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With emerging infectious disease outbreaks in human, domestic and wild animal populations on the rise, improvements in pathogen characterization and surveillance are paramount for the protection of human and animal health, as well as the conservation of ecologically and economically important wildlife. Genomics offers a range of suitable tools to meet these goals, with metagenomic sequencing facilitating the characterization of whole microbial communities associated with emerging and endemic disease outbreaks. Here, we use metagenomic sequencing in a case-control study to identify microbes in lung tissue associated with newly observed pneumonia-related fatalities in 34 white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in Wisconsin, USA. We identified 20 bacterial species that occurred in more than a single individual. Of these, onlyClostridium novyiwas found to substantially differ (in number of detections) between case and control sample groups; however, this difference was not statistically significant. We also detected several bacterial species associated with pneumonia and/or other diseases in ruminants (Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae,Trueperella pyogenes,Pasteurella multocida,Anaplasma phagocytophilum,Fusobacterium necrophorum); however, these species did not substantially differ between case and control sample groups. On average, we detected a larger number of bacterial species in case samples than controls, supporting the potential role of polymicrobial infections in this system. Importantly, we did not detect DNA of viruses or fungi, suggesting that they are not significantly associated with pneumonia in this system. Together, these results highlight the utility of metagenomic sequencing for identifying disease-associated microbes. This preliminary list of microbes will help inform future research on pneumonia-associated fatalities of white-tailed deer.more » « less
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Biddle, Jennifer F (Ed.)ABSTRACT Autotrophic bacteria are able to fix CO2in a great diversity of habitats, even though this dissolved gas is relatively scarce at neutral pH and above. As many of these bacteria rely on CO2fixation by ribulose 1,5-bisphospate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) for biomass generation, they must compensate for the catalytical constraints of this enzyme with CO2-concentrating mechanisms (CCMs). CCMs consist of CO2and HCO3−transporters and carboxysomes. Carboxysomes encapsulate RubisCO and carbonic anhydrase (CA) within a protein shell and are essential for the operation of a CCM in autotrophicBacteriathat use the Calvin-Benson-Basham cycle. Members of the genusThiomicrospiralack genes homologous to those encoding previously described CA, and prior to this work, the mechanism of function for their carboxysomes was unclear. In this paper, we provide evidence that a member of the recently discovered iota family of carbonic anhydrase enzymes (ιCA) plays a role in CO2fixation by carboxysomes from members ofThiomicrospiraand potentially otherBacteria. Carboxysome enrichments fromThiomicrospira pelophilaandThiomicrospira aerophilawere found to have CA activity and contain ιCA, which is encoded in their carboxysome loci. When the gene encoding ιCA was interrupted inT. pelophila, cells could no longer grow under low-CO2conditions, and CA activity was no longer detectable in their carboxysomes. WhenT. pelophilaιCA was expressed in a strain ofEscherichia colilacking native CA activity, this strain recovered an ability to grow under low CO2conditions, and CA activity was present in crude cell extracts prepared from this strain. IMPORTANCEHere, we provide evidence that iota carbonic anhydrase (ιCA) plays a role in CO2fixation by some organisms with CO2-concentrating mechanisms; this is the first time that ιCA has been detected in carboxysomes. While ιCA genes have been previously described in other members of bacteria, this is the first description of a physiological role for this type of carbonic anhydrase in this domain. Given its distribution in alkaliphilic autotrophic bacteria, ιCA may provide an advantage to organisms growing at high pH values and could be helpful for engineering autotrophic organisms to synthesize compounds of industrial interest under alkaline conditions.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available September 18, 2025