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Oxford University Press, Molecular Biology and Evolution, 4(33), p. 915-927, 2015

DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msv281

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Comparative Genomics of Candidate Phylum TM6 Suggests That Parasitism Is Widespread and Ancestral in This Lineage

Journal article published in 2015 by Yun Kit Yeoh, Yuji Sekiguchi, Donovan H. Parks, Philip Hugenholtz ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Candidate phylum TM6 is a major bacterial lineage recognised through culture-independent rRNA surveys to be low abundance members in a wide range of habitats, however, they are poorly characterised due to a lack of pure culture representatives. Two recent genomic studies of TM6 bacteria revealed small genomes and limited gene repertoire, consistent with known or inferred dependence on eukaryotic hosts for their metabolic needs. Here, we obtained additional near-complete genomes of TM6 populations from agricultural soil and upflow anaerobic sludge blanket reactor metagenomes which, together with the two publicly available TM6 genomes, represent seven distinct family level lineages in the TM6 phylum. Genome-based phylogenetic analysis confirms that TM6 is an independent phylum level lineage in the bacterial domain, possibly affiliated with the Patescibacteria superphylum. All seven genomes are small (1.0 to 1.5 Mb) and lack complete biosynthetic pathways for various essential cellular building blocks including amino acids, lipids and nucleotides. These and other features identified in the TM6 genomes such as a degenerated cell envelope, ATP/ADP translocases for parasitising host ATP pools and protein motifs to facilitate eukaryotic host interactions indicate that parasitism is widespread in this phylum. Phylogenetic analysis of ATP/ADP translocase genes suggests that the ancestral TM6 lineage was also parasitic. We propose the name Dependentiae (phyl. nov.) to reflect dependence of TM6 bacteria on host organisms.