Cataloging Viral Diversity from Nonaxenic Terrestrial Cyanobacteria Cultures
Abstract
Viruses are exceedingly common, but little is known about their diversity let alone how they behave in extreme environments, and whether viruses facilitate adaptation of their hosts to harsh conditions. To set a foundation for understanding of these understudied viral-host interactions, we created a catalog of viruses through analysis of metagenomes from 50 unialgal but nonaxenic Cyanobacteria cultures with 47 cultures isolated from various terrestrial habitats, including desert soil and rock surfaces, tropical soil, and vernal pools. These cultures represent low diversity microbial consortia dominated by the terrestrial Cyanobacteria and its associated cyanosphere microbiome containing heterotrophic microbes. We identified viral sequences in metagenomes, grouped these into viral operational taxonomic units (vOTUs) and then placed vOTUs into viral clusters (VCs). We also calculated vOTU relative abundance and predicted possible bacterial hosts. In total we predicted 814 viral sequences representing 726 vOTUs. We assigned putative taxonomy to 72 of the 814 putative viral sequences; these were distributed into 15 VCs — mostly assigned to the recently abolished Caudovirales order (now Caudoviricetes class) of viruses. We found that nonaxenic cultures were dominated by unclassified and unclustered viral sequences. Furthermore, we predicted putative bacterial hosts for 211 vOTUs, with the majority of viruses predicted to infect a Proteobacteria (now Pseudomonadota) host. Overall, while limited, these results are consistent with the notion that both viruses and Cyanobacteria isolated from extreme environments are underrepresented in reference datasets. This work increases knowledge of viral diversity and sets a foundation for future exploration of viruses associated with terrestrial Cyanobacteria and their heterotroph associates, such as connecting specific viruses to critical cycling processes and investigating their metabolic functions.
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