Publications by authors named "Wen-sheng Shu"

Candidate bacterial phylum CSP1-3 has not been cultivated and is poorly understood. Here, we analyzed 112 CSP1-3 metagenome-assembled genomes and showed they are likely facultative anaerobes, with 3 of 5 families encoding autotrophy through the reductive glycine pathway (RGP), Wood-Ljungdahl pathway (WLP) or Calvin-Benson-Bassham (CBB), with hydrogen or sulfide as electron donors. Chemoautotrophic enrichments from hot spring sediments and fluorescence hybridization revealed enrichment of six CSP1-3 genera, and both transcribed genes and DNA-stable isotope probing were consistent with proposed chemoautotrophic metabolisms.

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Nucleocytoplasmic large DNA viruses (NCLDVs; also called giant viruses), constituting the phylum Nucleocytoviricota, can infect a wide range of eukaryotes and exchange genetic material with not only their hosts but also prokaryotes and phages. A few NCLDVs were reported to encode genes conferring resistance to beta‑lactam, trimethoprim, or pyrimethamine, suggesting that they are potential vehicles for the transmission of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in the biome. However, the incidence of ARGs across the phylum Nucleocytoviricota, their evolutionary characteristics, their dissemination potential, and their association with virulence factors remain unexplored.

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  • - Ecosystem multifunctionality is vital for sustainable human development, and soil viruses play a key role in driving various ecosystem functions, though their relationship with ecosystem diversity hasn't been thoroughly explored.
  • - A study analyzed viral diversity in soil samples from 29 farmlands and 25 forests in China, discovering that specific viral populations (vOTUs) were more closely linked to ecosystem multifunctionality than overall viral diversity.
  • - Key viral populations were identified as better predictors of ecosystem functions related to nutrient cycling, with certain bacterial groups dominating the host communities of these keystone viruses, highlighting the importance of understanding viral roles in ecosystem management.
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  • The research explored how microbes interact in anaerobic acid mine drainage (AMD) sediments, which are a significant global environmental issue.
  • By analyzing DNA from 90 AMD sites in Southern China, scientists reconstructed thousands of microbial genomes and discovered that nitrogen metabolism was more frequently shared among microbes than sulfur metabolism.
  • The study indicated that extreme conditions in these sediments lead to increased competition and complex interactions among microbial communities, which could inform future strategies for bioremediation of AMD.
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  • Scientists studied 333 soil samples from different places in China to learn more about giant viruses found in the soil.
  • They found 533 different types of giant viruses, with many being unique to areas like mine wasteland.
  • The research highlighted that other tiny organisms in the soil play a big role in where these giant viruses are found and how they work with the environment.
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Although it is well documented that mountains tend to exhibit high biodiversity, how geological processes affect the assemblage of montane floras is a matter of ongoing research. Here, we explore landform-specific differences among montane floras based on a dataset comprising 17,576 angiosperm species representing 140 Chinese mountain floras, which we define as the collection of all angiosperm species growing on a specific mountain. Our results show that igneous bedrock (granitic and karst-granitic landforms) is correlated with higher species richness and phylogenetic overdispersion, while the opposite is true for sedimentary bedrock (karst, Danxia, and desert landforms), which is correlated with phylogenetic clustering.

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  • Terrestrial geothermal springs are important environments that host diverse populations of Archaea, but their diversity and functionalities are not fully understood.
  • A study analyzed 152 metagenomes from 48 geothermal springs in Tengchong, China, uncovering 2949 archaeal genomes and 392 new species, increasing known Archaea diversity by ~48.6%.
  • The research highlights how temperature and pH influence archaeal communities and potential ecological roles in important biogeochemical cycles, revealing both competitive and cooperative interactions among Archaea.
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Aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria (AAPB) contribute profoundly to the global carbon cycle. However, most AAPB in marine environments are uncultured and at low abundance, hampering the recognition of their functions and molecular mechanisms. In this study, we developed a new culture-independent method to identify and sort AAPB using single-cell Raman/fluorescence spectroscopy.

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Phosphorus (P) limitation of ecosystem processes is widespread in terrestrial habitats. While a few auxiliary metabolic genes (AMGs) in bacteriophages from aquatic habitats are reported to have the potential to enhance P-acquisition ability of their hosts, little is known about the diversity and potential ecological function of P-acquisition genes encoded by terrestrial bacteriophages. Here, we analyze 333 soil metagenomes from five terrestrial habitat types across China and identify 75 viral operational taxonomic units (vOTUs) that encode 105 P-acquisition AMGs.

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Detecting cyanobacteria in environments is an important concern due to their crucial roles in ecosystems, and they can form blooms with the potential to harm humans and nonhuman entities. However, the most widely used methods for high-throughput detection of environmental cyanobacteria, such as 16S rRNA sequencing, typically provide above-species-level resolution, thereby disregarding intraspecific variation. To address this, we developed a novel DNA microarray tool, termed the CyanoStrainChip, that enables strain-level comprehensive profiling of environmental cyanobacteria.

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Ammonia-oxidizing Nitrososphaeria are among the most abundant archaea on Earth and have profound impacts on the biogeochemical cycles of carbon and nitrogen. In contrast to these well-studied ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA), deep-branching non-AOA within this class remain poorly characterized because of a low number of genome representatives. Here, we reconstructed 128 Nitrososphaeria metagenome-assembled genomes from acid mine drainage and hot spring sediment metagenomes.

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Arsenic (As) speciation transformation in acid mine drainage (AMD) is comprehensively affected by biological and abiotic factors, such as microbially mediated Fe/S redox reactions and changes in environmental conditions (pH and oxidation-reduction potential). However, their combined impacts on arsenic speciation transformation remain poorly studied. Therefore, we explored arsenic transformation and immobilization during pyrite dissolution mediated by AMD enrichment culture under different acidic pH conditions.

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  • Sulphate-reducing microorganisms (SRMs) are being explored for their potential to treat acid mine drainage (AMD) by reducing sulphate and stabilizing harmful metals.
  • Researchers enriched SRMs from AMD sediment using various carbon sources, uncovering a diverse range of genes linked to nine different phyla, including newly identified ones associated with Aciduliprofundum and Vulcanisaeta.
  • The study found that the presence of certain SRM genes was affected by pH levels and that more abundant SRM genomes were linked to higher carbon and sulphate concentrations, providing insights for improving AMD treatment systems.
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Background: Phosphonates are the main components in the global phosphorus redox cycle. Little is known about phosphonate metabolism in freshwater ecosystems, although rapid consumption of phosphonates has been observed frequently. Cyanobacteria are often the dominant primary producers in freshwaters; yet, only a few strains of cyanobacteria encode phosphonate-degrading (C-P lyase) gene clusters.

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The extremely high species diversity of soil bacterial community has fascinated and puzzled community ecologists. Although theory predicts that fluctuations in environments can facilitate diversity maintenance, the effects of fluctuating temperature on species diversity have rarely been investigated in species-rich microbial communities. Here, we examined whether fluctuating temperature had positive effects on species diversity relative to constant temperatures in soil bacterial communities, and investigated the effects of fluctuating temperature on bacterial performances (changes in relative abundance).

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" Parvarchaeales" microbes, representing a DPANN archaeal group with limited metabolic potential and reliance on hosts for their growth, were initially found in acid mine drainage (AMD). Due to the lack of representatives, however, their ecological roles and adaptation to extreme habitats such as AMD as well as how they diverge across the lineage remain largely unexplored. By applying genome-resolved metagenomics, 28 Parvarchaeales-associated metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) representing two orders and five genera were recovered.

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The biology of Korarchaeia remains elusive due to the lack of genome representatives. Here, we reconstruct 10 closely related metagenome-assembled genomes from hot spring habitats and place them into a single species, proposed herein as Panguiarchaeum symbiosum. Functional investigation suggests that Panguiarchaeum symbiosum is strictly anaerobic and grows exclusively in thermal habitats by fermenting peptides coupled with sulfide and hydrogen production to dispose of electrons.

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Methylmercury (MeHg) is a notorious neurotoxin, and its production and degradation in the environment are mainly driven by microorganisms. A variety of microbial MeHg producers carrying the gene pair and degraders carrying the gene have been separately reported in recent studies. However, surprisingly little attention has been paid to the simultaneous investigation of the diversities of microbial MeHg producers and degraders in a given habitat, and no studies have been performed to explore to what extent these two contrasting microbial groups correlate with MeHg accumulation in the habitat of interest.

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  • Mining-impacted areas are known to be hotspots for antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), but there are currently no treatments available to address this issue.
  • A phytostabilization project at a copper mine tailings pond was conducted, and metagenomics was used to analyze soil samples, revealing a 75% reduction in total ARG abundance in the topsoil.
  • The study found that phytostabilization led to increased ARG and microbial diversity, altered ARG host composition, and reduced virulence factor genes, with factors like soil nutrients and heavy metal toxicity influencing ARG levels.
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  • Metalliferous mine tailings ponds have low nutrients, are often acidic, and contain toxic metals, resembling Earth’s early environments.
  • Recent research shows that these ponds have a greater diversity of fungi than previously recognized, with 5842 different fungal types discovered in 33 ponds across China, primarily made up of saprotrophic fungi.
  • Fungal community assembly is influenced by both random and deterministic processes, with key fungal types playing significant roles in nutrient cycling and soil health, highlighting the ecological importance of fungi in extreme environments.
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  • The study investigates sulfate-reducing microorganisms (SRMs) in a revegetated acidic mine wasteland, addressing the gap in understanding their role in the terrestrial sulfur cycle under oxic/hypoxic conditions.
  • Researchers recovered 16 high-quality metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) of SRMs, with a focus on Acidobacteria and Deltaproteobacteria, and identified three new genera within these groups.
  • Comparative genomic analysis showed differences in gene content related to metabolic functions between Acidobacteria and Deltaproteobacteria SRMs, while metatranscriptomics revealed that most SRMs were actively expressing genes related to oxidative stress and competition for resources.
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Biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) by cyanobacteria is of significant importance for the Earth's biogeochemical nitrogen cycle but is restricted to a few genera that do not form monophyletic group. To explore the evolutionary trajectory of BNF and investigate the driving forces of its evolution, we analyze 650 cyanobacterial genomes and compile the database of diazotrophic cyanobacteria based on the presence of nitrogen fixation gene clusters (NFGCs). We report that 266 of 650 examined genomes are NFGC-carrying members, and these potentially diazotrophic cyanobacteria are unevenly distributed across the phylogeny of Cyanobacteria, that multiple independent losses shaped the scattered distribution.

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  • * A study analyzing 272 metagenomes from global mining sites found an average ARG abundance significantly higher than that in freshwater sediments, with multidrug resistance genes making up 40% of the total.
  • * The research identified high-quality metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) that not only carried multiple resistance genes but also expanded the diversity of ARG hosts, revealing potential pathogens in these contaminated environments.
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  • Low soil phosphorus bioavailability is a significant issue for many ecosystems worldwide, prompting a need to explore influencing factors at large scales.
  • This study found that soil microbial biomass carbon and acid phosphatase are key predictors of phosphorus availability, along with total soil phosphorus, and they positively affect phosphorus levels in both agricultural and natural ecosystems across China.
  • Additionally, the presence of microbial genes responsible for these enzymes also enhances phosphorus bioavailability, especially in agricultural areas, underscoring the importance of considering microbial factors in ecosystem management.
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Oxidative dissolution of stibnite (SbS), one of the most prevalent geochemical processes for antimony (Sb) release, can be promoted by Sb-oxidizing microbes, which were studied under alkaline and neutral conditions but rarely under acidic conditions. This work is dedicated to unraveling the enhancement mechanism of stibnite dissolution by typical acidophile under extremely acidic conditions. The results of solution behavior showed that the dissolution of SbS was significantly enhanced by , with lower pH and higher redox potential values and higher [Sb(III)] and [Sb(V)] than the sterile control.

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