Author ORCID Identifier
Frederik Schulz: 0000-0002-4932-4677
Agnes K.M. Weiner: 0000-0002-9917-5235
Laura A. Katz: 0000-0002-9138-4702
Tanja Woyke: 0000-0002-9485-5637
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-24-2025
Publication Title
Nature Communications
Abstract
Protists play important roles in nutrient cycling across ecosystems, yet the composition and function of their associated microbiomes remain poorly studied. Here, we use cultivation-independent single-cell isolation and genome-resolved metagenomics to investigate the microbiomes and viromes of more than 100 uncultivated ciliates and amoebae from diverse environments. Our findings reveal unique microbiome structures and complex associations with bacterial symbionts and viruses, with stark differences between ciliates and amoebae. We recover 117 microbial genomes affiliated with known eukaryotic endosymbionts, including Holosporales, Rickettsiales, Legionellales, Chlamydiae, and Babelota, and 258 genomes linked to host-associated Patescibacteriota. Many show genome reduction and genes related to toxin-antitoxin systems and nucleotide parasitism, indicating adaptation to intracellular lifestyles. We also identify more than 80 giant viruses from diverse lineages, some actively expressing genes in single-cell transcriptomes, along with other viruses predicted to infect eukaryotes or symbiotic bacteria. The frequent co-occurrence of giant viruses and microbial symbionts, especially in amoebae, suggests multipartite interactions. Together, our study highlights protists as hubs of microbial and viral associations and provides a broad view of the diversity, activity, and ecological importance of their hidden partners.
Volume
16
Issue
10336
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-65263-4
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Version
Version of Record
Recommended Citation
Schulz, Frederik; Yan, Ying; Weiner, Agnes K. M.; Ahsan, Ragib; Katz, Laura A.; and Woyke, Tanja, "Single-Cell Genomics Reveals Complex Microbial and Viral Associations in Ciliates and Testate Amoebae" (2025). Biological Sciences: Faculty Publications, Smith College, Northampton, MA.
https://scholarworks.smith.edu/bio_facpubs/324
