Symbiosis between Candidatus Patescibacteria and Archaea Discovered in Wastewater-Treating Bioreactors

Kyohei Kuroda, Kyosuke Yamamoto, Ryosuke Nakai, Yuga Hirakata, Kengo Kubota, Masaru K. Nobu, Takashi Narihiro

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Each prokaryotic domain, Bacteria and Archaea, contains a large and diverse group of organisms characterized by their ultrasmall cell size and symbiotic lifestyles (potentially commensal, mutualistic, and parasitic relationships), namely, Candidatus Patescibacteria (also known as the Candidate Phyla Radiation/CPR superphylum) and DPANN archaea, respectively. Cultivation-based approaches have revealed that Ca. Patescibacteria and DPANN symbiotically interact with bacterial and archaeal partners and hosts, respectively, but that cross-domain symbiosis and parasitism have never been observed. By amending wastewater treatment sludge samples with methanogenic archaea, we observed increased abundances of Ca. Patescibacteria (Ca. Yanofskybacteria/UBA5738) and, using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), discovered that nearly all of the Ca. Yanofskybacteria/UBA5738 cells were attached to Methanothrix (95.7 6 2.1%) and that none of the cells were attached to other lineages, implying high host dependency and specificity. Methanothrix filaments (multicellular) with Ca. Yanofskybacteria/UBA5738 attached had significantly more cells with no or low detectable ribosomal activity (based on FISH fluorescence) and often showed deformations at the sites of attachment (based on transmission electron microscopy), suggesting that the interaction is parasitic. Metagenome-assisted metabolic reconstruction showed that Ca. Yanofskybacteria/UBA5738 lacks most of the biosynthetic pathways necessary for cell growth and universally conserves three unique gene arrays that contain multiple genes with signal peptides in the metagenome-assembled genomes of the Ca. Yanofskybacteria/UBA5738 lineage. The results shed light on a novel cross-domain symbiosis and inspire potential strategies for culturing CPR and DPANN.

Original languageEnglish
JournalmBio
Volume13
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022 Sept

Keywords

  • Archaea
  • Candidate Phyla Radiation (CPR)
  • Candidatus Patescibacteria
  • Candidatus Yanofskybacteria/UBA5738
  • fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH)
  • shotgun metagenomic analysis
  • symbiosis
  • transmission electron microscopy (TEM)

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Microbiology
  • Virology

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