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Genomic factors shape carbon and nitrogen metabolic niche breadth across Saccharomycotina yeasts.

Dana A OpulenteAbigail Leavitt LaBellaMarie-Claire HarrisonJohn F WoltersChao LiuYonglin LiJacek KominekJacob Lucas SteenwykHayley R StonemanJenna VanDenAvondCaroline R MillerQuinn K LangdonMargarida SilvaCarla GonçalvesEmily J UbbelohdeYuanning LiKelly V BuhMartin JarzynaMax A B HaaseCarlos A RosaNeža ČadežDiego LibkindJeremy H DeVirgilioAmanda Beth HulfachorCletus P KurtzmanJosé Paulo SampaioPaula GonçalvesXiao-Fan ZhouXing-Xing ShenMarizeth GroenewaldAntonis RokasChris Todd Hittinger
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2024)
Organisms exhibit extensive variation in ecological niche breadth, from very narrow (specialists) to very broad (generalists). Two general paradigms have been proposed to explain this variation: (i) trade-offs between performance efficiency and breadth and (ii) the joint influence of extrinsic (environmental) and intrinsic (genomic) factors. We assembled genomic, metabolic, and ecological data from nearly all known species of the ancient fungal subphylum Saccharomycotina (1154 yeast strains from 1051 species), grown in 24 different environmental conditions, to examine niche breadth evolution. We found that large differences in the breadth of carbon utilization traits between yeasts stem from intrinsic differences in genes encoding specific metabolic pathways, but we found limited evidence for trade-offs. These comprehensive data argue that intrinsic factors shape niche breadth variation in microbes.
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