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Organismal and spatial partitioning of energy and macronutrient transformations within a hypersaline mat.

Authors :
Mobberley JM
Lindemann SR
Bernstein HC
Moran JJ
Renslow RS
Babauta J
Hu D
Beyenal H
Nelson WC
Source :
FEMS microbiology ecology [FEMS Microbiol Ecol] 2017 Apr 01; Vol. 93 (4).
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Phototrophic mat communities are model ecosystems for studying energy cycling and elemental transformations because complete biogeochemical cycles occur over millimeter-to-centimeter scales. Characterization of energy and nutrient capture within hypersaline phototrophic mats has focused on specific processes and organisms; however, little is known about community-wide distribution of and linkages between these processes. To investigate energy and macronutrient capture and flow through a structured community, the spatial and organismal distribution of metabolic functions within a compact hypersaline mat community from Hot Lake have been broadly elucidated through species-resolved metagenomics and geochemical, microbial diversity and metabolic gradient measurements. Draft reconstructed genomes of 34 abundant organisms revealed three dominant cyanobacterial populations differentially distributed across the top layers of the mat suggesting niche separation along light and oxygen gradients. Many organisms contained diverse functional profiles, allowing for metabolic response to changing conditions within the mat. Organisms with partial nitrogen and sulfur metabolisms were widespread indicating dependence on metabolite exchange. In addition, changes in community spatial structure were observed over the diel. These results indicate that organisms within the mat community have adapted to the temporally dynamic environmental gradients in this hypersaline mat through metabolic flexibility and fluid syntrophic interactions, including shifts in spatial arrangements.<br /> (© FEMS 2017.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1574-6941
Volume :
93
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
FEMS microbiology ecology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28334407
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/femsec/fix028