Geographical isolation in hot spring cyanobacteria
R. Thane Papke, Niels B. Ramsing, Mary M. Bateson and David M. Ward
Environmental Microbiology, 2003
Abstract
It has been proposed that free-living microorganisms
exhibit ubiquitous dispersal, do not form geographically
isolated populations and rarely (if ever) speciate
via allopatry. We studied island-like hot spring cyanobacterial
communities in which geographical isolation
should be prominent and detectable if it
influences the evolution of bacteria. The genetic diversity
of cyanobacteria indigenous to North American,
Japanese, New Zealand and Italian springs was surveyed
by (i) amplification and cloning of 16S rRNA and 16S-23S internal transcribed spacer regions; (ii)
lineage-specific oligonucleotide probing (used to verify
the predominance of cloned sequences); and (iii)
lineage-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
(used to search for possible rare genotypes). Phylogenetic
and distribution patterns were found to be
consistent with the occurrence of geographical isolation
at both global and local spatial scales, although
different cyanobacterial lineages were found to vary
in their distribution. A lack of correspondence
between biological patterning and the chemical character
of springs sampled suggested that the geographical
distribution of thermophilic cyanobacteria
cannot be explained by the 20 potential nichedetermining
chemical parameters that we assayed.
Thus, geographical isolation (i.e. genetic drift) must
in part be responsible for driving the observed evolutionary
divergences. Geographical isolation may be
an important underestimated aspect of microbial
evolution.
NOTE: the article text supplied here is for educational purposes only.
*Don't have Adobe Reader?
Get the latest version.
NOTE: Some versions of Adobe Reader have problems with Google Chrome. Either resize the browser to view the paper or enable
the Chrome internal PDF viewer by entering chrome://plugins in your address bar and clicking enable for the Chrome PDF Viewer plugin.