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The Amazon River microbiome, a story of humic carbon

Authors :
Nicolas Leroux
Aleicia Holland
Sidki Bouslama
Pierre-Luc Mercier
Adalberto Luis Val
François-Étienne Sylvain
Nicolas Derome
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

The Amazon River basin sustains dramatic hydrochemical gradients defined by three water types: white, clear and black waters. Black waters contain important loads of allochthonous humic dissolved organic carbon (DOC), mostly coming from bacteria-mediated lignin degradation, a process that remains understudied. Here, we identified the main bacterial taxa and functions associated with contrasting Amazonian water types, and shed light on their potential implication in the lignin degradation process. We performed an extensive field bacterioplankton sampling campaign from the three Amazonian water types, and combined our observations to a meta-analysis of 90 Amazonian basin shotgun metagenomes used to build a tailored functional inference database. We showed that the overall quality of DOC is a major driver of bacterioplankton structure, transcriptional activity and functional repertory. We also showed that among the taxa mostly associated to differences between water types, Polynucleobacter sinensis particularly stood out, as its abundance and transcriptional activity was strongly correlated to black water environments, and specially to humic DOC concentration. Screening the reference genome of this bacteria, we found genes coding for enzymes implicated in all the main lignin degradation steps, suggesting that this bacteria may play key roles in the carbon cycle processes within the Amazon basin.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........44ecea67571a83890d75309bf8a399f6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.07.21.453257