Metabolic Potential of <scp> Candidatus </scp> Saccharimonadia Including Rare Lineages in Activated Sludge


Publication

Citation
Kagemasa et al. (2025). Environmental Microbiology Reports 17 (6)
Names (1)
Abstract
ABSTRACT Candidatus Saccharimonadia is a class‐level lineage of ultrasmall bacteria within the phylum Minisyncoccota (formerly Candidate Phyla Radiation or Ca . Patescibacteria), commonly found in activated sludge processes treating municipal wastewater. In this study, we aimed to elucidate the metabolic potential of Ca . Saccharimonadia by using shotgun metagenomic sequencing combined with a filtration‐based size‐fractionation approach for activated sludge from five wastewater treatment plants. A total of 65 high‐quality metagenomic bins were recovered, belonging to four orders and 19 families of Ca . Saccharimonadia, including previously unreported lineages in activated sludge. These bins had small genomes (approximately 0.46–1.73 Mbp) with limited metabolic capabilities, indicating dependency on other microorganisms. Notably, the order Ca . Saccharimonadales retained a type IV secretion system and effector gene cluster for parasitic interactions with the hosts, suggesting that Ca . Saccharimonadales bacteria may exhibit a parasitic lifestyle. Co‐occurrence network analysis showed that members of the order Ca . Saccharimonadales were significantly correlated with multiple lineages, including Actinobacteriota , for which a parasitic relationship has been previously demonstrated. Our results shed light on the potential ecophysiology of the diverse members of Ca . Saccharimonadia, providing a comprehensive understanding of Ca . Saccharimonadia in activated sludge.
Authors
Kagemasa, Shuka; Kuroda, Kyohei; Nakai, Ryosuke; Sato, Mikiko; Li, Yu‐You; Kubota, Kengo
Publication date
2025-12-01
DOI
10.1111/1758-2229.70231 

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