Premium
Metabolic potential and in situ activity of marine Marinimicrobia bacteria in an anoxic water column
Author(s) -
Bertagnolli Anthony D.,
Padilla Cory C.,
Glass Jennifer B.,
Thamdrup Bo,
Stewart Frank J.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.954
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1462-2920
pISSN - 1462-2912
DOI - 10.1111/1462-2920.13879
Subject(s) - biology , biogeochemical cycle , oxygen minimum zone , metagenomics , anoxic waters , archaea , bacteria , water column , sulfur , environmental chemistry , nitrogen cycle , microaerophile , carbon monoxide dehydrogenase , ecology , nitrogen , biochemistry , gene , carbon monoxide , genetics , chemistry , organic chemistry , upwelling , catalysis
Summary Marinimicrobia bacteria are widespread in subeuphotic areas of the oceans and particularly abundant in oxygen minimum zones (OMZs). Information on Marinimicrobia metabolism is sparse, making the biogeochemical influence of this group challenging to predict. Here, metagenome‐assembled genomes representing Marinimicrobia subgroups PN262000N21 and ARCTIC96B‐7 were retrieved to near completion (97% and 94%) from OMZ metagenomes, with contamination (14.1%) observed only in ARCTIC96B‐7. Genes for aerobic carbon monoxide (CO) oxidation, polysulfide metabolism and hydrogen utilization were identified only in PN262000N21, while genes for partial denitrification occurred in both genomes. Transcripts mapping to these genomes increased from <0.3% of total mRNA from the oxic zone to a max of 22% under anoxia. ARCTIC96B‐7 transcript representation decreased an order of magnitude from non‐sulfidic to sulfidic depths. In contrast, PN262000N21 representation was relatively constant throughout the OMZ, although transcripts encoding sulfur‐utilizing proteins, including sulfur transferases, were enriched at sulfidic depths. PN262000N21 transcripts encoding a protein with fibronectin domains similar to those in cellulosome‐producing bacteria were also abundant, suggesting a potential for high molecular weight carbon cycling. These data provide omic‐level descriptions of metabolic potential and activity in OMZ‐associated Marinimicrobia, suggesting differentiation between subgroups with roles in carbon and dissimilatory inorganic nitrogen and sulfur cycling.