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Microbiomes influence diverse ecosystems, but viruses increasingly appear to impose key constraints. While viromics has expanded genomic catalogs, host identification for these viruses remains challenging due to the limitations in scaling cultivation-based approaches and the uncertain reliability and relative low resolution of predictions - particularly for understudied viral taxa. Towards this, Hi-C proximity ligation uses sequenced, cross-linked virus and host genomic fragments to infer virus-host linkages and has now been applied in at least nine studies. However, its accuracy remains unknown. Here we assess Hi-C performance in recovering virus-host interactions using synthetic communities (SynComs) composed of four bacterial strains and nine phages with known interactions and then apply optimized protocols to natural soil samples. In SynComs, standard Hi-C sample preparations and analyses showed poor normalized linkage score performance (26% specificity, 100% sensitivity, incorrect matches up to class level) that could be dramatically improved by Z-score filtering (Z ≥ 0.5, 99% specificity), though at reduced sensitivity (62% down from 100%). Detection limits were established as reproducibility was poor below minimal phage abundances of 10 PFU/mL. Applying optimized protocols to natural soil samples, we compared Hi-C inferred virus-linkages with bioinformatic predictions. Prior to Z-score thresholding, agreement was relatively high at the phylum to family levels (72%), but not at the genus (43%) or species (15%) levels. Z-score thresholding reduced sensitivity (only 34% of predictions were retained), with only modest improvements in congruence with bioinformatic methods (48% or 18% at genus or species levels, respectively). Regardless, this led to 79 genus-level-congruent virus-host linkages and 293 new ones revealed by Hi-C alone - i.e., providing many new virus-host interactions to explore in already well-studied climate-critical soils. Overall, these findings provide empirical benchmarks and methodological guidelines to improve the accuracy and reliability of Hi-C for virus-host linkage studies in complex microbial communities.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2025.02.12.637985 | DOI Listing |
NPJ Biofilms Microbiomes
August 2025
Environmental Microbiome Engineering and Innovative Genomics Laboratory, College of Chemistry and Environmental Engineering, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, China.
Harmful cyanobacterial blooms pose severe threats to aquatic ecosystems. Bloom-forming cyanobacteria form cyanobacterial aggregates (CAs) that create a phycosphere supporting diverse microbial interactions. Here, longitudinal metagenomics and metatranscriptomics were employed to explore the temporal variation of CA-attached viral communities throughout cyanobacterial blooms in Lake Taihu.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
August 2025
Key Laboratory of Lake and Watershed Science for Water Security, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, PR China.
Virus-host interactions are vital to microbiome ecology and evolution, yet their responses to environmental stressors under global change remain poorly understood. We perform a 10-month outdoor mesocosm experiment simulating multi-trophic freshwater shallow lake ecosystems. Using a fully factorial design comprising eight treatments with six replicates each, we assess the individual and combined effects of climate warming, nutrient loading, and pesticide loading on DNA viral communities and their interactions with microbial hosts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRes Microbiol
June 2025
Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, Faculty of Biological Sciences, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, Santiago, Chile; GEMA Center for Genomics, Ecology and Environment, Universidad Mayor, Santiago, Chile; Millenium Institute Center for Genome Regulation (CGR), Santiago, Chile.
Microbial communities in hot springs are distributed globally and have been extensively characterized regarding their diversity and composition. However, most studies have focused on cellular microbes, with relatively few addressing viruses, and even fewer examining virus-host ecology. Furthermore, research on viral communities and virus-host interactions has predominantly targeted extremely thermophilic environments, leaving mesothermophilic (40-80 °C) and circumneutral (pH 6-8) hot spring less explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Hazard Mater
September 2025
State Key Laboratory of Biocontrol, School of Life Sciences, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510275, PR China. Electronic address:
Sulfidic mine tailings represent a major source of acid mine drainage (AMD), a significant environmental problem worldwide. While the prokaryotic communities in extremely acidic tailings have been extensively studied to reveal their adaptation strategies and roles in acid generation, the diversity and putative ecosystem functions of viruses potentially infecting these extremophilic prokaryotes remain unexplored. Here, we used comparative metagenomics to investigate the viral communities in a massive copper mine tailings impoundment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFISME Commun
January 2025
State Key Laboratory of Nutrient Use and Management, College of Resources and Environmental Sciences, National Academy of Agriculture Green Development, Key Laboratory of Plant-Soil Interactions, Ministry of Education, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100193, China.
Methanogens play a critical role in global methane (CH) emissions from rice paddy ecosystems. Through the integration of metagenomic analysis and meta-analysis, we constructed a CRISPR spacer database comprising 14 475 spacers derived from 351 methanogenic genomes. This enabled the identification of viruses targeting key methanogenic families prevalent in rice paddies, including , , , , and .
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