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Authors Layoun

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Layoun, Paul


Publications
3

CitationNamesAbstract
Bringing the uncultivated microbial majority of freshwater ecosystems into culture Salcher et al. (2025). Nature Communications 16 (1) 52 Names
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Ecophysiology and global dispersal of the freshwater SAR11-IIIb genus Fontibacterium Fernandes et al. (2025). Nature Microbiology 10 (9) 12 Names
Flexible genomic island conservation across freshwater and marine Methylophilaceae Layoun et al. (2024). The ISME Journal 18 (1) Methylopumilus planktonicus Ts Novimethylotenera aquatica Ts Methylopumilus universalis Methylopumilus Methylopumilus rimovensis
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Bringing the uncultivated microbial majority of freshwater ecosystems into culture
Abstract Axenic cultures are essential for studying microbial ecology, evolution, and genomics. Despite the importance of pure cultures, public culture collections are biased towards fast-growing copiotrophs, while many abundant aquatic prokaryotes remain uncultured due to uncharacterized growth requirements and oligotrophic lifestyles. Here, we applied high-throughput dilution-to-extinction cultivation using defined media that mimic natural conditions to samples from 14 Central European lakes, yielding 627 axenic strains. These cultures include 15 genera among the 30 most abundant freshwater bacteria identified via metagenomics, collectively representing up to 72% of genera detected in the original samples (average 40%) and are widespread in freshwater systems globally. Genome-sequenced strains are closely related to metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) from the same samples, many of which remain undescribed. We propose a classification of several novel families, genera, and species, including many slowly growing, genome-streamlined oligotrophs that are notoriously underrepresented in public repositories. Our large-scale initiative to cultivate the “uncultivated microbial majority” has yielded a valuable collection of abundant freshwater microbes, characterized by diverse metabolic pathways and lifestyles. This culture collection includes promising candidates for oligotrophic model organisms, suitable for a wide array of ecological studies aimed at advancing our ecological and functional understanding of dominant, yet previously uncultured, taxa.
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Flexible genomic island conservation across freshwater and marine Methylophilaceae
Abstract The evolutionary trajectory of Methylophilaceae includes habitat transitions from freshwater sediments to freshwater and marine pelagial that resulted in genome reduction (genome-streamlining) of the pelagic taxa. However, the extent of genetic similarities in the genomic structure and microdiversity of the two genome-streamlined pelagic lineages (freshwater “Ca. Methylopumilus” and the marine OM43 lineage) has so far never been compared. Here, we analyzed complete genomes of 91 “Ca. Methylopumilus” strains isolated from 14 lakes in Central Europe and 12 coastal marine OM43 strains. The two lineages showed a remarkable niche differentiation with clear species-specific differences in habitat preference and seasonal distribution. On the other hand, we observed a synteny preservation in their genomes by having similar locations and types of flexible genomic islands (fGIs). Three main fGIs were identified: a replacement fGI acting as phage defense, an additive fGI harboring metabolic and resistance-related functions, and a tycheposon containing nitrogen-, thiamine-, and heme-related functions. The fGIs differed in relative abundances in metagenomic datasets suggesting different levels of variability ranging from strain-specific to population-level adaptations. Moreover, variations in one gene seemed to be responsible for different growth at low substrate concentrations and a potential biogeographic separation within one species. Our study provides a first insight into genomic microdiversity of closely related taxa within the family Methylophilaceae and revealed remarkably similar dynamics involving mobile genetic elements and recombination between freshwater and marine family members.
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