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A subset of viruses thrives following microbial resuscitation during rewetting of a seasonally dry California grassland soil.


ABSTRACT: Viruses are abundant, ubiquitous members of soil communities that kill microbial cells, but how they respond to perturbation of soil ecosystems is essentially unknown. Here, we investigate lineage-specific virus-host dynamics in grassland soil following "wet-up", when resident microbes are both resuscitated and lysed after a prolonged dry period. Quantitative isotope tracing, time-resolved metagenomics and viromic analyses indicate that dry soil holds a diverse but low biomass reservoir of virions, of which only a subset thrives following wet-up. Viral richness decreases by 50% within 24 h post wet-up, while viral biomass increases four-fold within one week. Though recent hypotheses suggest lysogeny predominates in soil, our evidence indicates that viruses in lytic cycles dominate the response to wet-up. We estimate that viruses drive a measurable and continuous rate of cell lysis, with up to 46% of microbial death driven by viral lysis one week following wet-up. Thus, viruses contribute to turnover of soil microbial biomass and the widely reported CO2 efflux following wet-up of seasonally dry soils.

SUBMITTER: Nicolas AM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10511743 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A subset of viruses thrives following microbial resuscitation during rewetting of a seasonally dry California grassland soil.

Nicolas Alexa M AM   Sieradzki Ella T ET   Pett-Ridge Jennifer J   Banfield Jillian F JF   Taga Michiko E ME   Firestone Mary K MK   Blazewicz Steven J SJ  

Nature communications 20230920 1


Viruses are abundant, ubiquitous members of soil communities that kill microbial cells, but how they respond to perturbation of soil ecosystems is essentially unknown. Here, we investigate lineage-specific virus-host dynamics in grassland soil following "wet-up", when resident microbes are both resuscitated and lysed after a prolonged dry period. Quantitative isotope tracing, time-resolved metagenomics and viromic analyses indicate that dry soil holds a diverse but low biomass reservoir of virio  ...[more]

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