping microbial composition and diversity in the ocean. Nonetheless, what taxon-specific cell lysis is caused by viruses remains to be studied. The present study, therefore, examined the taxon-specific cell lysis and estimated its contribution to the variations in the rare and abundant microbial taxa. The results demonstrate that taxon-specific mortality differed in surface and bottom of the coastal environment. In addition, active rare taxa are more susceptible to heightened lytic pressure and suggested the importance of viral lysis in regulating the microbial community composition. These results improve our understanding of bottom-up (abiotic environmental variables) and top-down (viral lysis) controls contributing to microbial community assembly in the ocean.
Keyphrases
  • microbial community
  • antibiotic resistance genes
  • single cell
  • cell therapy
  • cardiovascular events
  • risk factors
  • climate change
  • heavy metals
  • high glucose
  • endothelial cells
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • risk assessment