98%
921
2 minutes
20
Background: 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.
Results: Prominent active 0.2-3 µm free-living clades comprised Aurantivirga, "Formosa", Cd. Prosiliicoccus, NS4, NS5, Amylibacter, Planktomarina, SAR11 Ia, SAR92, and SAR86, whereas BD1-7, Stappiaceae, Nitrincolaceae, Methylophagaceae, Sulfitobacter, NS9, Polaribacter, Lentimonas, CL500-3, Algibacter, and Glaciecola dominated 3-10 µm and > 10 µm particles. Particle-attached bacteria were more diverse and exhibited more dynamic adaptive shifts over time in terms of taxonomic composition and repertoires of encoded polysaccharide-targeting enzymes. In total, 305 species-level metagenome-assembled genomes were obtained, including 152 particle-attached bacteria, 100 of which were novel for the sampling site with 76 representing new species. Compared to free-living bacteria, they featured on average larger metagenome-assembled genomes with higher proportions of polysaccharide utilization loci. The latter were predicted to target a broader spectrum of polysaccharide substrates, ranging from readily soluble, simple structured storage polysaccharides (e.g., laminarin, α-glucans) to less soluble, complex structural, or secreted polysaccharides (e.g., xylans, cellulose, pectins). In particular, the potential to target poorly soluble or complex polysaccharides was more widespread among abundant and active particle-attached bacteria.
Conclusions: Particle-attached bacteria represented only 1% of all bloom-associated bacteria, yet our data suggest that many abundant active clades played a pivotal gatekeeping role in the solubilization and subsequent degradation of numerous important classes of algal glycans. The high diversity of polysaccharide niches among the most active particle-attached clades therefore is a determining factor for the proportion of algal polysaccharides that can be rapidly remineralized during generally short-lived phytoplankton bloom events. Video Abstract.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10877868 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40168-024-01757-5 | DOI Listing |
Mar Pollut Bull
November 2025
State Key Laboratory of Tropical Oceanography, Laboratory of Tropical Marine Bio-resources and Ecology, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Applied Marine Biology, South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510301, China; Sanya National Marine Ecosystem Resear
Dissolved organic phosphorus (DOP) has been closely linked to microbial alkaline phosphatases (AP) whose affiliation and diversity is largely unknown in coastal waters. Here we assessed genetic diversity and abundance of bacterial alkaline phosphatases phoD and phosphate transporter phoD and explored how AP activity interacting with them along the salinity gradient of Pearl River Estuary (PRE), which was under heavy anthropogenic pressures. Partial least squares path modeling (PLS-PM) revealed the pathway from environmental variables (pH and salinity) to phoD-harboring bacterial taxa in particle-attached fraction and then to phoD gene copies was the determinant process for AP activity; while AP activity in free-living fraction was mainly controlled by the pathway from dissolved inorganic phosphorus (DIP) to phoD encoding community structure and its gene abundance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Microbiol
July 2025
IFREMER, PHYTOX, GENALG, Nantes, France.
In this study, we examined the role of species-specific algal exudates in shaping bacterial community structure and interactions using synthetic microbial communities co-cultured with Alexandrium minutum and Prymnesium parvum. Cell-free algal exudates supported bacterial growth as the sole carbon source and revealed distinct exometabolomes unique to each algal species. These exometabolomes selectively influenced bacterial community composition, even among common copiotrophic taxa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Microbiome
June 2025
Ecological Genomics Group, Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Bremen, Germany.
Background: Benthic microbiomes exhibit remarkable temporal stability, contrasting with the dynamic, substrate-driven successions of bacterioplankton. Nonetheless, understanding their role in carbon cycling and interactions between these two microbial communities is limited due to the complexity of benthic microbiomes.
Results: Here, we used a long-reads (LRs) metagenomic approach to examine benthic microbiomes and compared them to the microbiomes in the overlaying water column and on particles, sampled at the same site and time off the island Heligoland in the North Sea.
Front Microbiol
May 2025
University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science Horn Point Laboratory, Cambridge, MD, United States.
Introduction: Marine particles form in the ocean surface sink through the water column into the deep ocean, sequestering carbon. Microorganisms inhabit and consume carbon in these particles. The East Pacific Rise (EPR) harbors both an Oxygen Deficient Zone (ODZ) and a non-buoyant plume region formed from hydrothermal vents located on the ocean floor, allowing us to explore relationships between microbial community and particle size between a range of environments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Technol
June 2025
College of Marine Life Sciences, MoE Key Laboratory of Evolution & Marine Biodiversity and Institute of Evolution & Marine Biodiversity, Ocean University of China, Qingdao 266003, China.
Atmospheric particulate matter (PM) deposition has become an important nutrient source in marine ecosystems, increasing particulate organic carbon and resource heterogeneity. However, their effects on marine bacterial communities remain unclear. In this study, by conducting on-board microcosm experiments with anthropogenic East Asian PM in the oligotrophic South China Sea, the response of particle-associated (PA) bacteria was investigated and compared with its free-living (FL) counterparts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF