Microbial metabolism and adaptations in Atribacteria-dominated methane hydrate sediments.
Jennifer B GlassPiyush RanjanCecilia B KretzBrook L NunnAbigail M JohnsonManlin XuJames McManusFrank J StewartPublished in: Environmental microbiology (2021)
Gas hydrates harbour gigatons of natural gas, yet their microbiomes remain understudied. We bioprospected 16S rRNA amplicons, metagenomes, and metaproteomes from methane hydrate-bearing sediments under Hydrate Ridge (offshore Oregon, USA, ODP Site 1244, 2-69 mbsf) for novel microbial metabolic and biosynthetic potential. Atribacteria sequences generally increased in relative sequence abundance with increasing sediment depth. Most Atribacteria ASVs belonged to JS-1-Genus 1 and clustered with other sequences from gas hydrate-bearing sediments. We recovered 21 metagenome-assembled genomic bins spanning three geochemical zones in the sediment core: the sulfate-methane transition zone, the metal (iron/manganese) reduction zone, and the gas hydrate stability zone. We found evidence for bacterial fermentation as a source of acetate for aceticlastic methanogenesis and as a driver of iron reduction in the metal reduction zone. In multiple zones, we identified a Ni-Fe hydrogenase-Na+ /H+ antiporter supercomplex (Hun) in Atribacteria and Firmicutes bins and in other deep subsurface bacteria and cultured hyperthermophiles from the Thermotogae phylum. Atribacteria expressed tripartite ATP-independent transporters downstream from a novel regulator (AtiR). Atribacteria also possessed adaptations to survive extreme conditions (e.g. high salt brines, high pressure and cold temperatures) including the ability to synthesize the osmolyte di-myo-inositol-phosphate as well as expression of K+ -stimulated pyrophosphatase and capsule proteins.
Keyphrases
- heavy metals
- carbon dioxide
- anaerobic digestion
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- room temperature
- risk assessment
- health risk
- organic matter
- microbial community
- antibiotic resistance genes
- poor prognosis
- high intensity
- endothelial cells
- human health
- optical coherence tomography
- transcription factor
- genome wide
- wastewater treatment