AI Article Synopsis

  • Metagenomics is revolutionizing our understanding of microbial life, particularly in unexplored areas like deep-sea environments, previously focused primarily on surface waters.
  • Researchers analyzed a metagenomic library from 3,000 meters deep in the Mediterranean, revealing microbial communities analogous to those found in shallower Pacific waters, suggesting that temperature plays a crucial role in microbial community structure.
  • The findings indicate that deep-sea microbes predominantly rely on decomposing complex organic materials, but also have genes that may enable them to oxidize carbon monoxide aerobically, highlighting unique metabolic pathways in these environments.

Article Abstract

Background: Metagenomics is emerging as a powerful method to study the function and physiology of the unexplored microbial biosphere, and is causing us to re-evaluate basic precepts of microbial ecology and evolution. Most marine metagenomic analyses have been nearly exclusively devoted to photic waters.

Methodology/principal Findings: We constructed a metagenomic fosmid library from 3,000 m-deep Mediterranean plankton, which is much warmer (approximately 14 degrees C) than waters of similar depth in open oceans (approximately 2 degrees C). We analyzed the library both by phylogenetic screening based on 16S rRNA gene amplification from clone pools and by sequencing both insert extremities of ca. 5,000 fosmids. Genome recruitment strategies showed that the majority of high scoring pairs corresponded to genomes from Rhizobiales within the Alphaproteobacteria, Cenarchaeum symbiosum, Planctomycetes, Acidobacteria, Chloroflexi and Gammaproteobacteria. We have found a community structure similar to that found in the aphotic zone of the Pacific. However, the similarities were significantly higher to the mesopelagic (500-700 m deep) in the Pacific than to the single 4000 m deep sample studied at this location. Metabolic genes were mostly related to catabolism, transport and degradation of complex organic molecules, in agreement with a prevalent heterotrophic lifestyle for deep-sea microbes. However, we observed a high percentage of genes encoding dehydrogenases and, among them, cox genes, suggesting that aerobic carbon monoxide oxidation may be important in the deep ocean as an additional energy source.

Conclusions/significance: The comparison of metagenomic libraries from the deep Mediterranean and the Pacific ALOHA water column showed that bathypelagic Mediterranean communities resemble more mesopelagic communities in the Pacific, and suggests that, in the absence of light, temperature is a major stratifying factor in the oceanic water column, overriding pressure at least over 4000 m deep. Several chemolithotrophic metabolic pathways could supplement organic matter degradation in this most depleted habitat.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1976395PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0000914PLOS

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