Menu
July 7, 2019  |  

Adaptive radiation by waves of gene transfer leads to fine-scale resource partitioning in marine microbes.

Authors: Hehemann, Jan-Hendrik and Arevalo, Philip and Datta, Manoshi S and Yu, Xiaoqian and Corzett, Christopher H and Henschel, Andreas and Preheim, Sarah P and Timberlake, Sonia and Alm, Eric J and Polz, Martin F

Adaptive radiations are important drivers of niche filling, since they rapidly adapt a single clade of organisms to ecological opportunities. Although thought to be common for animals and plants, adaptive radiations have remained difficult to document for microbes in the wild. Here we describe a recent adaptive radiation leading to fine-scale ecophysiological differentiation in the degradation of an algal glycan in a clade of closely related marine bacteria. Horizontal gene transfer is the primary driver in the diversification of the pathway leading to several ecophysiologically differentiated Vibrionaceae populations adapted to different physical forms of alginate. Pathway architecture is predictive of function and ecology, underscoring that horizontal gene transfer without extensive regulatory changes can rapidly assemble fully functional pathways in microbes.

Journal: Nature communications
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms12860
Year: 2016

Read publication

Talk with an expert

If you have a question, need to check the status of an order, or are interested in purchasing an instrument, we're here to help.