Plasmidome-defensome interactions drive adaptation of ‘ Fervidacidithiobacillus caldus’ in natural and industrial extreme acidic environments

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Abstract

Plasmids are major drivers of microbial evolution, enabling horizontal gene transfer (HGT) and facilitating adaptation through the dissemination of relevant functional genes and traits. However, little is known about plasmid diversity and function in extremophiles. ‘ Fervidacidithiobacillus caldus’, a meso-thermo-acidophilic sulfur oxidizer, is a key player in sulfur cycling in natural and industrially engineered acidic environments. Here, we present a comprehensive analysis of the plasmidome, and associated anti-mobile genetic element (anti-MGE) defense systems (defensome), across genomes of this species and metagenomes from diverse natural and industrial settings harboring ‘ F. caldus’ . We identified >30 distinct plasmids, representing five consistent replication-mobilization families. Plasmids ranged in size between 2.5–65 kb, with gene content and plasmid modularity scaling with element size and copy numbers inversely correlating with size. Plasmids carried variable numbers of hypothetical proteins and transposases, with annotated cargo genes reflecting functional differentiation by habitat. Defensome profiling revealed over 50 anti-MGE systems in sequenced ‘ F. caldus’ isolates, including diverse restriction-modification systems, CRISPR-Cas types IV-A and V-F, and widespread abortive infection and composite defense systems such as Wadjet, Gabija, and Zorya. In environmental populations, an inverse relationship was observed between defensome complexity and plasmidome abundance and diversity, underscoring a pivotal role of the host defensome in modulating persistence, compatibility, and overall plasmid diversity across ‘ F. caldus’ populations. Yet, other plasmids appeared decoupled from both host abundance and defensome complexity, suggesting potential host shifts, environmental persistence, or differential replication under suboptimal growth conditions for the host. Altogether, these findings reveal a modular, adaptive plasmidome shaped by selective pressures and host–plasmid–defensome interactions and positions plasmids as key contributors to adaptation, gene flow, and functional innovation in this extreme acidophile.

Importance

Plasmids are key vehicles of gene exchange and adaptation in bacteria, yet their roles in extremophilic systems remain poorly understood. This study provides the first integrated view of the plasmidome and defense systems in ‘ Fervidacidithiobacillus caldus’ , a sulfur-oxidizing acidophile relevant to both natural biogeochemical cycling and industrial bioleaching. We uncover a rich plasmid diversity structured into modular families with variable cargo and backbone features and reveal their coexistence with complex anti-MGE defense repertoires. By combining genomic and metagenomic approaches, we expose principles of plasmid compatibility, persistence, and habitat-specific adaptation. These insights expand current knowledge of mobile genetic elements in extreme environments and provide a foundation for plasmid-based vector design and synthetic biology in acidophiles, with direct implications for biomining and environmental remediation in extreme environments.

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