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  4. Strain-level diversity drives alternative community types in millimetre-scale granular biofilms
 
research article

Strain-level diversity drives alternative community types in millimetre-scale granular biofilms

Leventhal, Gabriel E.
•
Boix, Caries
•
Kuechler, Urs
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November 1, 2018
Nature Microbiology

Microbial communities are often highly diverse in their composition, both at a coarse-grained taxonomic level, such as genus, and at a highly resolved level, such as strains, within species. This variability can be driven by either extrinsic factors such as temperature and or by intrinsic ones, for example demographic fluctuations or ecological interactions. The relative contributions of these factors and the taxonomic level at which they influence community composition remain poorly understood, in part because of the difficulty in identifying true community replicates assembled under the same environmental parameters. Here, we address this problem using an activated granular sludge reactor in which millimetre-scale biofilm granules represent true community replicates. Differences in composition are then expected to be driven primarily by biotic factors. Using 142 shotgun metagenomes of single biofilm granules we found that, at the commonly used genus-level resolution, community replicates varied much more in their composition than would be expected from neutral assembly processes. This variation did not translate into any clear partitioning into discrete community types, that is, distinct compositional states, such as enterotypes in the human gut. However, a strong partition into community types did emerge at the strain level for the dominant organism: genotypes of Candidatus Accumulibacter that coexisted in the metacommunity (the reactor) excluded each other within community replicates (granules). Individual granule communities maintained a significant lineage structure, whereby the strain phylogeny of Accumulibacter correlated with the overall composition of the community, indicating a high potential for co-diversification among species and communities. Our results suggest that due to the high functional redundancy and competition between close relatives, alternative community types are most probably observed at the level of recently differentiated genotypes but not at higher orders of genetic resolution.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41564-018-0242-3
Web of Science ID

WOS:000448229100016

Author(s)
Leventhal, Gabriel E.
Boix, Caries
Kuechler, Urs
Enke, Tim N.
Sliwerska, Elzbieta
Holliger, Christof  
Cordero, Otto X.
Date Issued

2018-11-01

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP

Published in
Nature Microbiology
Volume

3

Issue

11

Start page

1295

End page

1303

Subjects

Microbiology

•

biological phosphorus removal

•

candidatus accumulibacter clades

•

polyphosphate kinase genes

•

microbial community

•

accumulating organisms

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comparative genomics

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activated-sludge

•

population

•

biogeography

•

sequence

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBE  
Available on Infoscience
December 13, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/152519
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