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Dive into the research topics where Ramiro Logares is active.

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Featured researches published by Ramiro Logares.


Science | 2015

Eukaryotic plankton diversity in the sunlit ocean

Colomban de Vargas; Stéphane Audic; Nicolas Henry; Johan Decelle; Frédéric Mahé; Ramiro Logares; Enrique Lara; Cédric Berney; Noan Le Bescot; Ian Probert; Margaux Carmichael; Julie Poulain; Sarah Romac; Sébastien Colin; Jean-Marc Aury; Lucie Bittner; Samuel Chaffron; Micah Dunthorn; Stefan Engelen; Olga Flegontova; Lionel Guidi; Aleš Horák; Olivier Jaillon; Gipsi Lima-Mendez; Julius Lukeš; Shruti Malviya; Raphaël Morard; Matthieu Mulot; Eleonora Scalco; Raffaele Siano

Marine plankton support global biological and geochemical processes. Surveys of their biodiversity have hitherto been geographically restricted and have not accounted for the full range of plankton size. We assessed eukaryotic diversity from 334 size-fractionated photic-zone plankton communities collected across tropical and temperate oceans during the circumglobal Tara Oceans expedition. We analyzed 18S ribosomal DNA sequences across the intermediate plankton-size spectrum from the smallest unicellular eukaryotes (protists, >0.8 micrometers) to small animals of a few millimeters. Eukaryotic ribosomal diversity saturated at ~150,000 operational taxonomic units, about one-third of which could not be assigned to known eukaryotic groups. Diversity emerged at all taxonomic levels, both within the groups comprising the ~11,200 cataloged morphospecies of eukaryotic plankton and among twice as many other deep-branching lineages of unappreciated importance in plankton ecology studies. Most eukaryotic plankton biodiversity belonged to heterotrophic protistan groups, particularly those known to be parasites or symbiotic hosts.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

The Protist Ribosomal Reference database (PR2): a catalog of unicellular eukaryote Small Sub-Unit rRNA sequences with curated taxonomy

Laure Guillou; Dipankar Bachar; Stéphane Audic; David Bass; Cédric Berney; Lucie Bittner; Christophe Boutte; Gaétan Burgaud; Colomban de Vargas; Johan Decelle; Javier Campo; John R. Dolan; Micah Dunthorn; Bente Edvardsen; Maria Holzmann; Wiebe H. C. F. Kooistra; Enrique Lara; Noan Le Bescot; Ramiro Logares; Frédéric Mahé; Ramon Massana; Marina Montresor; Raphaël Morard; Fabrice Not; Jan Pawlowski; Ian Probert; Anne-Laure Sauvadet; Raffaele Siano; Thorsten Stoeck; Daniel Vaulot

The interrogation of genetic markers in environmental meta-barcoding studies is currently seriously hindered by the lack of taxonomically curated reference data sets for the targeted genes. The Protist Ribosomal Reference database (PR2, http://ssu-rrna.org/) provides a unique access to eukaryotic small sub-unit (SSU) ribosomal RNA and DNA sequences, with curated taxonomy. The database mainly consists of nuclear-encoded protistan sequences. However, metazoans, land plants, macrosporic fungi and eukaryotic organelles (mitochondrion, plastid and others) are also included because they are useful for the analysis of high-troughput sequencing data sets. Introns and putative chimeric sequences have been also carefully checked. Taxonomic assignation of sequences consists of eight unique taxonomic fields. In total, 136 866 sequences are nuclear encoded, 45 708 (36 501 mitochondrial and 9657 chloroplastic) are from organelles, the remaining being putative chimeric sequences. The website allows the users to download sequences from the entire and partial databases (including representative sequences after clustering at a given level of similarity). Different web tools also allow searches by sequence similarity. The presence of both rRNA and rDNA sequences, taking into account introns (crucial for eukaryotic sequences), a normalized eight terms ranked-taxonomy and updates of new GenBank releases were made possible by a long-term collaboration between experts in taxonomy and computer scientists.


Trends in Microbiology | 2009

Infrequent marine-freshwater transitions in the microbial world

Ramiro Logares; Jon Bråte; Stefan Bertilsson; Jessica L. Clasen; Kamran Shalchian-Tabrizi; Karin Rengefors

Until recently, the evolutionary relationships between marine and freshwater microbes were unclear, but the use of molecular phylogenies is beginning to shed light on this subject. An increasing amount of studies are showing that marine and freshwater microbes (including viruses) are usually not closely related, often grouping into distinct marine and freshwater phylogenetic clusters, similar to what has been reported before for macroorganisms. These studies indicate that marine-freshwater transitions have been infrequent events during the diversification of microbes and that most of these transitions occurred a long time ago in evolutionary terms. Here we discuss the significance of recent studies addressing this question and consider possible avenues for future research.


Current Biology | 2014

Patterns of Rare and Abundant Marine Microbial Eukaryotes

Ramiro Logares; Stéphane Audic; David Bass; Lucie Bittner; Christophe Boutte; Richard Christen; Jean-Michel Claverie; Johan Decelle; John R. Dolan; Micah Dunthorn; Bente Edvardsen; Angélique Gobet; Wiebe H. C. F. Kooistra; Frédéric Mahé; Fabrice Not; Hiroyuki Ogata; Jan Pawlowski; Massimo C. Pernice; Sarah Romac; Kamran Shalchian-Tabrizi; Nathalie Simon; Thorsten Stoeck; Sébastien Santini; Raffaele Siano; Patrick Wincker; Adriana Zingone; Thomas A. Richards; Colomban de Vargas; Ramon Massana

BACKGROUND Biological communities are normally composed of a few abundant and many rare species. This pattern is particularly prominent in microbial communities, in which most constituent taxa are usually extremely rare. Although abundant and rare subcommunities may present intrinsic characteristics that could be crucial for understanding community dynamics and ecosystem functioning, microbiologists normally do not differentiate between them. Here, we investigate abundant and rare subcommunities of marine microbial eukaryotes, a crucial group of organisms that remains among the least-explored biodiversity components of the biosphere. We surveyed surface waters of six separate coastal locations in Europe, independently considering the picoplankton, nanoplankton, and microplankton/mesoplankton organismal size fractions. RESULTS Deep Illumina sequencing of the 18S rRNA indicated that the abundant regional community was mostly structured by organismal size fraction, whereas the rare regional community was mainly structured by geographic origin. However, some abundant and rare taxa presented similar biogeography, pointing to spatiotemporal structure in the rare microeukaryote biosphere. Abundant and rare subcommunities presented regular proportions across samples, indicating similar species-abundance distributions despite taxonomic compositional variation. Several taxa were abundant in one location and rare in other locations, suggesting large oscillations in abundance. The substantial amount of metabolically active lineages found in the rare biosphere suggests that this subcommunity constitutes a diversity reservoir that can respond rapidly to environmental change. CONCLUSIONS We propose that marine planktonic microeukaryote assemblages incorporate dynamic and metabolically active abundant and rare subcommunities, with contrasting structuring patterns but fairly regular proportions, across space and time.


Environmental Microbiology | 2014

Metagenomic 16S rDNA Illumina tags are a powerful alternative to amplicon sequencing to explore diversity and structure of microbial communities

Ramiro Logares; Shinichi Sunagawa; Guillem Salazar; Francisco M. Cornejo-Castillo; Isabel Ferrera; Hugo Sarmento; Pascal Hingamp; Hiroyuki Ogata; Colomban de Vargas; Gipsi Lima-Mendez; Jeroen Raes; Julie Poulain; Olivier Jaillon; Patrick Wincker; Stefanie Kandels-Lewis; Eric Karsenti; Peer Bork; Silvia G. Acinas

Sequencing of 16S rDNA polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplicons is the most common approach for investigating environmental prokaryotic diversity, despite the known biases introduced during PCR. Here we show that 16S rDNA fragments derived from Illumina-sequenced environmental metagenomes (mi tags) are a powerful alternative to 16S rDNA amplicons for investigating the taxonomic diversity and structure of prokaryotic communities. As part of the Tara Oceans global expedition, marine plankton was sampled in three locations, resulting in 29 subsamples for which metagenomes were produced by shotgun Illumina sequencing (ca. 700 Gb). For comparative analyses, a subset of samples was also selected for Roche-454 sequencing using both shotgun (m454 tags; 13 metagenomes, ca. 2.4 Gb) and 16S rDNA amplicon (454 tags; ca. 0.075 Gb) approaches. Our results indicate that by overcoming PCR biases related to amplification and primer mismatch, mi tags may provide more realistic estimates of community richness and evenness than amplicon 454 tags. In addition, mi tags can capture expected beta diversity patterns. Using mi tags is now economically feasible given the dramatic reduction in high-throughput sequencing costs, having the advantage of retrieving simultaneously both taxonomic (Bacteria, Archaea and Eukarya) and functional information from the same microbial community.


The ISME Journal | 2013

Biogeography of bacterial communities exposed to progressive long-term environmental change

Ramiro Logares; Eva S. Lindström; Silke Langenheder; Jürg Brendan Logue; Harriet Paterson; Johanna Laybourn-Parry; Karin Rengefors; Lars J. Tranvik; Stefan Bertilsson

The response of microbial communities to long-term environmental change is poorly understood. Here, we study bacterioplankton communities in a unique system of coastal Antarctic lakes that were exposed to progressive long-term environmental change, using 454 pyrosequencing of the 16S rDNA gene (V3–V4 regions). At the time of formation, most of the studied lakes harbored marine-coastal microbial communities, as they were connected to the sea. During the past 20 000 years, most lakes isolated from the sea, and subsequently they experienced a gradual, but strong, salinity change that eventually developed into a gradient ranging from freshwater (salinity 0) to hypersaline (salinity 100). Our results indicated that present bacterioplankton community composition was strongly correlated with salinity and weakly correlated with geographical distance between lakes. A few abundant taxa were shared between some lakes and coastal marine communities. Nevertheless, lakes contained a large number of taxa that were not detected in the adjacent sea. Abundant and rare taxa within saline communities presented similar biogeography, suggesting that these groups have comparable environmental sensitivity. Habitat specialists and generalists were detected among abundant and rare taxa, with specialists being relatively more abundant at the extremes of the salinity gradient. Altogether, progressive long-term salinity change appears to have promoted the diversification of bacterioplankton communities by modifying the composition of ancestral communities and by allowing the establishment of new taxa.


Environmental Microbiology | 2015

Marine protist diversity in European coastal waters and sediments as revealed by high-throughput sequencing.

Ramon Massana; Angélique Gobet; Stéphane Audic; David Bass; Lucie Bittner; Christophe Boutte; Aurélie Chambouvet; Richard Christen; Jean-Michel Claverie; Johan Decelle; John R. Dolan; Micah Dunthorn; Bente Edvardsen; Irene Forn; Dominik Forster; Laure Guillou; Olivier Jaillon; Wiebe H. C. F. Kooistra; Ramiro Logares; Frédéric Mahé; Fabrice Not; Hiroyuki Ogata; Jan Pawlowski; Massimo C. Pernice; Ian Probert; Sarah Romac; Thomas A. Richards; Sébastien Santini; Kamran Shalchian-Tabrizi; Raffaele Siano

Although protists are critical components of marine ecosystems, they are still poorly characterized. Here we analysed the taxonomic diversity of planktonic and benthic protist communities collected in six distant European coastal sites. Environmental deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA) from three size fractions (pico-, nano- and micro/mesoplankton), as well as from dissolved DNA and surface sediments were used as templates for tag pyrosequencing of the V4 region of the 18S ribosomal DNA. Beta-diversity analyses split the protist community structure into three main clusters: picoplankton-nanoplankton-dissolved DNA, micro/mesoplankton and sediments. Within each cluster, protist communities from the same site and time clustered together, while communities from the same site but different seasons were unrelated. Both DNA and RNA-based surveys provided similar relative abundances for most class-level taxonomic groups. Yet, particular groups were overrepresented in one of the two templates, such as marine alveolates (MALV)-I and MALV-II that were much more abundant in DNA surveys. Overall, the groups displaying the highest relative contribution were Dinophyceae, Diatomea, Ciliophora and Acantharia. Also, well represented were Mamiellophyceae, Cryptomonadales, marine alveolates and marine stramenopiles in the picoplankton, and Monadofilosa and basal Fungi in sediments. Our extensive and systematic sequencing of geographically separated sites provides the most comprehensive molecular description of coastal marine protist diversity to date.


The ISME Journal | 2010

Freshwater Perkinsea and marine-freshwater colonizations revealed by pyrosequencing and phylogeny of environmental rDNA.

Jon Bråte; Ramiro Logares; Cédric Berney; Dan Kristofer Ree; Dag Klaveness; Kjetill S. Jakobsen; Kamran Shalchian-Tabrizi

Protist parasites are ecologically important, as they can have great impact on host population dynamics and functioning of entire ecosystems. Nevertheless, little is known about their prevalence in aquatic habitats. Here, we investigate the diversity and distributional patterns of the protist parasites Perkinsus and Parvilucifera (Perkinsea). Our approach included 454 pyrosequencing of the 18S rDNA gene obtained from a high-altitude lake (Lake Finsevatn, Norway) and phylogenetic analyses of all publicly available sequences related to Perkinsea. The applied PCR primers target a 450 bp region that encompass the variable V4 region of the 18S rDNA gene and have been optimized for the Titanium upgrade of the 454 technology. Nearly 5000 sequences longer than 150 bp were recovered from nearly all eukaryotic supergroups, and of those, 13 unique sequences were affiliated to Perkinsea. Thus, our new strategy for 454 amplicon sequencing was able to recover a large diversity of distantly related eukaryotes and previously unknown species of Perkinsea. In addition, we identified 40 Perkinsea sequences in GenBank generated by other recent diversity surveys. Importantly, phylogenetic analyses of these sequences identified 17 habitat-specific marine and freshwater clades (PERK 1-17). Hence, only a few successful transitions between these habitats have taken place over the entire history of Perkinsea, suggesting that the boundary between marine and fresh waters may constitute a barrier to cross-colonizations for intracellular parasites.


Microbial Ecology | 2007

Phenotypically different microalgal morphospecies with identical ribosomal DNA: a case of rapid adaptive evolution?

Ramiro Logares; Karin Rengefors; Anke Kremp; Kamran Shalchian-Tabrizi; Andrés Boltovskoy; Torstein Tengs; Aaron Shurtleff; Dag Klaveness

The agents driving the divergence and speciation of free-living microbial populations are still largely unknown. We investigated the dinoflagellate morphospecies Scrippsiella hangoei and Peridinium aciculiferum, which abound in the Baltic Sea and in northern temperate lakes, respectively. Electron microscopy analyses showed significant interspecific differences in the external cellular morphology, but a similar plate pattern in the characteristic dinoflagellate armor. Experimentally, S. hangoei grew in a wide range of salinities (0–30), whereas P. aciculiferum only grew in low salinities (0–3). Despite these phenotypic differences and the habitat segregation, molecular analyses showed identical ribosomal DNA sequences (ITS1, ITS2, 5.8S, SSU, and partial LSU) for both morphospecies. Yet, a strong interspecific genetic isolation was indicated by amplified fragment length polymorphism (FST = 0.76) and cytochrome b (cob) sequence divergence (∼1.90%). Phylogenetic reconstructions based on ribosomal (SSU, LSU) and mitochondrial (cob) DNA indicated a recent marine ancestor for P. aciculiferum. In conclusion, we suggest that the lacustrine P. aciculiferum and the marine-brackish S. hangoei diverged very recently, after a marine–freshwater transition that exposed the ancestral populations to different selective pressures. This hypothetical scenario agrees with mounting data indicating a significant role of natural selection in the divergence of free-living microbes, despite their virtually unrestricted dispersal capabilities. Finally, our results indicate that identical ITS rDNA sequences do not necessarily imply the same microbial species, as commonly assumed.


The ISME Journal | 2012

Diversity patterns and activity of uncultured marine heterotrophic flagellates unveiled with pyrosequencing.

Ramiro Logares; Stéphane Audic; Sébastien Santini; Massimo C. Pernice; Colomban de Vargas; Ramon Massana

Flagellated heterotrophic microeukaryotes have key roles for the functioning of marine ecosystems as they channel large amounts of organic carbon to the upper trophic levels and control the population sizes of bacteria and archaea. Still, we know very little on the diversity patterns of most groups constituting this evolutionary heterogeneous assemblage. Here, we investigate 11 groups of uncultured flagellates known as MArine STramenopiles (MASTs). MASTs are ecologically very important and branch at the base of stramenopiles. We explored the diversity patterns of MASTs using pyrosequencing (18S rDNA) in coastal European waters. We found that MAST groups range from highly to lowly diversified. Pyrosequencing (hereafter ‘454’) allowed us to approach to the limits of taxonomic diversity for all MAST groups, which varied in one order of magnitude (tens to hundreds) in terms of operational taxonomic units (98% similarity). We did not evidence large differences in activity, as indicated by ratios of DNA:RNA-reads. Most groups were strictly planktonic, although we found some groups that were active in sediments and even in anoxic waters. The proportion of reads per size fraction indicated that most groups were composed of very small cells (∼2–5 μm). In addition, phylogenetically different assemblages appeared to be present in different size fractions, depths and geographic zones. Thus, MAST diversity seems to be highly partitioned in spatial scales. Altogether, our results shed light on these ecologically very important but poorly known groups of uncultured marine flagellates.

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Ramon Massana

Spanish National Research Council

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Josep M. Gasol

Spanish National Research Council

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Guillem Salazar

Spanish National Research Council

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Caterina R. Giner

Spanish National Research Council

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Massimo C. Pernice

Spanish National Research Council

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Silvia G. Acinas

Spanish National Research Council

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