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Marine Community Metabolomes Carry Fingerprints of Phytoplankton Community Composition

Phytoplankton transform inorganic carbon into thousands of biomolecules that represent an important pool of fixed carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur in the surface ocean. Metabolite production differs between phytoplankton, and the flux of these molecules through the microbial food web depends on compound...

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Autores principales: Heal, Katherine R., Durham, Bryndan P., Boysen, Angela K., Carlson, Laura T., Qin, Wei, Ribalet, François, White, Angelicque E., Bundy, Randelle M., Armbrust, E. Virginia, Ingalls, Anitra E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8269262/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33947800
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.01334-20
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author Heal, Katherine R.
Durham, Bryndan P.
Boysen, Angela K.
Carlson, Laura T.
Qin, Wei
Ribalet, François
White, Angelicque E.
Bundy, Randelle M.
Armbrust, E. Virginia
Ingalls, Anitra E.
author_facet Heal, Katherine R.
Durham, Bryndan P.
Boysen, Angela K.
Carlson, Laura T.
Qin, Wei
Ribalet, François
White, Angelicque E.
Bundy, Randelle M.
Armbrust, E. Virginia
Ingalls, Anitra E.
author_sort Heal, Katherine R.
collection PubMed
description Phytoplankton transform inorganic carbon into thousands of biomolecules that represent an important pool of fixed carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur in the surface ocean. Metabolite production differs between phytoplankton, and the flux of these molecules through the microbial food web depends on compound-specific bioavailability to members of a wider microbial community. Yet relatively little is known about the diversity or concentration of metabolites within marine plankton. Here, we compare 313 polar metabolites in 21 cultured phytoplankton species and in natural planktonic communities across environmental gradients to show that bulk community metabolomes reflect the chemical composition of the phytoplankton community. We also show that groups of compounds have similar patterns across space and taxonomy, suggesting that the concentrations of these compounds in the environment are controlled by similar sources and sinks. We quantify several compounds in the surface ocean that represent substantial understudied pools of labile carbon. For example, the N-containing metabolite homarine was up to 3% of particulate carbon and is produced in high concentrations by cultured Synechococcus, and S-containing gonyol accumulated up to 2.5 nM in surface particles and likely originates from dinoflagellates or haptophytes. Our results show that phytoplankton composition directly shapes the carbon composition of the surface ocean. Our findings suggest that in order to access these pools of bioavailable carbon, the wider microbial community must be adapted to phytoplankton community composition. IMPORTANCE Microscopic phytoplankton transform 100 million tons of inorganic carbon into thousands of different organic compounds each day. The structure of each chemical is critical to its biological and ecosystem function, yet the diversity of biomolecules produced by marine microbial communities remained mainly unexplored, especially small polar molecules which are often considered the currency of the microbial loop. Here, we explore the abundance and diversity of small biomolecules in planktonic communities across ecological gradients in the North Pacific and within 21 cultured phytoplankton species. Our work demonstrates that phytoplankton diversity is an important determinant of the chemical composition of the highly bioavailable pool of organic carbon in the ocean, and we highlight understudied yet abundant compounds in both the environment and cultured organisms. These findings add to understanding of how the chemical makeup of phytoplankton shapes marine microbial communities where the ability to sense and use biomolecules depends on the chemical structure.
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spelling pubmed-82692622021-08-02 Marine Community Metabolomes Carry Fingerprints of Phytoplankton Community Composition Heal, Katherine R. Durham, Bryndan P. Boysen, Angela K. Carlson, Laura T. Qin, Wei Ribalet, François White, Angelicque E. Bundy, Randelle M. Armbrust, E. Virginia Ingalls, Anitra E. mSystems Research Article Phytoplankton transform inorganic carbon into thousands of biomolecules that represent an important pool of fixed carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur in the surface ocean. Metabolite production differs between phytoplankton, and the flux of these molecules through the microbial food web depends on compound-specific bioavailability to members of a wider microbial community. Yet relatively little is known about the diversity or concentration of metabolites within marine plankton. Here, we compare 313 polar metabolites in 21 cultured phytoplankton species and in natural planktonic communities across environmental gradients to show that bulk community metabolomes reflect the chemical composition of the phytoplankton community. We also show that groups of compounds have similar patterns across space and taxonomy, suggesting that the concentrations of these compounds in the environment are controlled by similar sources and sinks. We quantify several compounds in the surface ocean that represent substantial understudied pools of labile carbon. For example, the N-containing metabolite homarine was up to 3% of particulate carbon and is produced in high concentrations by cultured Synechococcus, and S-containing gonyol accumulated up to 2.5 nM in surface particles and likely originates from dinoflagellates or haptophytes. Our results show that phytoplankton composition directly shapes the carbon composition of the surface ocean. Our findings suggest that in order to access these pools of bioavailable carbon, the wider microbial community must be adapted to phytoplankton community composition. IMPORTANCE Microscopic phytoplankton transform 100 million tons of inorganic carbon into thousands of different organic compounds each day. The structure of each chemical is critical to its biological and ecosystem function, yet the diversity of biomolecules produced by marine microbial communities remained mainly unexplored, especially small polar molecules which are often considered the currency of the microbial loop. Here, we explore the abundance and diversity of small biomolecules in planktonic communities across ecological gradients in the North Pacific and within 21 cultured phytoplankton species. Our work demonstrates that phytoplankton diversity is an important determinant of the chemical composition of the highly bioavailable pool of organic carbon in the ocean, and we highlight understudied yet abundant compounds in both the environment and cultured organisms. These findings add to understanding of how the chemical makeup of phytoplankton shapes marine microbial communities where the ability to sense and use biomolecules depends on the chemical structure. American Society for Microbiology 2021-05-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8269262/ /pubmed/33947800 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.01334-20 Text en Copyright © 2021 Heal et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Heal, Katherine R.
Durham, Bryndan P.
Boysen, Angela K.
Carlson, Laura T.
Qin, Wei
Ribalet, François
White, Angelicque E.
Bundy, Randelle M.
Armbrust, E. Virginia
Ingalls, Anitra E.
Marine Community Metabolomes Carry Fingerprints of Phytoplankton Community Composition
title Marine Community Metabolomes Carry Fingerprints of Phytoplankton Community Composition
title_full Marine Community Metabolomes Carry Fingerprints of Phytoplankton Community Composition
title_fullStr Marine Community Metabolomes Carry Fingerprints of Phytoplankton Community Composition
title_full_unstemmed Marine Community Metabolomes Carry Fingerprints of Phytoplankton Community Composition
title_short Marine Community Metabolomes Carry Fingerprints of Phytoplankton Community Composition
title_sort marine community metabolomes carry fingerprints of phytoplankton community composition
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8269262/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33947800
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.01334-20
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