Publications by authors named "Francisco Rodriguez-Valera"

The prokaryotic pangenome, the full complement of genes within a species, is strikingly large. To understand how ecological forces shape this diversity, it is useful to examine the variable gene pool within a single population, defined as cells of the same species coexisting in the same time and place. This single-population pangenome reflects the minimal flexible gene repertoire required in a specific environmental context.

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Rhodopsins are light-sensitive membrane proteins capturing solar energy via a retinal cofactor covalently attached to a lysine residue. Several groups of rhodopsins lack the conserved lysine and showed no retinal binding. Recently, flotillin-associated rhodopsins (FArhodopsins or FARs) were identified and suggested to lack the retinal-binding pocket despite preserving the lysine residue in many members of the group.

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Microbial rhodopsins are omnipresent on Earth; however, the vast majority of them remain uncharacterized. Here, we describe a rhodopsin group found in microorganisms from cold environments, such as glaciers, denoted as CryoRhodopsins (CryoRs). A distinguishing feature of the group is the presence of a buried arginine residue close to the cytoplasmic face.

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The Candidate Phyla Radiation, also known as , represents a vast and diverse division of bacteria that has come to light via culture-independent 'omics' technologies. Their limited biosynthetic capacity, along with evidence of their growth as obligate epibionts on other bacteria, suggests a broad reliance on host organisms for their survival. Nevertheless, our understanding of the molecular mechanisms governing their metabolism and lifestyle remains limited.

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Bacterial proton pumps, proteorhodopsins (PRs), are a major group of light-driven membrane proteins found in marine bacteria. They are functionally and structurally distinct from archaeal and eukaryotic proton pumps. To elucidate the proton transfer mechanism by PRs and understand the differences to nonbacterial pumps on a molecular level, high-resolution structures of PRs' functional states are needed.

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Genomic diversity in prokaryotic species is largely due to the existence of extensive pangenomes, allowing different gene complements to be drawn depending on the strain. Here, we have studied the diversity of the O-chain polysaccharide biosynthesis cluster (OBC) in marine bacteria of the Pelagibacterales order as a proxy to measure such genetic diversity in a single population. The study of single-amplified genomes (SAGs) from the whole order found a pattern similar to that of other well-studied microbes, such as the Enterobacteriales or , where distinct OBCs represent strains containing different gene pools.

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Background: The oceanic microbiome is dominated by members of the SAR11 clade. Despite their abundance, challenges in recovering the full genetic diversity of natural populations have hindered our understanding of the eco-evolutionary mechanisms driving intra-species variation. In this study, we employed a combination of single-amplified genomes and long-read metagenomics to recover the genomic diversity of natural populations within the SAR11 genomospecies Ia.

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Article Synopsis
  • Telonemia are ancient marine protists with established evolutionary links to the SAR supergroup, but their ecological roles and distribution in freshwater environments remain under-researched.
  • A global study of over a thousand freshwater metagenomes and 407 samples from lakes revealed a wide distribution of Telonemia, though no new major clades were identified, indicating their diversity is well-represented in current surveys.
  • Findings suggest Telonemia prefer colder, deeper areas of lakes in the Northern Hemisphere, where they can make up 10%-20% of the heterotrophic flagellate population, highlighting their significance in freshwater food webs.
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The knowledge of the different population-level processes operating within a species, and the genetic variability of the individual prokaryotic genomes, is key to understanding the adaptability of microbial populations. Here, we characterized the flexible genome of ammonia-oxidizing archaeal (AOA) populations using a metagenomic recruitment approach and long-read (PacBio HiFi) metagenomic sequencing. In the lower photic zone of the western Mediterranean Sea (75 m deep), the genomes Nitrosopelagicus brevis CN25 and Nitrosopumilus catalinensis SPOT1 had the highest recruitment values among available complete AOA genomes.

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One major conundrum of modern microbiology is the large pangenome (gene pool) present in microbes, which is much larger than those found in complex organisms such as humans. Here, we argue that this diversity of gene pools carried by different strains is maintained largely due to the control exercised by viral predation. Viruses maintain a high strain diversity through time that we describe as constant-diversity equilibrium, preventing the hoarding of resources by specific clones.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how the injection machinery and receptor binding proteins (RBPs) of bacteriophages, specifically Alteromonas mediterranea schitovirus A5, adapt through mutations and recombination to remain effective against evolving bacterial hosts.
  • It highlights that A5 shares its unique host recognition module with other seemingly unrelated phages, such as Alteromonas myovirus V22, despite differing dependencies on chaperones for producing active tail fibers.
  • The research suggests that structural changes in these proteins may play a role in their functions and indicates that the exchange of genetic material among different phages is possibly more frequent than previously thought, revealing a complex web of viral evolution.
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Gemmatimonadota is a diverse bacterial phylum commonly found in environments such as soils, rhizospheres, fresh waters, and sediments. So far, the phylum contains just six cultured species (five of them sequenced), which limits our understanding of their diversity and metabolism. Therefore, we analyzed over 400 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) and 5 culture-derived genomes representing Gemmatimonadota from various aquatic environments, hydrothermal vents, sediments, soils, and host-associated (with marine sponges and coral) species.

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Marine group II (MGII) is the most abundant planktonic heterotrophic archaea in the ocean. The evolutionary history of MGII archaea is elusive. In this study, 13 new MGII metagenome-assembled genomes were recovered from surface to the hadal zone in Challenger Deep of the Mariana Trench; four of them from the deep ocean represent a novel group.

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Proton transport is indispensable for cell life. It is believed that molecular mechanisms of proton movement through different types of proton-conducting molecules have general universal features. However, elucidation of such mechanisms is a challenge.

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Microbial rhodopsins are found more than once in a single genome (paralogs) often have different functions. We screened a large dataset of open ocean single-amplified genomes (SAGs) for co-occurrences of multiple rhodopsin genes. Many such cases were found among Pelagibacterales (SAR11), HIMB59, and the Gammaproteobacteria SAGs.

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Article Synopsis
  • Viruses are believed to outnumber cells on Earth by at least tenfold, but traditional estimates may be inaccurate due to exclusion of certain virus types and potential false positives in measurements.* -
  • The study introduces a new method called metagenome-based VMR estimate (mVRM) that takes into account all stages of viral replication and uses specific gene counts to more accurately estimate virus and cell prevalence.* -
  • Findings show that while viruses significantly outnumber cells in aquatic environments, the overall global ratio of viruses to cells may be much lower than previously thought, particularly in non-aquatic ecosystems.*
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Background: Lake Baikal, the world's deepest freshwater lake, contains important numbers of Candidatus Patescibacteria (formerly CPR) in its deepest reaches. However, previously obtained CPR metagenome-assembled genomes recruited very poorly indicating the potential of other groups being present. Here, we have applied for the first time a long-read (PacBio CCS) metagenomic approach to analyze in depth the Ca.

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Article Synopsis
  • Evolutionary adaptations in prokaryotes, like genome reduction, can occur in response to environmental changes, but knowledge of this process in free-living bacteria is limited.
  • The study focuses on the SAR86 clade, a dominant group of oceanic bacteria, and reveals their streamlined genomes through the co-assembly of multiple single-amplified genomes, leading to the first complete genomes from different families within this clade.
  • Notably, the TMED112 family showcases extreme genome reduction, impacting essential functions like biosynthesis and DNA repair, suggesting these bacteria may rely on neighboring microbes for survival, aligning with the Black Queen hypothesis.
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is a marine heterotrophic bacterium with widespread distribution - from temperate to tropical oceans, and from surface to deep waters. Strains of exhibit considerable genomic and metabolic variability, and can grow rapidly on diverse organic compounds. is a model organism for the study of population genomics, physiological adaptations and microbial interactions, with individual genomes encoding diverse phenotypic traits influenced by recombination and horizontal gene transfer.

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Article Synopsis
  • Solar crystallizer ponds have a high density of a simple microbial community, primarily dominated by a type of archaeon, particularly in the Santa Pola region of Spain.
  • A study comparing metatranscriptomes from the natural pond environment to a cultured strain revealed significant differences in gene expression, indicating that natural strains adapt better to varied environmental stressors than cultivated ones.
  • Seasonal analysis showed 195 differentially expressed genes, with 140 genes more active in winter, mostly related to energy acquisition and stress response mechanisms.
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Background: Cyanobacteria are the major prokaryotic primary producers occupying a range of aquatic habitats worldwide that differ in levels of salinity, making them a group of interest to study one of the major unresolved conundrums in aquatic microbiology which is what distinguishes a marine microbe from a freshwater one? We address this question using ecogenomics of a group of picocyanobacteria (cluster 5) that have recently evolved to inhabit geographically disparate salinity niches. Our analysis is made possible by the sequencing of 58 new genomes from freshwater representatives of this group that are presented here, representing a 6-fold increase in the available genomic data.

Results: Overall, freshwater strains had larger genomes (≈2.

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Most microbial groups have not been cultivated yet, and the only way to approach the enormous diversity of rhodopsins that they contain in a sensible timeframe is through the analysis of their genomes. High-throughput sequencing technologies have allowed the release of community genomics (metagenomics) of many habitats in the photic zones of the ocean and lakes. Already the harvest is impressive and included from the first bacterial rhodopsin (proteorhodopsin) to the recent discovery of heliorhodopsin by functional metagenomics.

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Article Synopsis
  • The first microbial rhodopsin, bacteriorhodopsin from Halobacterium salinarum, was discovered in 1971 and sparked significant advancements in membrane protein research.
  • Until 1999, only a few types of archaeal rhodopsins were known, but the discovery of bacterial rhodopsin in 2000 opened the door to a new era of research.
  • Rhodopsins are now known to exist across all life domains and even in viruses, demonstrating a wide variety of functions while maintaining similar structures, highlighting their scientific and technological potential.
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RuBisCO (ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase) is one the most abundant enzymes on Earth. Virtually all food webs depend on its activity to supply fixed carbon. In aerobic environments, RuBisCO struggles to distinguish efficiently between CO and O.

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The recovery of DNA from viromes is a major obstacle in the use of long-read sequencing to study their genomes. For this reason, the use of cellular metagenomes (>0.2-μm size range) emerges as an interesting complementary tool, since they contain large amounts of naturally amplified viral genomes from prelytic replication.

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