Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Methylmercury, biomagnifying through food chains, is highly toxic for aquatic life. Its production and degradation are largely driven by microbial transformations; however, diversity and metabolic activity of mercury transformers, resulting in methylmercury concentrations in environments, remain poorly understood. Microbial mats are thick biofilms where oxic and anoxic metabolisms cooccur, providing opportunities to investigate the complexity of the microbial mercury transformations over contrasted redox conditions. Here, we conducted a genome-resolved metagenomic and metatranscriptomic analysis to identify putative activity of mercury reducers, methylators and demethylators in microbial mats strongly contaminated by mercury. Our transcriptomic results revealed the major role of rare microorganisms in mercury cycling. Mercury methylators, mainly related to Desulfobacterota, expressed a large panel of metabolic activities in sulfur, iron, nitrogen, and halogen compound transformations, extending known activities of mercury methylators under suboxic to anoxic conditions. Methylmercury detoxification processes were dissociated in the microbial mats with methylmercury cleavage being carried out by sulfide-oxidizing Thiotrichaceae and Rhodobacteraceae populations, whereas mercury reducers included members of the Verrucomicrobia, Bacteroidetes, Gammaproteobacteria, and different populations of Rhodobacteraceae. However most of the mercury reduction was potentially carried out anaerobically by sulfur- and iron-reducing Desulfuromonadaceae, revising our understanding of mercury transformers ecophysiology.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8605020PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41522-021-00255-yDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

microbial mats
16
mercury
11
metabolic activities
8
activities mercury
8
mercury cycling
8
mats methylmercury
8
activity mercury
8
mercury transformers
8
mercury reducers
8
mercury methylators
8

Similar Publications

Anaerobic methanotrophic archaea (ANME) are crucial to planetary carbon cycling. They oxidise methane in anoxic niches by transferring electrons to nitrate, metal oxides, or sulfate-reducing bacteria. No ANMEs have been isolated, hampering the biochemical investigation of anaerobic methane oxidation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

At methane seeps worldwide, syntrophic anaerobic methane-oxidizing archaea and sulfate-reducing bacteria promote carbonate precipitation and rock formation, acting as methane and carbon sinks. Although maintenance of anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) within seep carbonates has been documented, its reactivation upon methane exposure remains uncertain. Surface-associated microbes may metabolize sulfide from AOM, maintain carbonate anoxia, contribute to carbonate dissolution, and support higher trophic levels; however, these communities are poorly described.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: Microbial mats inhabiting extreme environments have been studied as modern analogs of stromatolites. Mats in Octopus Spring and Mushroom Spring, Yellowstone National Park, are predominated by unicellular photoautotrophic cyanobacteria ( spp.), which are thought to cross-feed filamentous photoheterotrophic bacteria (mainly spp.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Extreme environments, such as hypersaline habitats, hot springs, deep-sea hydrothermal vents, glaciers, and permafrost, provide diverse ecological niches for studying microbial evolution. However, knowledge of microbial communities in extreme environments at high southern latitudes remains limited, aside from Antarctica. Laguna Timone is a hypersaline crater lake located in a Pleistocene maar of the Pali Aike Volcanic Field, southern Patagonia; the lake was formed during basaltic eruptions in a periglacial setting.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Non-heterocytous filamentous cyanobacteria are increasingly recognized as abundant and diverse microbial components of tropical and subtropical mangrove ecosystems. However, taxonomic studies of cyanobacteria in Thailand have largely focused on freshwater and artificial hypersaline environments, leaving mangrove-associated cyanobacterial communities understudied. In this polyphasic study, cyanobacterial mats were isolated and characterized from mangrove environments along the Andaman coastlines of Ranong and Phang-Nga provinces.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF