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1.
Environ Microbiol Rep ; 16(1): e13228, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38192240

RESUMO

Pustular mats from Shark Bay, Western Australia, host complex microbial communities bound within an organic matrix. These mats harbour many poorly characterized organisms with low relative abundances (<1%), such as candidate phyla Hydrogenedentota and Sumerlaeota. Here, we aim to constrain the metabolism and physiology of these candidate phyla by analyzing two representative metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) from a pustular mat. Metabolic reconstructions of these MAGs suggest facultatively anaerobic, chemoorganotrophic lifestyles of both organisms and predict that both MAGs can metabolize a diversity of carbohydrate substrates. Ca. Sumerlaeota possesses genes involved in degrading chitin, cellulose and other polysaccharides, while Ca. Hydrogenedentota can metabolize cellulose derivatives in addition to glycerol, fatty acids and phosphonates. Both Ca. phyla can respond to nitrosative stress and participate in nitrogen metabolism. Metabolic comparisons of MAGs from Shark Bay and those from various polyextreme environments (i.e., hot springs, hydrothermal vents, subsurface waters, anaerobic digesters, etc.) reveal similar metabolic capabilities and adaptations to hypersalinity, oxidative stress, antibiotics, UV radiation, nitrosative stress, heavy metal toxicity and life in surface-attached communities. These adaptations and capabilities may account for the widespread nature of these organisms and their contributions to biofilm communities in a range of extreme surface and subsurface environments.


Assuntos
Bactérias , Microbiota , Bactérias/genética , Bactérias/metabolismo , Metagenoma , Biofilmes , Celulose/metabolismo , Filogenia
2.
Genes (Basel) ; 14(12)2023 12 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38136990

RESUMO

Pustular microbial mats in Shark Bay, Western Australia, are modern analogs of microbial systems that colonized peritidal environments before the evolution of complex life. To understand how these microbial communities evolved to grow and metabolize in the presence of various environmental stresses, the horizontal gene transfer (HGT) detection tool, MetaCHIP, was used to identify the horizontal transfer of genes related to stress response in 83 metagenome-assembled genomes from a Shark Bay pustular mat. Subsequently, maximum-likelihood phylogenies were constructed using these genes and their most closely related homologs from other environments in order to determine the likelihood of these HGT events occurring within the pustular mat. Phylogenies of several stress-related genes-including those involved in response to osmotic stress, oxidative stress and arsenic toxicity-indicate a potentially long history of HGT events and are consistent with these transfers occurring outside of modern pustular mats. The phylogeny of a particular osmoprotectant transport gene reveals relatively recent adaptations and suggests interactions between Planctomycetota and Myxococcota within these pustular mats. Overall, HGT phylogenies support a potentially broad distribution in the relative timing of the HGT events of stress-related genes and demonstrate ongoing microbial adaptations and evolution in these pustular mat communities.


Assuntos
Baías , Microbiota , Austrália Ocidental , Transferência Genética Horizontal , Metagenoma
3.
ISME Commun ; 2(1): 43, 2022 May 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37938726

RESUMO

Cyanobacteria and extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) in peritidal pustular microbial mats have a two-billion-year-old fossil record. To understand the composition, production, degradation, and potential role of EPS in modern analogous communities, we sampled pustular mats from Shark Bay, Australia and analyzed their EPS matrix. Biochemical and microscopic analyses identified sulfated organic compounds as major components of mat EPS. Sulfur was more abundant in the unmineralized regions with cyanobacteria and less prevalent in areas that contained fewer cyanobacteria and more carbonate precipitates. Sequencing and assembly of the pustular mat sample resulted in 83 high-quality metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs). Metagenomic analyses confirmed cyanobacteria as the primary sources of these sulfated polysaccharides. Genes encoding for sulfatases, glycosyl hydrolases, and other enzymes with predicted roles in the degradation of sulfated polysaccharides were detected in the MAGs of numerous clades including Bacteroidetes, Chloroflexi, Hydrogenedentes, Myxococcota, Verrucomicrobia, and Planctomycetes. Measurable sulfatase activity in pustular mats and fresh cyanobacterial EPS confirmed the role of sulfatases in the degradation of sulfated EPS. These findings suggest that the synthesis, modification, and degradation of sulfated polysaccharides influence microbial interactions, carbon cycling, and biomineralization processes within peritidal pustular microbial mats.

4.
Microbiol Resour Announc ; 10(34): e0061521, 2021 Aug 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34435861

RESUMO

A thermophilic chemolithoautotrophic bacterium was isolated from vent fluids at Axial Seamount, an active deep-sea volcano in the northeast Pacific Ocean. We present the draft genome sequence of Desulfurobacterium sp. strain AV08.

5.
Geobiology ; 19(5): 438-449, 2021 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33979014

RESUMO

Microbial fossils preserved by early diagenetic chert provide a window into the Proterozoic biosphere, but seawater chemistry, microbial processes, and the interactions between microbes and the environment that contributed to this preservation are not well constrained. Here, we use fossilization experiments to explore the processes that preserve marine cyanobacterial biofilms by the precipitation of amorphous silica in a seawater medium that is analogous to Proterozoic seawater. These experiments demonstrate that the exceptional silicification of benthic marine cyanobacteria analogous to the oldest diagnostic cyanobacterial fossils requires interactions among extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), photosynthetically induced pH changes, magnesium cations (Mg2+ ), and >70 ppm silica.


Assuntos
Cianobactérias , Sedimentos Geológicos , Fósseis , Água do Mar , Dióxido de Silício
6.
Free Radic Biol Med ; 140: 224-232, 2019 08 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31163257

RESUMO

The extent of oxygenated environments on the early Earth was much lower than today, and cyanobacteria were critical players in Earth's shift from widespread anoxia to oxygenated surface environments. Extant cyanobacteria that aggregate into cones, tufts and ridges are used to understand the long record of photosynthesis and microbe-mineral interactions during times when oxygen was much lower, i.e., the Archean and the Proterozoic. To better understand the metabolic versatility and physiological properties of these organisms, we examined publicly available genomes of cyanobacteria from modern terrestrial hydrothermal systems and a newly sequenced genome of a cyanobacterium isolated from conical and ridged microbialites that grow in occasionally sulfidic hydrothermal springs in Yellowstone National Park, USA. Phylogenomic analyses reveal that cyanobacteria from globally distributed terrestrial and shallow marine hydrothermal systems form a monophyletic clade within the Cyanobacteria phylum. Comparative genomics of this clade reveals the genetic capacity for oxygenic photosynthesis that uses photosystems I and II, and anoxygenic photosynthesis that uses a putative sulfide quinone reductase to oxidize sulfide and bypass photosystem II. Surprisingly large proportions of the newly sequenced genome from Yellowstone National Park are also dedicated to secondary metabolite production (15.1-15.6%), of which ∼6% can be attributed to antibiotic production and resistance genes. All this may be advantageous to benthic, mat-forming photosynthesizers that have to compete for light and nutrients in sporadically or permanently sulfidic environments, and may have also improved the tolerance of ancient counterparts of these cyanobacteria to sulfidic conditions in benthic communities that colonized the coastal margins in the Archean and the Proterozoic.


Assuntos
Cianobactérias/genética , Fotossíntese/genética , Filogenia , Cianobactérias/metabolismo , Fontes Termais/química , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Sulfetos/metabolismo
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