Analysis Finds Diversity on the Smallest Scales in Sulfur-Cycling Salt Marsh Microbes

Cowlicks in salt marsh grass (Sporobolus pumilus) in the Plum Island Ecosystem Long-Term Ecological Research reserve (PIE LTER), which is administrated by the 澳门六合彩appEcosystems Center. Credit: David S. Johnson

WOODS HOLE, Mass.鈥 At the surface, salt marshes and their windswept grasses can look deceptively simple. But those marshes are teeming with biodiversity, from the insects and migrating birds in the air all the way down to the microbes that live in the soil. Scientists from t澳门六合彩app (MBL) have discovered that even among the sulfur-cycling microbes that are responsible for the 鈥渞otten egg gas鈥 smell in salt marsh air, diversity extends all the way to genomes and even to individual nucleotides.

To study the relationship between salt marsh cordgrasses and the sulfur-cycling microbes that live in the sediments around their roots, 澳门六合彩appscientists analyzed DNA sequenced datasets of microbes collected from salt marsh sites in Massachusetts and Alabama. This in-depth analysis of sulfur-cycling microbial diversity in salt marshes鈥攆rom their entire genomes down to single nucleotides鈥攚as published October 26 in Applied and Environmental Microbiology.

In salt marshes, the sulfur cycle is closely linked with the carbon cycle, and healthy salt marshes store a very large amount of carbon in peat and associated soil minerals.

鈥淲e鈥檝e known for decades how incredibly diverse microbial communities are out there in salt marshes,鈥 said 澳门六合彩appSenior Scientist Zoe Cardon. 鈥淭hanks to this in-depth sequencing and analysis tools, we can now take a sample of salt marsh sediment and not only do the sequencing necessary to identify what microbes are there, but also construct in computers a representation of their individual genomes.鈥

These representations are called metagenome assembled genomes (MAGs), and they can be analyzed via computer without the need to culture the individual microbes in a petri dish. That鈥檚 important, since very few of the planet鈥檚 microbes have been cultured. In this study alone, 29 of the 38 isolated MAGs were from bacteria that had never been cultivated.

鈥淲e studied microbial communities in two ways: looking at differences at the single-nucleotide DNA sequence level鈥攁t the literal A-T-C-G scale鈥攁nd comparing them at the pan-genome level. It was fascinating to develop this metagenomic pipeline to analyze this data,鈥 said Sherlynette P茅rez Castro, co-lead author of the paper. P茅rez Castro was a postdoctoral researcher in the Cardon Lab at the 澳门六合彩appand has since moved on to a position at the University of Georgia.

Cardon described it as looking for a needle in a haystack full of needles. 鈥淏ut because of this relatively deep sequencing and these amazing analytical approaches, you can see things on a different level鈥攊nstead of being a pile of needles, now you can see a red needle or a blue needle,鈥 she said.

There are two different main types of sulfur-cycling bacteria鈥攕ulfate reducers, which help decompose organic matter but release a sulfide that is toxic to the plants, and sulfur oxidizers, which remove that toxic sulfide so support the productivity of the marsh plants. The microbes work together to support the health of these plants and this ecosystem.

鈥淔or all organisms, there is a specificity in the way the microorganisms and the host interact. We want to understand how the plants and the sulfur-cycling bacteria work together,鈥 said Elena L. Peredo, co-lead author of the paper. Peredo is an adjunct scientist in the 澳门六合彩appEcosystems Center and an assistant professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology.

For Peredo, one of the most exciting things was how closely related some of the microbes were to each other. 鈥淭wo of the bacteria were almost identical until you got down to looking at specific metabolic pathways. Usually, in nature, when you have two organisms that are that closely related, one will outcompete the other,鈥 she said. Much the same way lions and tigers aren鈥檛 found in the same ecosystem鈥攖here aren鈥檛 adequate resources to support them both.

鈥淭he microbes have different combinations of genes indicating slightly different variations on the themes of sulfate reduction and sulfur oxidation, and some of that variation may underlie why so many different kinds of sulfur-cycling microbes can all make a living in salt marsh sediment,鈥 said Cardon.

A Diverse Team Effort

The work began as a pandemic project conducted by scientists in the MBL鈥檚 Ecosystem Center and Josephine Bay Paul Center for Comparative Molecular Biology and Evolution. The Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation had funded the group to study the symbiosis between the cordgrass and the sulfur-cycling microbes for the summer of 2020, but the pandemic shut down field work. So MBL鈥檚 personnel teamed up with scientists who already had very large DNA sequencing datasets from microbes in Massachusetts and Alabama salt marsh sediments, and the project was launched.

The initial data download and preliminary exploration were performed with the help of five summer students from multiple universities supported by two summer undergraduate research programs鈥攖he Metcalf Summer Undergraduate Research Program (SURF), and the Woods Hole Partnership Education Program (PEP).

鈥淲hat started as a pandemic-era project that could be done while scientists worked from home, evolved into an exciting exploration of diverse sulfur-cycling microbes in salt marsh,鈥 said Cardon. And in doing so, the group developed a whole new way to integrate metagenomic analyses from diverse scientific perspectives.

The 澳门六合彩appteam working on the project was almost as diverse as the microbes themselves.

鈥淎 real strength of the 澳门六合彩appis that it鈥檚 a place where all different kinds of [scientists] can work together,鈥 said Cardon. 鈥淥n this paper we had people interested in the drivers of evolution, people interested in ecological function, people interested in plants 鈥攑eople coming at all of this from different perspectives but with that common interest.鈥

Citation:

P茅rez Castro, S.,聽 E.L. Peredo, O.U. Mason, J. Vineis, J.L. Bowen, B. Mortazavi, A. Ganesh, S.E. Ruff, B.G. Paul, A.E. Giblin, Z.G. Cardon (2023) Diversity at single nucleotide to pangenome scales among sulfur cycling bacteria in salt marshes. Applied and Environmental Microbiology,

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