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Metagenome-assembled genome: ERR864075_bin.163_CONCOCT_v1.1_MAG

Identifiers
BioSample: SAMEA14075409; SRA: ERS11678638
Organism
uncultured Phycisphaerae bacterium
cellular organisms; Bacteria; PVC group; Planctomycetota; Phycisphaerae; environmental samples
Attributes
collection date2010-08-07
broad-scale environmental contextEnvironmental
local-scale environmental contextAquatic
environmental mediumMarine
geographic locationUSA
investigation typemetagenome-assembled genome
isolation sourcemarine metagenome
project nameMicrobial communities mediate the biogeochemical cycles that drive ecosystems, and it is important to understand how these communities are affected by changing environmental conditions, especially in complex coastal zones. As fresh and marine waters mix in estuaries and river plumes, the salinity, temperature, and nutrient gradients that are generated strongly influence bacterioplankton community structure, yet, a parallel shift in functional diversity has not been described. Metagenomic and metatranscriptomic analyses were conducted on five water samples spanning the salinity gradient of the Columbia River coastal margin, including river, estuary, plume, and ocean, in August 2010. Samples were pre-filtered through 3 μm filters and collected on 0.2 μm filters, thus results were focused on changes among free-living microbial communities. Results from metagenomic 16S rRNA sequences showed taxonomically distinct bacterial communities in river, estuary, and coastal ocean. Despite the strong salinity gradient observed over sampling locations (0 to 33), the functional gene profiles in the metagenomes were very similar from river to ocean with an average similarity of 82%. The metatranscriptomes, however, were an average of only 31% similar. We observed shifts from river to ocean in the abundance of genes encoding specific functions, such as catabolic pathways, osmoregulators, and metal transporters. Additionally, genes specifying both bacterial oxygenic and anoxygenic photosynthesis were highly abundant and expressed in the estuary and plume. Denitrification genes were found throughout the Columbia River coastal margin, and most highly expressed in the estuary. Across a river to ocean gradient, the free-living microbial community followed three different patterns of diversity: 1) the taxonomy of the community shifted strongly with salinity, 2) metabolic potential was highly similar across samples, with only small differences in functional gene abundance from river to ocean, and 3) gene expression was highly variable and generally was independent of changes in salinity.
sample nameERR864075_bin.163_CONCOCT_v1.1_MAG
ENA-CHECKLISTERC000047
ENA-FIRST-PUBLIC2023-01-03
ENA-LAST-UPDATE2023-01-03
External IdSAMEA14075409
INSDC center aliasEBI
INSDC center nameEuropean Bioinformatics Institute
INSDC first public2023-01-03T00:32:24Z
INSDC last update2023-01-03T00:32:24Z
INSDC statuspublic
Submitter IdERR864075_bin.163_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 score56.4
completeness softwareCheckM
contamination score0.0
geographic location (latitude)46.233
geographic location (longitude)-124.16
metagenomic sourcemarine metagenome
sample derived fromSAMEA3355530
scientific_nameuncultured Phycisphaerae bacterium
sequencing methodIllumina HiSeq 1000
taxonomic identity markermulti-marker approach
Description

This sample represents a Third Party Annotation (TPA) Metagenome-Assembled Genome (MAG) assembled from the metagenomic run ERR864075 of study ERP010213.

BioProject
PRJEB51078 Large-scale analysis of novel cellular microbes from the marine biome
Retrieve all samples from this project

Submission
EBI; 2023-01-04
Accession:
SAMEA14075409
ID:
32557324

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