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Seasonal Changes in Bacterial and Archaeal Gene Expression Patterns across Salinity Gradients in the Columbia River Coastal Margin

Through their metabolic activities, microbial populations mediate the impact of high gradient regions on ecological function and productivity of the highly dynamic Columbia River coastal margin (CRCM). A 2226-probe oligonucleotide DNA microarray was developed to investigate expression patterns for m...

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Autores principales: Smith, Maria W., Herfort, Lydie, Tyrol, Kaitlin, Suciu, Dominic, Campbell, Victoria, Crump, Byron C., Peterson, Tawnya D., Zuber, Peter, Baptista, Antonio M., Simon, Holly M.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2954162/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20967204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013312
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author Smith, Maria W.
Herfort, Lydie
Tyrol, Kaitlin
Suciu, Dominic
Campbell, Victoria
Crump, Byron C.
Peterson, Tawnya D.
Zuber, Peter
Baptista, Antonio M.
Simon, Holly M.
author_facet Smith, Maria W.
Herfort, Lydie
Tyrol, Kaitlin
Suciu, Dominic
Campbell, Victoria
Crump, Byron C.
Peterson, Tawnya D.
Zuber, Peter
Baptista, Antonio M.
Simon, Holly M.
author_sort Smith, Maria W.
collection PubMed
description Through their metabolic activities, microbial populations mediate the impact of high gradient regions on ecological function and productivity of the highly dynamic Columbia River coastal margin (CRCM). A 2226-probe oligonucleotide DNA microarray was developed to investigate expression patterns for microbial genes involved in nitrogen and carbon metabolism in the CRCM. Initial experiments with the environmental microarrays were directed toward validation of the platform and yielded high reproducibility in multiple tests. Bioinformatic and experimental validation also indicated that >85% of the microarray probes were specific for their corresponding target genes and for a few homologs within the same microbial family. The validated probe set was used to query gene expression responses by microbial assemblages to environmental variability. Sixty-four samples from the river, estuary, plume, and adjacent ocean were collected in different seasons and analyzed to correlate the measured variability in chemical, physical and biological water parameters to differences in global gene expression profiles. The method produced robust seasonal profiles corresponding to pre-freshet spring (April) and late summer (August). Overall relative gene expression was high in both seasons and was consistent with high microbial abundance measured by total RNA, heterotrophic bacterial production, and chlorophyll a. Both seasonal patterns involved large numbers of genes that were highly expressed relative to background, yet each produced very different gene expression profiles. April patterns revealed high differential gene expression in the coastal margin samples (estuary, plume and adjacent ocean) relative to freshwater, while little differential gene expression was observed along the river-to-ocean transition in August. Microbial gene expression profiles appeared to relate, in part, to seasonal differences in nutrient availability and potential resource competition. Furthermore, our results suggest that highly-active particle-attached microbiota in the Columbia River water column may perform dissimilatory nitrate reduction (both dentrification and DNRA) within anoxic particle microniches.
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spelling pubmed-29541622010-10-21 Seasonal Changes in Bacterial and Archaeal Gene Expression Patterns across Salinity Gradients in the Columbia River Coastal Margin Smith, Maria W. Herfort, Lydie Tyrol, Kaitlin Suciu, Dominic Campbell, Victoria Crump, Byron C. Peterson, Tawnya D. Zuber, Peter Baptista, Antonio M. Simon, Holly M. PLoS One Research Article Through their metabolic activities, microbial populations mediate the impact of high gradient regions on ecological function and productivity of the highly dynamic Columbia River coastal margin (CRCM). A 2226-probe oligonucleotide DNA microarray was developed to investigate expression patterns for microbial genes involved in nitrogen and carbon metabolism in the CRCM. Initial experiments with the environmental microarrays were directed toward validation of the platform and yielded high reproducibility in multiple tests. Bioinformatic and experimental validation also indicated that >85% of the microarray probes were specific for their corresponding target genes and for a few homologs within the same microbial family. The validated probe set was used to query gene expression responses by microbial assemblages to environmental variability. Sixty-four samples from the river, estuary, plume, and adjacent ocean were collected in different seasons and analyzed to correlate the measured variability in chemical, physical and biological water parameters to differences in global gene expression profiles. The method produced robust seasonal profiles corresponding to pre-freshet spring (April) and late summer (August). Overall relative gene expression was high in both seasons and was consistent with high microbial abundance measured by total RNA, heterotrophic bacterial production, and chlorophyll a. Both seasonal patterns involved large numbers of genes that were highly expressed relative to background, yet each produced very different gene expression profiles. April patterns revealed high differential gene expression in the coastal margin samples (estuary, plume and adjacent ocean) relative to freshwater, while little differential gene expression was observed along the river-to-ocean transition in August. Microbial gene expression profiles appeared to relate, in part, to seasonal differences in nutrient availability and potential resource competition. Furthermore, our results suggest that highly-active particle-attached microbiota in the Columbia River water column may perform dissimilatory nitrate reduction (both dentrification and DNRA) within anoxic particle microniches. Public Library of Science 2010-10-13 /pmc/articles/PMC2954162/ /pubmed/20967204 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013312 Text en Smith et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Smith, Maria W.
Herfort, Lydie
Tyrol, Kaitlin
Suciu, Dominic
Campbell, Victoria
Crump, Byron C.
Peterson, Tawnya D.
Zuber, Peter
Baptista, Antonio M.
Simon, Holly M.
Seasonal Changes in Bacterial and Archaeal Gene Expression Patterns across Salinity Gradients in the Columbia River Coastal Margin
title Seasonal Changes in Bacterial and Archaeal Gene Expression Patterns across Salinity Gradients in the Columbia River Coastal Margin
title_full Seasonal Changes in Bacterial and Archaeal Gene Expression Patterns across Salinity Gradients in the Columbia River Coastal Margin
title_fullStr Seasonal Changes in Bacterial and Archaeal Gene Expression Patterns across Salinity Gradients in the Columbia River Coastal Margin
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal Changes in Bacterial and Archaeal Gene Expression Patterns across Salinity Gradients in the Columbia River Coastal Margin
title_short Seasonal Changes in Bacterial and Archaeal Gene Expression Patterns across Salinity Gradients in the Columbia River Coastal Margin
title_sort seasonal changes in bacterial and archaeal gene expression patterns across salinity gradients in the columbia river coastal margin
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2954162/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20967204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013312
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