Top-heavy trophic structure within benthic viral dark matter
Top-heavy trophic structure within benthic viral dark matter
Viruses exert considerable influence on microbial population dynamics and community structure, with cascading effects on ecosystem-scale biogeochemical cycling and functional trajectories. Creating broadly generalizable theory on viral trophic ecology requires further inquiry into historically unexplored microbial systems that currently lack empirically demonstrated patterns in viral infectivity, such as structurally complex benthic communities. This becomes increasingly relevant considering recently proposed revisions to the fundamental mechanisms that modulate the strength and direction viral trophic linkages. Here, we employed deep longitudinal multiomic sequencing to characterize the viral assemblage (including ssDNA, dsDNA, and dsRNA viruses) and profile lineage-specific host-virus interactions within benthic cyanobacterial mats sampled from Bonaire, Caribbean Netherlands, over a complete diel time-series, and reconstruct patterns in intra-mat trophic structure. We recovered 11,020 unique viral populations spanning at least 10 viral families across the orders Caudovirales, Petitvirales, and Mindivirales, with evidence for extensive genomic novelty from reference and environmental viral sequences. Analysis of coverage ratios of viral sequences and computationally predicted hosts spanning 15 phyla and 21 classes revealed virus:host abundance and activity ratios consistently exceeding 1:1, with overall power-law scaling indicating an increasingly top-heavy intra-mat trophic structure with significant top-down pressure. Diel activity of cyanophages showed clear temporal patterns that seem to follow host physiological condition. These data generate important hypotheses concerning taxon-dependent variation in the relative contribution of top-down vs. bottom-up forcing in driving mat community dynamics, and establish a useful database of viral sequences from this previously unexplored system toward the generation of generalizable trans-system theory on viral trophic ecology.
Cissell Ethan C、McCoy Sophie J
环境科学理论生物科学现状、生物科学发展环境生物学微生物学
Cissell Ethan C,McCoy Sophie J.Top-heavy trophic structure within benthic viral dark matter[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-09].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.10.01.510451.点此复制
评论