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Metagenome-assembled genome: ERR1034454_bin.31_CONCOCT_v1.1_MAG

Identifiers
BioSample: SAMEA14037569; SRA: ERS11640849
Organism
uncultured Myxococcales bacterium
cellular organisms; Bacteria; Myxococcota; Myxococcia; Myxococcales; environmental samples
Attributes
collection date2010-05-01
broad-scale environmental contextEnvironmental
local-scale environmental contextTerrestrial
environmental mediumSoil
geographic locationUSA
investigation typemetagenome-assembled genome
isolation sourcesoil metagenome
project namePlease see: Metagenomics Reveals Pervasive Bacterial Populations and Reduced Community Diversity across the Alaska Tundra Ecosystem. Johnston et al. 2016. Frontiers in Microbiology.doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.00579How soil microbial communities contrast with respect to taxonomic and functional composition within and between ecosystems remains an unresolved question that is central to predicting how global anthropogenic change will affect soil functioning and services. In particular, it remains unclear how small-scale observations of soil communities based on the typical volume sampled (1-2 g) are generalizable to ecosystem-scale responses and processes. This is especially relevant for remote, northern latitude soils, which are challenging to sample and are also thought to be more vulnerable to climate change compared to temperate soils. Here, we employed well-replicated shotgun metagenome and 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing to characterize community composition and metabolic potential in Alaskan tundra soils, combining our own datasets with those publically available from distant tundra and temperate grassland and agriculture habitats. We found that the abundance of many taxa and metabolic functions differed substantially between tundra soil metagenomes relative to those from temperate soils, and that a high degree of OTU-sharing exists between tundra locations. Tundra soils were an order of magnitude less complex than their temperate counterparts, allowing for near-complete coverage of microbial community richness (~92% breadth) by sequencing, and the recovery of 27 high-quality, almost complete (>80% completeness) population bins. These population bins, collectively, made up to ~10% of the metagenomic datasets, and represented diverse taxonomic groups and metabolic lifestyles tuned toward sulfur cycling, hydrogen metabolism, methanotrophy, and organic matter oxidation. Several population bins, including members of Acidobacteria, Actinobacteria, and Proteobacteria, were also present in geographically distant (~100-530 km apart) tundra habitats (full genome representation and up to 99.6% genome-derived average nucleotide identity). Collectively, our results revealed that Alaska tundra microbial communities are less diverse and more homogenous across spatial scales than previously anticipated, and provided DNA sequences of abundant populations and genes that would be relevant for future studies of the effects of environmental change on tundra ecosystems.
sample nameERR1034454_bin.31_CONCOCT_v1.1_MAG
ENA-CHECKLISTERC000047
ENA-FIRST-PUBLIC2023-01-03
ENA-LAST-UPDATE2023-01-03
External IdSAMEA14037569
INSDC center aliasEBI
INSDC center nameEuropean Bioinformatics Institute
INSDC first public2023-01-03T00:32:01Z
INSDC last update2023-01-03T00:32:01Z
INSDC statuspublic
Submitter IdERR1034454_bin.31_CONCOCT_v1.1_MAG
assembly qualityMany fragments with little to no review of assembly other than reporting of standard assembly statistics
assembly softwaremetaSPAdes version 3.10.139
binning parametersDefault
binning softwareCONCOCT v1.1
broker nameEMG broker account, EMBL-EBI
completeness score91.61
completeness softwareCheckM
contamination score2.58
geographic location (latitude)63.88306
geographic location (longitude)-149.22556
metagenomic sourcesoil metagenome
sample derived fromSAMEA3539302
scientific_nameuncultured Myxococcales bacterium
sequencing methodIllumina HiSeq 2000
taxonomic identity markermulti-marker approach
Description

This sample represents a Third Party Annotation (TPA) Metagenome-Assembled Genome (MAG) assembled from the metagenomic run ERR1034454 of study ERP012016.

BioProject
PRJEB52028 Large-scale analysis of novel cellular microbes from the soil biome
Retrieve all samples from this project

Submission
EBI; 2023-01-04
Accession:
SAMEA14037569
ID:
32556511

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