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Culture-independent tracking of Vibrio cholerae lineages reveals complex spatiotemporal dynamics in a natural population
Authors:Paul C. Kirchberger  Fabini D. Orata  Tania Nasreen  Kathryn M. Kauffman  Cheryl L. Tarr  Rebecca J. Case  Martin F. Polz  Yann F. Boucher
Affiliation:1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2E9 Canada;2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, 02139 USA;3. Enteric Diseases Laboratory Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, 30329 USA
Abstract:Populations of the bacterium Vibrio cholerae consist of dozens of distinct lineages, with primarily (but not exclusively) members of the pandemic generating lineage capable of causing the diarrhoeal disease cholera. Assessing the composition and temporal dynamics of such populations requires extensive isolation efforts and thus only rarely covers large geographic areas or timeframes exhaustively. We developed a culture-independent amplicon sequencing strategy based on the protein-coding gene viuB (vibriobactin utilization) to study the structure of a V. cholerae population over the course of a summer. We show that the 26 co-occurring V. cholerae lineages continuously compete for limited space on nutrient-rich particles where only a few of them can grow to large numbers. Differential abundance of lineages between locations and size-fractions associated with a particle-attached or free-swimming lifestyle could reflect adaptation to various environmental niches. In particular, a major V. cholerae lineage occasionally grows to large numbers on particles but remain undetectable using isolation-based methods, indicating selective culturability for some members of the species. We thus demonstrate that isolation-based studies may not accurately reflect the structure and complex dynamics of V. cholerae populations and provide a scalable high-throughput method for both epidemiological and ecological approaches to studying this species.
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