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Bacterial community transcription patterns during a marine phytoplankton bloom
Author(s) -
RintaKanto Johanna M.,
Sun Shulei,
Sharma Shalabh,
Kiene Ronald P.,
Moran Mary Ann
Publication year - 2012
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/j.1462-2920.2011.02602.x
Subject(s) - bacterioplankton , biology , phytoplankton , bloom , roseobacter , algal bloom , chemostat , microbial loop , biogeochemical cycle , microcosm , phototroph , nutrient , microbial food web , ecology , phylogenetics , botany , bacteria , photosynthesis , gene , genetics , clade
Summary Bacterioplankton consume a large proportion of photosynthetically fixed carbon in the ocean and control its biogeochemical fate. We used an experimental metatranscriptomics approach to compare bacterial activities that route energy and nutrients during a phytoplankton bloom compared with non‐bloom conditions. mRNAs were sequenced from duplicate bloom and control microcosms 1 day after a phytoplankton biomass peak, and transcript copies per litre of seawater were calculated using an internal mRNA standard. Transcriptome analysis revealed a potential novel mechanism for enhanced efficiency during carbon‐limited growth, mediated through membrane‐bound pyrophosphatases [V‐type H(+)‐translocating; hppA ]; bloom bacterioplankton participated less in this metabolic energy scavenging than non‐bloom bacterioplankton, with possible implications for differences in growth yields on organic substrates. Bloom bacterioplankton transcribed more copies of genes predicted to increase cell surface adhesiveness, mediated by changes in bacterial signalling molecules related to biofilm formation and motility; these may be important in microbial aggregate formation. Bloom bacterioplankton also transcribed more copies of genes for organic acid utilization, suggesting an increased importance of this compound class in the bioreactive organic matter released during phytoplankton blooms. Transcription patterns were surprisingly faithful within a taxon regardless of treatment, suggesting that phylogeny broadly predicts the ecological roles of bacterial groups across ‘boom’ and ‘bust’ environmental backgrounds.

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