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The contribution of plasmids to trait diversity in a soil bacterium

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Abstract Plasmids are so closely associated with pathogens and antibiotic resistance that their potential for conferring other traits is often overlooked. Few studies consider how the full suite of traits encoded by plasmids is related to a host’s environmental adaptation, particularly for Gram-positive bacteria. To investigate the role that plasmid traits might play in microbial communities from natural ecosystems, we identified plasmids carried by isolates of Curtobacterium (phylum Actinomycetota) from a variety of soil environments. We found that plasmids were common, but not ubiquitous, in the genus and varied greatly in their size and genetic diversity. There was little evidence of phylogenetic conservation among Curtobacterium plasmids even for closely related bacterial strains within the same ecotype, indicating that horizontal transmission of plasmids is common. The plasmids carried a wide diversity of traits that were not a random subset of the host chromosome. Furthermore, the composition of these plasmid traits was associated with the environmental context of the host bacterium. Together, the results indicate that plasmids contribute substantially to the microdiversity of a soil bacterium and that this diversity may play a role in niche differentiation and a bacterium’s adaptation to its local environment.
Title: The contribution of plasmids to trait diversity in a soil bacterium
Description:
Abstract Plasmids are so closely associated with pathogens and antibiotic resistance that their potential for conferring other traits is often overlooked.
Few studies consider how the full suite of traits encoded by plasmids is related to a host’s environmental adaptation, particularly for Gram-positive bacteria.
To investigate the role that plasmid traits might play in microbial communities from natural ecosystems, we identified plasmids carried by isolates of Curtobacterium (phylum Actinomycetota) from a variety of soil environments.
We found that plasmids were common, but not ubiquitous, in the genus and varied greatly in their size and genetic diversity.
There was little evidence of phylogenetic conservation among Curtobacterium plasmids even for closely related bacterial strains within the same ecotype, indicating that horizontal transmission of plasmids is common.
The plasmids carried a wide diversity of traits that were not a random subset of the host chromosome.
Furthermore, the composition of these plasmid traits was associated with the environmental context of the host bacterium.
Together, the results indicate that plasmids contribute substantially to the microdiversity of a soil bacterium and that this diversity may play a role in niche differentiation and a bacterium’s adaptation to its local environment.

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