生物
微观世界
生态系统
生态学
放线菌门
营养水平
地球微生物学
微生物种群生物学
生态演替
原绿藻
土壤水分
微生物生态学
细菌
环境生物技术
联合球菌
遗传学
蓝藻
16S核糖体RNA
作者
Christian Santos‐Medellín,Steven J. Blazewicz,Jennifer Pett‐Ridge,Mary K. Firestone,Joanne Emerson
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41559-023-02207-5
摘要
As central members of soil trophic networks, viruses have the potential to drive substantial microbial mortality and nutrient turnover. Pinpointing viral contributions to terrestrial ecosystem processes remains a challenge, as temporal dynamics are difficult to unravel in the spatially and physicochemically heterogeneous soil environment. In Mediterranean grasslands, the first rainfall after seasonal drought provides an ecosystem reset, triggering microbial activity during a tractable window for capturing short-term dynamics. Here, we simulated precipitation in microcosms from four distinct dry grassland soils and generated 144 viromes, 84 metagenomes and 84 16S ribosomal RNA gene amplicon datasets to characterize viral, prokaryotic and relic DNA dynamics over 10 days. Vastly different viral communities in each soil followed remarkably similar successional trajectories. Wet-up triggered a significant increase in viral richness, followed by extensive compositional turnover. Temporal succession in prokaryotic communities was much less pronounced, perhaps suggesting differences in the scales of activity captured by viromes (representing recently produced, ephemeral viral particles) and total DNA. Still, differences in the relative abundances of Actinobacteria (enriched in dry soils) and Proteobacteria (enriched in wetted soils) matched those of their predicted phages, indicating viral predation of dominant bacterial taxa. Rewetting also rapidly depleted relic DNA, which subsequently reaccumulated, indicating substantial new microbial mortality in the days after wet-up, particularly of the taxa putatively under phage predation. Production of abundant, diverse viral particles via microbial host cell lysis appears to be a conserved feature of the early response to soil rewetting, and results suggest the potential for ‘Cull-the-Winner’ dynamics, whereby viruses infect and cull but do not decimate dominant host populations. Characterizing the responses of viral, prokaryotic and relic DNA dynamics to simulated precipitation on dry grassland soils, the authors show that soil viral communities follow remarkably similar successional patterns, despite large differences in composition.
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