Marine DNA Viral Macro- and Microdiversity from Pole to Pole
Author(s) -
Ann Gregory,
Ahmed A. Zayed,
Nádia ConceiçãoNeto,
Ben Temperton,
Benjamin Bolduc,
Adriana Alberti,
Mathieu Ardyna,
Ksenia Arkhipova,
Margaux Carmichael,
Corinne Cruaud,
Céline Dimier,
Guillermo Domínguez-Huerta,
Joannie Ferland,
Stefanie Kandels,
Yunxiao Liu,
Claudie Marec,
Stéphane Pesant,
Marc Picheral,
Sergey Pisarev,
Julie Poulain,
JeanÉric Tremblay,
Dean Vik,
Marcel Babin,
Chris Bowler,
Alexander I. Culley,
Colomban de Vargas,
Bas E. Dutilh,
Daniele Iudicone,
Lee Karp-Boss,
Simon Roux,
Shinichi Sunagawa,
Patrick Wincker,
Matthew B. Sullivan,
Silvia G. Acinas,
Peer Bork,
Emmanuel Boss,
Guy Cochrane,
Michael J. Follows,
Gabriel Gorsky,
Nigel Grimsley,
Lionel Guidi,
Pascal Hingamp,
Olivier Jaillon,
Stefanie Kandels-Lewis,
Eric Karsenti,
Fabrice Not,
Hiroyuki Ogata,
Nicole Poulton,
Jeroen Raes,
Christian Sardet,
Sabrina Speich,
Lars Stemmann
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2019.03.040
Subject(s) - biology , biodiversity , ecosystem , arctic , ecology , genetic diversity , population , metagenomics , human virome , evolutionary biology , gene , genetics , demography , sociology
Microbes drive most ecosystems and are modulated by viruses that impact their lifespan, gene flow, and metabolic outputs. However, ecosystem-level impacts of viral community diversity remain difficult to assess due to classification issues and few reference genomes. Here, we establish an ∼12-fold expanded global ocean DNA virome dataset of 195,728 viral populations, now including the Arctic Ocean, and validate that these populations form discrete genotypic clusters. Meta-community analyses revealed five ecological zones throughout the global ocean, including two distinct Arctic regions. Across the zones, local and global patterns and drivers in viral community diversity were established for both macrodiversity (inter-population diversity) and microdiversity (intra-population genetic variation). These patterns sometimes, but not always, paralleled those from macro-organisms and revealed temperate and tropical surface waters and the Arctic as biodiversity hotspots and mechanistic hypotheses to explain them. Such further understanding of ocean viruses is critical for broader inclusion in ecosystem models.
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