Cyanobacterial mats profoundly influenced Earth's biological and geochemical evolution and still play important ecological roles in the modern world. However, the biogeochemical functioning of cyanobacterial mats under persistent low-O conditions, which dominated their evolutionary history, is not well understood. To investigate how different metabolic and biogeochemical functions are partitioned among community members, we conducted metagenomics and metatranscriptomics on cyanobacterial mats in the low-O, sulfidic Middle Island sinkhole (MIS) in Lake Huron. Metagenomic assembly and binning yielded 144 draft metagenome assembled genomes, including 61 of medium quality or better, and the dominant cyanobacteria and numerous involved in sulfur cycling. Strains of a Phormidium autumnale-like cyanobacterium dominated the metagenome and metatranscriptome. Transcripts for the photosynthetic reaction core genes and were abundant in both day and night. Multiple types of genes were expressed from each cyanobacterium, and the dominant transcripts were from an atypical microaerobic type of D1 protein from . Further, cyanobacterial transcripts for photosystem I genes were more abundant than those for photosystem II, and two types of sulfide quinone reductase were recovered, consistent with anoxygenic photosynthesis via photosystem I in the presence of sulfide. Transcripts indicate active sulfur oxidation and reduction within the cyanobacterial mat, predominately by and Deltaproteobacteria, respectively. Overall, these genomic and transcriptomic results link specific microbial groups to metabolic processes that underpin primary production and biogeochemical cycling in a low-O cyanobacterial mat and suggest mechanisms for tightly coupled cycling of oxygen and sulfur compounds in the mat ecosystem. Cyanobacterial mats are dense communities of microorganisms that contain photosynthetic cyanobacteria along with a host of other bacterial species that play important yet still poorly understood roles in this ecosystem. Although such cyanobacterial mats were critical agents of Earth's biological and chemical evolution through geological time, little is known about how they function under the low-oxygen conditions that characterized most of their natural history. Here, we performed sequencing of the DNA and RNA of modern cyanobacterial mat communities under low-oxygen and sulfur-rich conditions from the Middle Island sinkhole in Lake Huron. The results reveal the organisms and metabolic pathways that are responsible for both oxygen-producing and non-oxygen-producing photosynthesis as well as interconversions of sulfur that likely shape how much O is produced in such ecosystems. These findings indicate tight metabolic reactions between community members that help to explain the limited the amount of O produced in cyanobacterial mat ecosystems.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.01042-21 | DOI Listing |
J Phycol
December 2024
School of Life Sciences, and Hubei Key Laboratory of Genetic Regulation and Integrative Biology, Central China Normal University, Wuhan, Hubei, China.
Chlorophyll (Chl) f was reported as the fifth Chl in oxygenic photoautotrophs. Chlorophyll f production expanded the utilization of photosynthetically active radiation into the far-red light (FR) region in some cyanobacterial genera. In this study, 11 filamentous cyanobacterial strains were isolated from FR-enriched habitats, including hydrophyte, moss, shady stone, shallow ditch, and microbial mat across Central and Southern China.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFEMS Microbiol Ecol
November 2024
BVBGR-LR11ES31, ISBST, Biotechpole Sidi Thabet, Univ. Manouba, Ariana 2020, Tunisia.
Thermal springs harbour microorganisms, often dominated by cyanobacteria, which form biofilms and microbial mats. These phototrophic organisms release organic exudates into their immediate surroundings, attracting heterotrophic bacteria that contribute to the diversity and functioning of these ecosystems. In this study, the microbial mats from a hydrothermal pool in the Ksar Ghilane oasis in the Grand Erg Oriental of the Desert Tunisia were collected to obtain cyanobacterial cultures formed by single cyanobacterial species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFToxins (Basel)
October 2024
Interdisciplinary Centre of Marine and Environmental Research, University of Porto, Terminal de Cruzeiros de Leixões, Av. General Norton de Matos s/n, 4450-208 Matosinhos, Portugal.
In this paper, we examine the filamentous cyanobacterial strain NILCB16 and describe it as a new species within the genus . The original population was sampled from a mat growing in an irrigation canal in the Nile River, Egypt. Initially classified under or the strain is a potential producer of the toxins microcystin and β-N-Methylamino-L-Alanine (BMAA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRes Microbiol
October 2024
Departmeno de Biología, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia. Electronic address:
Coral diseases contribute to the worldwide loss of coral reefs, with the Black Band Disease (BBD) being a prominent example. BBD is an infectious condition with lesions with a pigmented mat composed of cyanobacteria, sulphate-reducing, sulphide-oxidizing, and heterotrophic bacteria. We compared the heterotrophic bacterial communities of healthy and BBD-affected colonies of the Caribbean coral Orbicella faveolata using culture-dependent and -independent techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExtremophiles
August 2024
Division of Invertebrate Zoology and Institute for Comparative Genomics, American Museum of Natural History, 200 Central Park West, New York, NY, 10024, USA.
We acquired and analyzed metagenome and 16S/18S rRNA gene amplicon data of green-colored microbial mats from two hot springs within the Onikobe geothermal region (Miyagi Prefecture, Japan). The two collection sites-Tamago and Warabi-were in proximity and had the same temperature (40 °C), but the Tamago site was connected to a nearby stream, whereas the Warabi site was isolated. Both the amplicon and metagenome data suggest the bacterial, especially cyanobacterial, dominance of the mats; other abundant groups include Chloroflexota, Pseudomonadota, Bacteroidota/Chlorobiota, and Deinococcota.
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