16S rRNA phylogeny and clustering is not a reliable proxy for genome-based taxonomy in Streptomyces

Author:

Kiepas Angelika B.1ORCID,Hoskisson Paul A.1ORCID,Pritchard Leighton1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, University of Strathclyde, 161 Cathedral Street, Glasgow, G4 0RE, UK

Abstract

Streptomyces is among the most extensively studied genera of bacteria but its complex taxonomy remains contested and is suspected to contain significant species-level misclassification. Resolving the classification of Streptomyces would benefit many areas of applied microbiology that rely on an accurate ground truth for grouping of related organisms, including comparative genomics-based searches for novel antimicrobials. We survey taxonomic conflicts between 16S rRNA and whole genome-based Streptomyces classifications using 2276 publicly available Streptomyces genome assemblies and 48 981 publicly available full-length 16S rRNA Streptomyces sequences from silva, Greengenes, Ribosomal Database Project (RDP), and NCBI (National Centre for Biotechnology Information) databases. We construct a full-length 16S gene tree for 14 239 distinct Streptomyces sequences that resolves three major lineages of Streptomyces, but whose topology is not consistent with existing taxonomic assignments. We use these sequence data to delineate 16S and whole genome landscapes for Streptomyces, demonstrating that 16S and whole-genome classifications are frequently in disagreement, and that 16S zero-radius Operational Taxonomic Units (zOTUs) are often inconsistent with Average Nucleotide Identity (ANI)-based taxonomy. Our results strongly imply that 16S rRNA sequence data does not map to taxonomy sufficiently well to delineate Streptomyces species routinely. We propose that alternative marker sequences should be adopted by the community for classification and metabarcoding. Insofar as Streptomyces taxonomy has been determined or supported by 16S sequence data and may in parts be in error, we also propose that reclassification of the genus by alternative approaches may benefit the Streptomyces community.

Funder

University of Strathclyde

Publisher

Microbiology Society

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