Login / Signup

Novel trends of genome evolution in highly complex tropical sponge microbiomes.

Joseph B KellyDavid E CarlsonJun Siong LowRobert W Thacker
Published in: Microbiome (2022)
These results illustrate patterns of genome evolution within highly complex microbiomes that illuminate how associations with hosts are maintained. The metabolic redundancy within the microbiomes could help buffer the hosts from changes in the ambient chemical and physical regimes and from fluctuations in the population sizes of the individual microbial strains that make up the microbiome. Additionally, the enrichment of ELPs and depletion of LPS and cellular motility genes provide a model for how alternative strategies to virulence can evolve in microbiomes undergoing mixed-mode transmission that do not ultimately result in higher levels of damage (i.e., pathogenicity) to the host. Our last set of results provides evidence that sterol biosynthesis in Ircinia-associated bacteria is widespread and that these molecules are important for the survival of bacteria in highly complex Ircinia microbiomes. Video Abstract.
Keyphrases
  • biofilm formation
  • escherichia coli
  • genome wide
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • air pollution
  • inflammatory response
  • mental health
  • microbial community
  • particulate matter
  • gene expression
  • anti inflammatory
  • cystic fibrosis