articleScienceApr 24, 2014Closed access

Single-Cell Genomics Reveals Hundreds of Coexisting Subpopulations in Wild Prochlorococcus

Massachusetts Institute of Technology · Université de Sherbrooke · +5 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Extensive genomic diversity within coexisting members of a microbial species has been revealed through selected cultured isolates and metagenomic assemblies. Yet, the cell-by-cell genomic composition of wild uncultured populations of co-occurring cells is largely unknown. In this work, we applied large-scale single-cell genomics to study populations of the globally abundant marine cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus. We show that they are composed of hundreds of subpopulations with distinct "genomic backbones," each backbone consisting of a different set of core gene alleles linked to a small distinctive set of flexible genes. These subpopulations are estimated to have diverged at least a few million years ago,…

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