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ABSTRACT: Importance
The cycling of sulfur is one of Earth's major biogeochemical processes and is closely related to the energy metabolism of microorganisms living in the deep-sea cold seep and hydrothermal vents. To date, some of the members of Chloroflexota are proposed to play a previously unrecognized role in sulfur cycling. However, the sulfur metabolic characteristics of deep-sea Chloroflexota bacteria have never been reported, and remain to be verified in cultured deep-sea representatives. Here, we show that the deep-sea Chloroflexota bacterium ZRK33 can perform sulfate assimilation in both laboratory and deep-sea conditions, which expands our knowledge of the sulfur metabolic potential of deep-sea Chloroflexota bacteria. We also show that the genes associated with assimilatory and dissimilatory sulfate reduction ubiquitously distribute in the deep-sea Chloroflexota members, providing hints to the roles of Chloroflexota bacteria in deep-sea sulfur biogeochemical cycling.
SUBMITTER: Zheng R
PROVIDER: S-EPMC11005417 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Apr
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
mBio 20240228 4
<i>Chloroflexota</i> bacteria are abundant and globally distributed in various deep-sea ecosystems. It has been reported based on metagenomics data that two deep-sea <i>Chloroflexota</i> lineages (the SAR202 group and <i>Dehalococcoidia</i> class) have the potential to drive sulfur cycling. However, the absence of cultured <i>Chloroflexota</i> representatives is a significant bottleneck toward understanding their contribution to the deep-sea sulfur cycling. In this study, we find that <i>Phototr ...[more]