Project description:Previous studies have demonstrated that the iron content in marine heterotrophic bacteria is comparatively higher than that of phytoplankton. Therefore, they have been indicated to play a major role in the biogeochemical cycling of iron. In this study, we aimed to investigate the potential of viral lysis as a source of iron for marine heterotrophic bacteria. Viral lysates were derived from the marine heterotrophic bacterium, Vibrio natriegens PWH3a (A.K.A Vibrio alginolyticus). The bioavailability of Fe in the lysates was determined using a model heterotrophic bacterium, namely, Dokdonia sp. strain Dokd-P16, isolated from Fe-limited waters along Line P transect in the Northeastern Pacific Ocean. The bacteria were grown under Fe-deplete or Fe-replete conditions before being exposed to the viral lysate. Differential gene expression following exposure to the viral lysate was analyzed via RNA sequencing to identify differentially expressed genes under iron-replete and iron-deplete conditions. This study would provide novel insights into the role of viral lysis in heterotrophic bacteria in supplying bioavailable iron to other marine microorganisms under iron-limiting and non-limiting conditions. First, the marine heterotrophic bacterium genome, Dokdonia sp. strain Dokd-P16, was sequenced to provide a genomic context for the expression studies. Subsequently, the relative gene expression in Dokdonia sp. strain Dokd-P16 grown under Fe limiting and non-limiting conditions were analyzed. This transcriptomic approach would be utilized to elucidate genes regulated by Fe availability in Dokdonia sp. strain Dokd-P16, which indicate its Fe-related response viral lysate exposure. Taken together, in this study, the transcriptomic responses of Fe-limited and non-limited marine heterotrophic bacteria were analyzed, which provided novel insights into the biological availability of Fe from the viral lysates.
Project description:Phytoplankton-derived metabolites fuel a large fraction of heterotrophic bacterial production in the global ocean, yet methodological challenges have limited our knowledge of organic molecules transferred between these two microbial groups. In an experimental bloom study in which the diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana was co-cultured with three heterotrophic marine bacteria, we concurrently measured diatom endometabolites (i.e., potential exometabolite supply) by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and bacterial gene expression (i.e., potential exometabolite uptake) by metatranscriptomic sequencing.
Project description:Marine microalgae (phytoplankton) mediate almost half of the worldwide photosynthetic carbon dioxide fixation and therefore play a pivotal role in global carbon cycling, most prominently during massive phytoplankton blooms. Phytoplankton biomass consists of considerable proportions of polysaccharides, substantial parts of which are rapidly remineralized by heterotrophic bacteria. We analyzed the diversity, activity and functional potential of such polysaccharide-degrading bacteria in different size fractions during a diverse spring phytoplankton bloom at Helgoland Roads (southern North Sea) at high temporal resolution using microscopic, physicochemical, biodiversity, metagenome and metaproteome analyses.
2024-01-15 | PXD046705 | Pride
Project description:Transcriptomes of marine phytoplankton and heterotrophic bacteria
Project description:Organic substrate transfer between photoautotrophic and heterotrophic microbes in the surface ocean is a central but poorly understood process in the global carbon cycle. This study developed a co-culture system of marine diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana and heterotrophic bacterium Ruegeria pomeroyi, and addressed diel changes in phytoplankton endometabolite production using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and bacterial metabolite consumption using gene expression. Here we deposit data for NMR analysis from the study. Samples were collected every 6 hours over two days under a diel light cycle. During the course of the study, we observed an increase in some phytoplankton endometabolites presumably due to the effects of the associated bacteria. We introduced an additional experiment and tested this possibility by comparing phytoplankton endometabolite accumulation between axenic treatments and bacteria coculture treatments.
Project description:Phytoplankton and bacteria form the base of marine ecosystems and their interactions drive global biogeochemical cycles. The effect of bacteria and bacteria-produced compounds on diatoms range from synergistic to pathogenic and can affect the physiology and transcriptional patterns of the interacting diatom. Here, we investigate physiological and transcriptional changes in the marine diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana induced by extracellular metabolites of a known antagonistic bacterium Croceibacter atlanticus. Mono-cultures of C. atlanticus released compounds that inhibited diatom cell division and elicited a distinctive phenotype of enlarged cells with multiple plastids and nuclei, similar to what was observed when the diatom was co-cultured with the live bacteria. The extracellular C. atlanticus metabolites induced transcriptional changes in diatom pathways that include recognition and signaling pathways, cell cycle regulation, carbohydrate and amino acid production, as well as cell wall stability. Phenotypic analysis showed a disruption in the diatom cell cycle progression and an increase in both intra- and extracellular carbohydrates in diatom cultures after bacterial exudate treatment. The transcriptional changes and corresponding phenotypes suggest that extracellular bacterial metabolites, produced independently of direct bacterial-diatom interaction, may modulate diatom metabolism in ways that support bacterial growth.
Project description:One of the most abundant organic carbon sources in the ocean is glycolate, a compound that is commonly secreted by marine phytoplankton resulting in an estimated annual flux of one petagram of glycolate in marine environments. While it is generally accepted that glycolate is oxidized to glyoxylate by marine bacteria, the further fate of this C2 metabolite is not well understood. Here we show that ubiquitous marine Proteobacteria are able to assimilate glyoxylate via the hydroxyaspartate cycle (BHAC) that was originally proposed 56 years ago. We unravel the biochemistry of the BHAC and describe the structure of its key enzymes, including a previously unknown primary imine reductase. Overall, the BHAC allows for the direct production of oxaloacetate from glyoxylate through only four enzymatic steps, representing the most efficient glyoxylate assimilation route described to date. Analysis of marine metagenomes shows that the BHAC is globally distributed and on average 20-fold more abundant than the glycerate pathway, the only other known pathway for net glyoxylate assimilation. In a field study on a phytoplankton bloom, we show that glycolate is present in high nanomolar concentrations and taken up by prokaryotes at rates that allow a full turnover of the glycolate pool within one week. During the bloom, the BHAC is present in up to 1.5% of the bacterial community and actively transcribed, supporting its role in glycolate assimilation and suggesting a new trophic interaction between autotrophic phytoplankton and heterotrophic bacterioplankton.
Project description:Emiliania huxleyi: Cellular cascades induced by bacterial algicides Interactions between phytoplankton and bacteria play a central role in mediating oceanic biogeochemical cycling and microbial trophic structure in the ocean. The intricate relationships between these two domains of life are mediated via excreted molecules that facilitate communication and determine competitive outcomes. Yet, despite their predicted importance, identifying these secreted compounds and understanding their ecological significance has remained a challenge. Research in the Whalen Lab endeavors to (i) identify those bacterially-derived chemical signaling compounds (i.e. infochemicals) that mediate phytoplankton population dynamics, and (ii) determine the underlying physiological processes that contribute to phytoplankton tolerance or susceptibility to these compounds. Recently, the Whalen lab isolated an alkylquinolone-signaling molecule with known quorum sensing function from the globally distributed marine γ-proteobacteria, Pseudoalteromonas sp. capable of inducing species-specific phytoplankton mortality. This research was the first to suggest quorum sensing compounds have expanded and previously unrecognized ecological roles in regulating primary production and phytoplankton bloom dynamics. We are now investigating in how this alkylquinolone induces phytoplankton mortality via transcriptomic profiling and diagnostic biochemical analysis. Complementary to this transcriptomic examination, we will complete whole-cell proteomic approach to identify those phytoplankton proteins crucial in competitive interactions with bacterial infochemicals, but whose functions may not yet be known. With this proteomic approach in parallel to our transcriptomic investigation, we can establish a better understanding of the eukaryotic macromolecular targets and cellular cascades induced in response to bacterial algicides like alkylquinolones. With the knowledge gained from both approaches we can begin to address how these ?keystone molecules? influence population dynamics and community composition of phytoplankton and bacteria in field-based experiments with the goal of defining a new mechanistic framework for how bacterially derived signaling molecules influence biogeochemical cycles. D= DMSO - control treatment L= low 1 nm HHG additions M= medium 10 nm HHG additions H= high 100 nm HHG additions Each treatment had 4 biological replicates A-D
Project description:Emiliania huxleyi: Cellular cascades induced by bacterial algicides Interactions between phytoplankton and bacteria play a central role in mediating oceanic biogeochemical cycling and microbial trophic structure in the ocean. The intricate relationships between these two domains of life are mediated via excreted molecules that facilitate communication and determine competitive outcomes. Yet, despite their predicted importance, identifying these secreted compounds and understanding their ecological significance has remained a challenge. Research in the Whalen Lab endeavors to (i) identify those bacterially-derived chemical signaling compounds (i.e. infochemicals) that mediate phytoplankton population dynamics, and (ii) determine the underlying physiological processes that contribute to phytoplankton tolerance or susceptibility to these compounds. Recently, the Whalen lab isolated an alkylquinolone-signaling molecule with known quorum sensing function from the globally distributed marine γ-proteobacteria, Pseudoalteromonas sp. capable of inducing species-specific phytoplankton mortality. This research was the first to suggest quorum sensing compounds have expanded and previously unrecognized ecological roles in regulating primary production and phytoplankton bloom dynamics. We are now investigating in how this alkylquinolone induces phytoplankton mortality via transcriptomic profiling and diagnostic biochemical analysis. Complementary to this transcriptomic examination, we will complete whole-cell proteomic approach to identify those phytoplankton proteins crucial in competitive interactions with bacterial infochemicals, but whose functions may not yet be known. With this proteomic approach in parallel to our transcriptomic investigation, we can establish a better understanding of the eukaryotic macromolecular targets and cellular cascades induced in response to bacterial algicides like alkylquinolones. With the knowledge gained from both approaches we can begin to address how these ?keystone molecules? influence population dynamics and community composition of phytoplankton and bacteria in field-based experiments with the goal of defining a new mechanistic framework for how bacterially derived signaling molecules influence biogeochemical cycles. D= DMSO - control treatment L= low 1 nm HHG additions M= medium 10 nm HHG additions H= high 100 nm HHG additions Each treatment had 4 biological replicates A-D
Project description:Microbial photoautotroph-heterotroph interactions underlie marine food webs and shape ecosystem diversity and structure in upper ocean environments. However, the high complexity of in situ ecosystems renders it difficult to study these interactions. Two-member co-culture systems of picocyanobacteria and single heterotrophic bacterial strains have been thoroughly investigated. However, in situ interactions comprise far more diverse heterotrophic bacterial associations with single photoautotrophic organisms. Here, bacterial community composition, lifestyle preference, and genomic- and proteomic-level metabolic characteristics were investigated for an open ocean Synechococcus ecotype and its associated heterotrophs over 91 days of co-cultivation. The associated heterotrophic bacterial assembly mostly constituted five classes including Flavobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Phycisphaerae, Gammaproteobacteria, and Alphaproteobacteria. The seven most abundant taxa/genera comprised >90% of the total heterotrophic bacterial community, and five of these displayed distinct lifestyle preferences (free-living or attached) and responses to Synechococcus growth phases. Six high-quality genomes from the co-culture system were reconstructed inclusive of Synechococcus and the five dominant heterotrophic bacterial populations. The only primary producer of the co-culture system, Synechococcus, displayed metabolic processes primarily involved in inorganic nutrient uptake, photosynthesis, and organic matter biosynthesis and release. Two of the flavobacterial populations, Muricauda and Winogradskyella, and an SM1A02 population, displayed preferences for initial degradation of complex compounds and biopolymers, as evinced by high abundances of TBDT, glycoside hydrolase, and peptidases proteins. In contrast, the alphaproteobacterium Oricola sp. population mainly utilized low molecular weight DOM, including Flavobacteria metabolism byproducts, through ABC, TRAP, and TTT transport systems. Polysaccharide-utilization loci present in the flavobacterial genomes encoded similar trans-membrane protein complexes as Sus/cellulosome and may influence their lifestyle preferences and close associations with phytoplankton. The heterotrophic bacterial populations exhibited complementary mechanisms for degrading Synechococcus-derived organic matter and driving nutrient cycling. In addition to nutrient exchange, removal of reactive oxygen species and vitamin trafficking also contributed to the maintenance of the Synechococcus / heterotroph co-culture system and the interactions shaping the system.