AUTHOR=Ren Minglei , Wang Jianjun TITLE=Biogeography of soda lake microbiome and uneven cross-continent transition rates JOURNAL=Frontiers in Microbiology VOLUME=Volume 16 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/microbiology/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2025.1614302 DOI=10.3389/fmicb.2025.1614302 ISSN=1664-302X ABSTRACT=Microbial dark matter in soda lakes has been increasingly illuminated, however, much remains unknown about microbial biogeography at the global scale and underlying mechanisms. To study microbial biogeography and dispersal patterns, we analyzed 51 soda lake metagenomes collected from key global regions, including 37 from the Kulunda Steppe in South Siberia, Mongolia, and the Cariboo Plateau in Canada, as well as 14 newly sequenced samples from the East African Rift Valley. We found that there were 575 widespread taxa such as the dominant archaeal Haloarchaeota and actinobacterial Nitriliruptor persistently inhabiting global soda lakes. We further identified 1,217 region-specific taxa, with Africa containing the highest proportion of geographical endemism (66.72%). Such effects of dispersal limitation on microbial assembly of global soda lakes were supported by the significant distance-decay relationships for taxonomic and functional composition, and genomic similarity. For example, microbial genomic divergence was closely associated with their geographical distance, showing that both inter- and intraspecies genome similarities decayed with distance. This concurs with the uneven dispersal history among continental microbiomes, indicated by the at least one order of magnitude lower transition rates between Africa and other continents than between Asia and North America. Our results revealed that the global biogeography of soda lake microbial communities across three continents and their distinct transition history between continents. These findings highlight the critical role of microbial evolutionary history associated with dispersal limitation in shaping their geographical distribution in extreme environments.