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  Metagenomic analysis of planktonic riverine microbial consortia using nanopore sequencing reveals insight into river microbe taxonomy and function

Reddington, K., Eccles, D., O'Grady, J., Drown, D., Hansen, L., Nielsen, T., et al. (2020). Metagenomic analysis of planktonic riverine microbial consortia using nanopore sequencing reveals insight into river microbe taxonomy and function. GigaScience, 9(6). doi:10.1093/gigascience/giaa053.

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 Creators:
Reddington, K, Author
Eccles, D, Author
O'Grady, J, Author
Drown, DM, Author
Hansen, LH, Author
Nielsen, TK, Author
Ducluzeau, A-L, Author
Leggett, RM, Author
Heavens, D, Author
Peel, N, Author
Snutch, TP, Author
Bayega, A, Author
Oikonomopoulos, S, Author
Ragoussis, I, Author
Barry, T, Author
van der Helm, E, Author
Jolic, D1, Author           
Richardson, H, Author
Jansen, H, Author
Tyson, JR, Author
Jain, M, AuthorBrown, BL, Author more..
Affiliations:
1Department Molecular Biology, Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology, Max Planck Society, ou_3375790              

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 Abstract: Background: Riverine ecosystems are biogeochemical powerhouses driven largely by microbial communities that inhabit water columns and sediments. Because rivers are used extensively for anthropogenic purposes (drinking water, recreation, agriculture, and industry), it is essential to understand how these activities affect the composition of river microbial consortia. Recent studies have shown that river metagenomes vary considerably, suggesting that microbial community data should be included in broad-scale river ecosystem models. But such ecogenomic studies have not been applied on a broad "aquascape" scale, and few if any have applied the newest nanopore technology.

Results: We investigated the metagenomes of 11 rivers across 3 continents using MinION nanopore sequencing, a portable platform that could be useful for future global river monitoring. Up to 10 Gb of data per run were generated with average read lengths of 3.4 kb. Diversity and diagnosis of river function potential was accomplished with 0.5-1.0 ⋅ 106 long reads. Our observations for 7 of the 11 rivers conformed to other river-omic findings, and we exposed previously unrecognized microbial biodiversity in the other 4 rivers.

Conclusions: Deeper understanding that emerged is that river microbial consortia and the ecological functions they fulfil did not align with geographic location but instead implicated ecological responses of microbes to urban and other anthropogenic effects, and that changes in taxa manifested over a very short geographic space.

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 Dates: 2020-06
 Publication Status: Published online
 Pages: -
 Publishing info: -
 Table of Contents: -
 Rev. Type: -
 Identifiers: DOI: 10.1093/gigascience/giaa053
PMID: 32520351
 Degree: -

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Title: GigaScience
Source Genre: Journal
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Publ. Info: London : BioMed Central
Pages: 12 Volume / Issue: 9 (6) Sequence Number: - Start / End Page: - Identifier: ISSN: 2047-217X
CoNE: https://pure.mpg.de/cone/journals/resource/2047-217X