275 research outputs found

    Perspectives and Challenges in Microbial Communities Metabolic Modeling

    Get PDF
    Bacteria have evolved to efficiently interact each other, forming complex entities known as microbial communities. These “super-organisms” play a central role in maintaining the health of their eukaryotic hosts and in the cycling of elements like carbon and nitrogen. However, despite their crucial importance, the mechanisms that influence the functioning of microbial communities and their relationship with environmental perturbations are obscure. The study of microbial communities was boosted by tremendous advances in sequencing technologies, and in particular by the possibility to determine genomic sequences of bacteria directly from environmental samples. Indeed, with the advent of metagenomics, it has become possible to investigate, on a previously unparalleled scale, the taxonomical composition and the functional genetic elements present in a specific community. Notwithstanding, the metagenomic approach per se suffers some limitations, among which the impossibility of modeling molecular-level (e.g., metabolic) interactions occurring between community members, as well as their effects on the overall stability of the entire system. The family of constraint-based methods, such as flux balance analysis, has been fruitfully used to translate genome sequences in predictive, genome-scale modeling platforms. Although these techniques have been initially developed for analyzing single, well-known model organisms, their recent improvements allowed engaging in multi-organism in silico analyses characterized by a considerable predictive capability. In the face of these advances, here we focus on providing an overview of the possibilities and challenges related to the modeling of metabolic interactions within a bacterial community, discussing the feasibility and the perspectives of this kind of analysis in the (near) future

    CONTIGuator: a bacterial genomes finishing tool for structural insights on draft genomes

    Get PDF
    Recent developments in sequencing technologies have given the opportunity to sequence many bacterial genomes with limited cost and labor, compared to previous techniques. However, a limiting step of genome sequencing is the finishing process, needed to infer the relative position of each contig and close sequencing gaps. An additional degree of complexity is given by bacterial species harboring more than one replicon, which are not contemplated by the currently available programs. The availability of a large number of bacterial genomes allows geneticists to use complete genomes (possibly from the same species) as templates for contigs mapping

    Replicon-dependent bacterial genome evolution: the case of Sinorhizobium meliloti

    Get PDF
    Many bacterial species, such as the alphaproteobacterium Sinorhizobium meliloti, are characterized by open pangenomes and contain multipartite genomes consisting of a chromosome and other large-sized replicons, such as chromids, megaplasmids, and plasmids. The evolutionary forces in both functional and structural aspects that shape the pangenome of species with multipartite genomes are still poorly understood. Therefore, we sequenced the genomes of 10 new S. meliloti strains, analyzed with four publicly available additional genomic sequences. Results indicated that the three main replicons present in these strains (a chromosome, a chromid, and a megaplasmid) partly show replicon-specific behaviors related to strain differentiation. In particular, the p SymB chromid was shown to be a hot spot for positively selected genes, and, unexpectedly, genes resident in the pSymB chromid were also found to be more widespread in distant taxa than those located in the other replicons. Moreover, through the exploitation of a DNA proximity network, a series of conserved "DNA backbones" were found to shape the evolution of the genome structure, with the rest of the genome experiencing rearrangements. The presented data allow depicting a scenario where the pSymB chromid has a distinctive role in intraspecies differentiation and in evolution through positive selection, whereas the pSymA megaplasmid mostly contributes to structural fluidity and to the emergence of new functions, indicating a specific evolutionary role for each replicon in the pangenome evolution. © 2013 The Author(s)

    Sequencing and analysis of plasmids pAV1 and pAV2 ofAcinetobacter venetianus VE-C3 involved in diesel fuel degradation

    Get PDF
    Acinetobacter venetianus strain VE-C3 was isolated in the Venice lagoon (Italy) as a strain able to degrade diesel fuel oil. This strain possesses genes of the alkane monoxygenase complex responsible forn-alkane degradation and carries two plasmids, pAV1 (10820 bp) and pAV2 (15135 bp), which were supposed from the analysis of Alk mutant strains to harbour genetic determinants for hydrocarbon degradation. In this work we determined the nucleotide sequence of both plasmids and showed the presence of a putative aldehyde dehydrogenase gene, essential for hydrocarbon degradation, on plasmid pAV2, and of an ORF similar toalkL gene present on pAV1 plasmid. These data, combined with genetic reports indicating that strains lacking one of the two plasmids or carrying transposon insertion on pAV1, are defective inn-alkane degradation, suggest a complex genomic organisation of genes involved in alkane degradation inA. venetianus VE-C3. In this bacterium these genes are carried by both the chromosome and the plasmids, while inAcinetobacter sp. strain ADP1 and M1 all the genes for alkane monoxygenase complex are located only on the chromosome

    Genetic diversity and salt tolerance of bacterial communities from two Tunisian soils

    Get PDF
    Microbial ecology studies on arid soils are particularly important for the analysis of biological functions during desertification. Although much is known about the arid saline flora, few researches have directly compared the bacterial communities of saline arid soils with cultivated soils in Northern Africa. Bacterial communities present in two soils from Soliman (north of Tunisia), one salty and neglected, and the other cultivated, were investigated by using both cultivation dependent and independent approaches. The first approach was used to assess the presence of salt tolerant bacteria and the relationships among salt (NaCl) resistance phenotype, soil characteristics and phylogenetic assignment of strains. Total community analysis, performed by T-RFLP on total DNA, was carried out to investigate the relationships between total community fingerprinting with cultivated isolates diversity. The cultivated isolates from salty soil were more genetically diverse, harbouring strains that can grow at high salt concentration. Moreover, the salt resistance of isolates was found not to be related to any particular phylogenetic group, being widespread among isolates belonging to different bacterial subdivisions. Ribotype richness, evaluated as number of different T-RFLP bands (TRFs), was shown to be higher in the agricultural soil than in the salty soil and several agricultural soil-specific TRFs were detected
    corecore