4 samples from Pacific Ocean uncultured phage metagenome

MGnify Record MGYS00001836

Description
Anaerobic oil degrading sediment metagenome - anaerobic subsurface sediments containing Monterey Formation oil and hydrocarbon gasses; sample description: Shane Seep; Coal Oil Point hydrocarbon seep field, offshore Goleta, CA. 0.22 micron filtered; CsCl-gradient; DNAse treatment. ANME metagenome - carbonate mound formed by hydrate crystalization and expansion; actively releasing methane from sediments; sample description: 0.22 micron filtered; CsCl-gradient; DNAse treatment, amplified via MDA with phi29 polymerase. Methanogenic sediments metagenome - anoxic sediments from center of Santa Barbara Basin. Basin water exhibits suboxic conditions at sampling depth. Subsurface environment detailed in refs 1&2. Methanogenesis confirmed through intermittent incubation headspace analyses; sample description: 0.22 micron filtered; CsCl-gradient; DNAse treatment. Benthic methanotrophic mats metagenome - sample cultivated ~1 month above active hydrocarbon gas vent; sample description: 0.22 micron filtered; CsCl-gradient; DNAse treatment.


Related Publications

Pubmed Record 25798780

Abstract Text
In the evolutionary arms race between microbes, their parasites, and their neighbours, the capacity for rapid protein diversification is a potent weapon. Diversity-generating retroelements (DGRs) use mutagenic reverse transcription and retrohoming to generate myriad variants of a target gene. Originally discovered in pathogens, these retroelements have been identified in bacteria and their viruses, but never in archaea. Here we report the discovery of intact DGRs in two distinct intraterrestrial archaeal systems: a novel virus that appears to infect archaea in the marine subsurface, and, separately, two uncultivated nanoarchaea from the terrestrial subsurface. The viral DGR system targets putative tail fibre ligand-binding domains, potentially generating >10(18) protein variants. The two single-cell nanoarchaeal genomes each possess >=4 distinct DGRs. Against an expected background of low genome-wide mutation rates, these results demonstrate a previously unsuspected potential for rapid, targeted sequence diversification in intraterrestrial archaea and their viruses.