Metagenomic survey of methanesulfonic acid (MSA) catabolic genes in an Atlantic Ocean surface water sample and in a partial enrichment.

PeerJ

Instituto de Investigação e Formação Avançada em Ciências e Tecnologias da Saúde (IINFACTS), CESPU , Gandra PRD , Portugal.

Published: October 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Methanesulfonic acid (MSA) plays a significant role in the sulfur biogeochemical cycle, with certain bacteria from soil and marine environments capable of utilizing it.
  • Researchers discovered two conserved operons in these bacteria that are crucial for MSA metabolism.
  • The study showed significant shifts in microbial community composition in response to MSA enrichment, highlighting an increase in methylotrophic bacteria and revealing the inadequacy of traditional markers for studying MSA degradation in oceanic environments.

Article Abstract

Methanesulfonic acid (MSA) is a relevant intermediate of the biogeochemical cycle of sulfur and environmental microorganisms assume an important role in the mineralization of this compound. Several methylotrophic bacterial strains able to grow on MSA have been isolated from soil or marine water and two conserved operons, coding for MSA monooxygenase and coding for a transport system, have been repeatedly encountered in most of these strains. Homologous sequences have also been amplified directly from the environment or observed in marine metagenomic data, but these showed a base composition (G + C content) very different from their counterparts from cultivated bacteria. The aim of this study was to understand which microorganisms within the coastal surface oceanic microflora responded to MSA as a nutrient and how the community evolved in the early phases of an enrichment by means of metagenome and gene-targeted amplicon sequencing. From the phylogenetic point of view, the community shifted significantly with the disappearance of all signals related to the , the and phylum SAR406, and the increase in methylotroph-harboring taxa, accompanied by other groups so far not known to comprise methylotrophs such as the . At the functional level, the abundance of several genes related to sulfur metabolism and methylotrophy increased during the enrichment and the allelic distribution of gene diagnostic for MSA monooxygenase altered considerably. Even more dramatic was the disappearance of MSA import-related gene , which suggests that alternative transporters must be present in the enriched community and illustrate the inadequacy of as an ecofunctional marker for MSA degradation at sea.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5068391PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2498DOI Listing

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