AI Article Synopsis

  • The Red Sea's unique environment, characterized by high temperature, salinity, and oligotrophy, supports distinct microbial biomes that adapt to stressors like hydrocarbons from deep-sea vents and oil traffic.
  • To explore this, researchers employed oligotrophic media and hydrocarbons as carbon sources to cultivate rare bacteria from mangrove sediments, leading to the identification of diverse microbial populations.
  • One notable isolate, Nit1536, is a new species capable of metabolizing various carbon sources and thriving under extreme conditions, highlighting the Red Sea's potential for discovering novel microorganisms with biotechnological applications.

Article Abstract

Introduction: The geological isolation, lack of freshwater inputs and specific internal water circulations make the Red Sea one of the most extreme-and unique-oceans on the planet. Its high temperature, salinity and oligotrophy, along with the consistent input of hydrocarbons due to its geology (e.g., deep-sea vents) and high oil tankers traffic, create the conditions that can drive and influence the assembly of unique marine (micro)biomes that evolved to cope with these multiple stressors. We hypothesize that mangrove sediments, as a model-specific marine environment of the Red Sea, act as microbial hotspots/reservoirs of such diversity not yet explored and described.

Methods: To test our hypothesis, we combined oligotrophic media to mimic the Red Sea conditions and hydrocarbons as C-source (i.e., crude oil) with long incubation time to allow the cultivation of slow-growing environmentally (rare or uncommon) relevant bacteria.

Results And Discussion: This approach reveals the vast diversity of taxonomically novel microbial hydrocarbon degraders within a collection of a few hundred isolates. Among these isolates, we characterized a novel species, sp. nov., namely, Nit1536. It is an aerobic, heterotrophic, Gram-stain-negative bacterium with optimum growth at 37°C, 8 pH and 4% NaCl, whose genome and physiological analysis confirmed the adaptation to extreme and oligotrophic conditions of the Red Sea mangrove sediments. For instance, Nit1536 metabolizes different carbon substrates, including straight-chain alkanes and organic acids, and synthesizes compatible solutes to survive in salty mangrove sediments. Our results showed that the Red Sea represent a source of yet unknown novel hydrocarbon degraders adapted to extreme marine conditions, and their discovery and characterization deserve further effort to unlock their biotechnological potential.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10185800PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1155381DOI Listing

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