The parasitic lifestyle of an archaeal symbiont ...

Abstract DPANN Archaea are a diverse group typically characterised by small cells and reduced genomes. To date, all cultivated DPANN Archaea are ectosymbionts that require direct cell contact with a host archaeal species for proliferation. However, the dynamics of DPANN – host interactions and the i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hamm, Joshua N., Liao, Yan, Andriko Von Kügelgen, Dombrowski, Nina, Landers, Evan, Brownlee, Christopher, Johansson, Emma M. V., Whan, Renee M., Baker, Matthew A. B., Baum, Buzz, Tanmay A. M. Bharat, Duggin, Iain, Spang, Anja, Cavicchioli, Ricardo
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2020
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4707105
https://zenodo.org/record/4707105
Description
Summary:Abstract DPANN Archaea are a diverse group typically characterised by small cells and reduced genomes. To date, all cultivated DPANN Archaea are ectosymbionts that require direct cell contact with a host archaeal species for proliferation. However, the dynamics of DPANN – host interactions and the impacts of these interactions on host species are poorly understood. Here, we show that one DPANN archaeon ( Candidatus Nanohaloarchaeum antarcticus) engages in parasitic interactions with its host ( Halorubrum lacusprofundi ) that result in host cell lysis. Our data also suggest that these interactions involve invasion of the host cell by the nanohaloarchaeon. This is the first reported instance of such a predatory-like lifestyle amongst Archaea and indicates that some DPANN Archaea may interact with host populations in a manner similar to viruses. If you find content useful and use part it for your work please cite this study. Repository contents 1_Phylogenies.tar.gz includes all files needed to generate the ...