Transcriptional activities of the microbial consortium living with the marine nitrogenfixing cyanobacterium Trichodesmium reveal potential roles in community-level nitrogen cycling

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Abstract

Trichodesmium is a globally distributed cyanobacterium whose nitrogenfixing capability fuels primary production in warm oligotrophic oceans. Like many photoautotrophs, Trichodesmium serves as a host to various other microorganisms, yet little is known about how this associated community modulates fluxes of environmentally relevant chemical species into and out of the supraorganismal structure. Here, we utilized metatranscriptomics to examine gene expression activities of microbial communities associated with Trichodesmium erythraeum (strain IMS101) using laboratory-maintained enrichment cultures that have previously been shown to harbor microbial communities similar to those of natural populations. In enrichments maintained under two distinct CO2 concentrations for ~8 years, the community transcriptional profiles were found to be specific to the treatment, demonstrating a restructuring of overall gene expression had occurred. Some of this restructuring involved significant increases in community respiration-related transcripts under elevated CO2, potentially facilitating the corresponding measured increases in host nitrogen fixation rates. Particularly of note, in both treatments, community transcripts involved in the reduction of nitrate, nitrite, and nitrous oxide were detected, suggesting the associated organisms may play a role in colony-level nitrogen cycling. Lastly, a taxon-specific analysis revealed distinct ecological niches of consistently cooccurring major taxa that may enable, or even encourage, the stable cohabitation of a diverse community within Trichodesmium consortia.

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Lee, M. D., Webb, E. A., Walworth, N. G., Fu, F. X., Held, N. A., Saito, M. A., & Hutchins, D. A. (2018). Transcriptional activities of the microbial consortium living with the marine nitrogenfixing cyanobacterium Trichodesmium reveal potential roles in community-level nitrogen cycling. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 84(1). https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02026-17

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