Bacteria from phyla lacking cultivated representatives are widespread in
natural systems and some have very small genomes. Here we test the
hypothesis that these cells are small and thus might be enriched by
filtration for coupled genomic and ultrastructural characterization.
Metagenomic analysis of groundwater that passed through a ~0.2-μm filter
reveals a wide diversity of bacteria from the WWE3, OP11 and OD1
candidate phyla. Cryogenic transmission electron microscopy demonstrates
that, despite morphological variation, cells consistently have small
cell size (0.009±0.002 μm3). Ultrastructural features
potentially related to cell and genome size minimization include tightly
packed spirals inferred to be DNA, few densely packed ribosomes and a
variety of pili-like structures that might enable inter-organism
interactions that compensate for biosynthetic capacities inferred to be
missing from genomic data. The results suggest that extremely small cell
size is associated with these relatively common, yet little known
organisms.
Cryo-electron tomography images from 3D reconstructions of ultra-small bacteria.
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Reloj
lunes, 16 de marzo de 2015
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