Functional repertoire convergence of distantly related eukaryotic plankton lineages revealed by genome-resolved metagenomics

Research output: Working paperPreprintResearch

Documents

  • Fulltext

    Submitted manuscript, 22.3 MB, PDF document

  • Tom O. Delmont
  • Morgan Gaia
  • Damien D. Hinsinger
  • Paul Fremont
  • Chiara Vanni
  • A. Murat Eren
  • Artem Kourlaiev
  • Leo d'Agata
  • Quentin Clayssen
  • Emilie Villar
  • Karine Labadie
  • Corinne Cruaud
  • Julie Poulain
  • Corinne Da Silva
  • Marc Wessner
  • Benjamin Noel
  • Jean-Marc Aury
  • Colomban de Vargas
  • Chris Bowler
  • Eric Karsenti
  • Eric Pelletier
  • Patrick Wincker
  • Olivier Jaillon
Marine planktonic eukaryotes play a critical role in global biogeochemical cycles and climate. However, their poor representation in culture collections limits our understanding of the evolutionary history and genomic underpinnings of planktonic ecosystems. Here, we used 280 billion Tara Oceans metagenomic reads from polar, temperate, and tropical sunlit oceans to reconstruct and manually curate more than 700 abundant and widespread eukaryotic environmental genomes ranging from 10 Mbp to 1.3 Gbp. This genomic resource covers a wide range of poorly characterized eukaryotic lineages that complement long-standing contributions from culture collections while better representing plankton in the upper layer of the oceans. We performed the first comprehensive genome-wide functional classification of abundant unicellular eukaryotic plankton, revealing four major groups connecting distantly related lineages. Neither trophic modes of plankton nor its vertical evolutionary history could explain the functional repertoire convergence of major eukaryotic lineages that coexisted within oceanic currents for millions of years. Cover Navigating on the map of plankton genomics with Tara Oceans and anvi'o: a comprehensive genome-resolved metagenomic survey dedicated to eukaryotic plankton. ![Figure][1] Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest. [1]: pending:yes
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages30
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 23 Jan 2021
SeriesbioRxiv

Number of downloads are based on statistics from Google Scholar and www.ku.dk


No data available

ID: 305803290