The team analyzed genetic material from
microbes in a one-of-a-kind archive of water samples collected over 20 years
from Lake Mendota in Wisconsin. Credit: Robin Rohwer/University of Texas at
Austin.
Like
Bill Murray in the movie "Groundhog Day," bacteria species in a
Wisconsin lake are in a kind of endless loop that they can't seem to shake.
Except in this case, it's more like Groundhog Year.
According to a study in Nature Microbiology, researchers found that over the course of a year,
most individual species of bacteria in Lake Mendota rapidly evolve, apparently
in response to dramatically changing seasons.
Gene variants would rise and fall over
generations, yet hundreds of separate species would return, almost fully, to
near copies of what they had been genetically prior to a thousand or so
generations of evolutionary pressures. (Individual microbes have lifespans of
only a few days—not whole seasons—so the scientists' work involved comparing
bacterial genomes to examine changes in species over time.)
This same seasonal change played out
year after year, as if evolution was a movie run back to the beginning each
time and played over again, seemingly getting nowhere.
"I was surprised that such a large
portion of the bacterial community was undergoing this type of change,"
said Robin Rohwer, a postdoctoral researcher at The University of Texas at
Austin in the lab of co-author Brett Baker. "I was hoping to observe just
a couple of cool examples, but there were literally hundreds."
Rohwer led the research, first as a doctoral student working with Trina McMahon at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and then at UT.
Lake
Mendota changes greatly from season to season—during the winter, it's covered
in ice, and during the summer, it's covered in algae. Within the same bacterial species, strains that are better adapted to one set of
environmental conditions will outcompete other strains for a season, while
other strains will get their chance to shine during different seasons.
The team used a one-of-a-kind archive of
471 water samples collected over 20 years from Lake Mendota by McMahon, Rohwer
and other UW-Madison researchers as part of long-term monitoring projects.
For each water sample, they assembled a
metagenome, all of the genetic sequences from fragments of DNA left behind by
bacteria and other organisms. This resulted in the longest metagenome time
series ever collected from a natural system.
"This study is a total game changer in our understanding of how microbial communities change over time," Baker said. "This is just the beginning of what these data will tell us about microbial ecology and evolution in nature."
This
archive also revealed longer-lasting genetic changes.
In 2012, the lake experienced unusual
conditions: the ice cover melted early, the summer was hotter and drier than
usual, the flow of water from a river that feeds into the lake dwindled, and
algae, which are an important source of organic nitrogen for bacteria, were
more scarce than usual.
As Rohwer and the team discovered, many
of the bacteria in the lake that year experienced a major shift in genes
related to nitrogen metabolism, possibly due to the scarcity of algae.
"I thought, out of hundreds of bacteria, I might find one or two with a long-term shift," Rohwer said. "But instead, one in five had big sequence changes that played out over years. We were only able to dig deep into one species, but some of those other species probably also had major gene changes."
Most species of bacteria in Lake Mendota
rapidly evolved with the change of seasons, returning to a similar state every
year, for 20 years. The blue dots represent how much individual species within
the genus Nanopelagicus changed genetically over time. The black line
represents a 6-month moving average. Credit: University of Texas at Austin
Climate
scientists predict more extreme weather events—like the hot, dry summer
experienced at Lake Mendota in 2012—for the midwestern U.S. during the coming
years.
"Climate change is slowly shifting
the seasons and average temperatures, but also causing more abrupt, extreme weather events," Rohwer said. "We don't know exactly how
microbes will respond to climate change, but our study suggests they will evolve in response
to both these gradual and abrupt changes."
Unlike
another famous bacterial evolution experiment at UT, the Long-Term Evolution Experiment, Rohwer and Baker's study involved bacterial
evolution under complex and constantly changing conditions in nature. The
researchers used the supercomputing resources at the Texas Advanced Computing
Center (TACC) to reconstruct bacterial genomes from short sequences of DNA in the water samples.
The same work that took a couple of months to complete at TACC would have taken 34 years with a laptop computer, Rohwer estimated, involving over 30,000 genomes from about 2,800 different species.
The team analyzed genetic material from
microbes in a one-of-a-kind archive of water samples collected over 20 years
from Lake Mendota in Wisconsin. Credit: Robin Rohwer/University of Texas at
Austin.
"Imagine
each species' genome is a book, and each little DNA fragment is a
sentence," Rohwer said. "Each sample has hundreds of books, all cut
up into these sentences. To reassemble each book, you have to figure out which
book each sentence came from and put them back together in order."
Other co-authors of the new study are
Mark Kirkpatrick at UT; Sarahi Garcia of Carl von Ossietzky University of
Oldenburg (Germany) and Stockholm University; and Matthew Kellom of the U.S.
Department of Energy's Joint Genome Institute.
This is one of two related papers published in the journal; the companion paper focuses on the ecology and evolution of viruses from the same lake samples.
by University of Texas at Austin
Source: Lake bacteria evolve like clockwork with the seasons, study reveals
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