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1.
Nat Microbiol ; 9(2): 318-319, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38316925

Subject(s)
Microbiota , Symbiosis
2.
Nat Protoc ; 18(10): 3050-3079, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37674095

ABSTRACT

Label-free molecular imaging techniques such as matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI-MSI) enable the direct and simultaneous mapping of hundreds of different metabolites in thin sections of biological tissues. However, in host-microbe interactions it remains challenging to localize microbes and to assign metabolites to the host versus members of the microbiome. We therefore developed a correlative imaging approach combining MALDI-MSI with fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) on the same section to identify and localize microbial cells. Here, we detail metaFISH as a robust and easy method for assigning the spatial distribution of metabolites to microbiome members based on imaging of nucleic acid probes, down to single-cell resolution. We describe the steps required for tissue preparation, on-tissue hybridization, fluorescence microscopy, data integration into a correlative image dataset, matrix application and MSI data acquisition. Using metaFISH, we map hundreds of metabolites and several microbial species to the micrometer scale on a single tissue section. For example, intra- and extracellular bacteria, host cells and their associated metabolites can be localized in animal tissues, revealing their complex metabolic interactions. We explain how we identify low-abundance bacterial infection sites as regions of interest for high-resolution MSI analysis, guiding the user to a trade-off between metabolite signal intensities and fluorescence signals. MetaFISH is suitable for a broad range of users from environmental microbiologists to clinical scientists. The protocol requires ~2 work days.

3.
Science ; 380(6644): 520-526, 2023 05 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37141360

ABSTRACT

Sterols are vital for nearly all eukaryotes. Their distribution differs in plants and animals, with phytosterols commonly found in plants whereas most animals are dominated by cholesterol. We show that sitosterol, a common sterol of plants, is the most abundant sterol in gutless marine annelids. Using multiomics, metabolite imaging, heterologous gene expression, and enzyme assays, we show that these animals synthesize sitosterol de novo using a noncanonical C-24 sterol methyltransferase (C24-SMT). This enzyme is essential for sitosterol synthesis in plants, but not known from most bilaterian animals. Our phylogenetic analyses revealed that C24-SMTs are present in representatives of at least five animal phyla, indicating that the synthesis of sterols common to plants is more widespread in animals than currently known.


Subject(s)
Annelida , Cholesterol , Sitosterols , Animals , Cholesterol/metabolism , Phylogeny , Plants/metabolism , Sitosterols/metabolism , Annelida/metabolism
4.
PNAS Nexus ; 2(5): pgad144, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37215633

ABSTRACT

Neuropeptides are important regulators of animal physiology and behavior. Hitherto the gold standard for the localization of neuropeptides have been immunohistochemical methods that require the synthesis of antibody panels, while another limiting factor has been the brain's opacity for subsequent in situ light or fluorescence microscopy. To address these limitations, we explored the integration of high-resolution mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) with microtomography for a multiplexed mapping of neuropeptides in two evolutionary distant ant species, Atta sexdens and Lasius niger. For analyzing the spatial distribution of chemically diverse peptide molecules across the brain in each species, the acquisition of serial mass spectrometry images was essential. As a result, we have comparatively mapped the three-dimensional (3D) distributions of eight conserved neuropeptides throughout the brain microanatomy. We demonstrate that integrating the 3D MSI data into high-resolution anatomy models can be critical for studying organs with high plasticity such as brains of social insects. Several peptides, like the tachykinin-related peptides (TK) 1 and 4, were widely distributed in many brain areas of both ant species, whereas others, for instance myosuppressin, were restricted to specific regions only. Also, we detected differences at the species level; many peptides were identified in the optic lobe of L. niger, but only one peptide (ITG-like) was found in this region in A. sexdens. Building upon MS imaging studies on neuropeptides in invertebrate model systems, our approach leverages correlative MSI and computed microtomography for investigating fundamental neurobiological processes by visualizing the unbiased 3D neurochemistry in its complex anatomic environment.

5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(1): e2210561119, 2023 Jan 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36584294

ABSTRACT

Brown algae annually convert gigatons of carbon dioxide into carbohydrates, including the complex extracellular matrix polysaccharide fucoidan. Due to its persistence in the environment, fucoidan is potentially a pathway for marine carbon sequestration. Rates of fucoidan secretion by brown algae remain unknown due to the challenge of identifying and quantifying complex polysaccharides in seawater. We adapted the techniques of anion exchange chromatography, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and biocatalytic enzyme-based assay for detection and quantification of fucoidan. We found the brown alga Fucus vesiculosus at the Baltic Sea coast of south-west Finland to secrete 0.3% of their biomass as fucoidan per day. Dissolved fucoidan concentrations in seawater adjacent to algae reached up to 0.48 mg L-1. Fucoidan accumulated during incubations of F. vesiculosus, significantly more in light than in darkness. Maximum estimation by acid hydrolysis indicated fucoidan secretion at a rate of 28 to 40 mg C kg-1 h-1, accounting for 44 to 50% of all exuded dissolved organic carbon. Composed only of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, and sulfur, fucoidan secretion does not consume nutrients enabling carbon sequestration independent of algal growth. Extrapolated over a year, the algae sequester more carbon into secreted fucoidan than their biomass. The global utility of fucoidan secretion is an alternative pathway for carbon dioxide removal by brown algae without the need to harvest or bury algal biomass.


Subject(s)
Carbon Dioxide , Phaeophyceae , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Polysaccharides/metabolism , Phaeophyceae/metabolism , Oceans and Seas
6.
Sci Rep ; 12(1): 9725, 2022 06 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35697683

ABSTRACT

Eukaryotes may experience oxygen deprivation under both physiological and pathological conditions. Because oxygen shortage leads to a reduction in cellular energy production, all eukaryotes studied so far conserve energy by suppressing their metabolism. However, the molecular physiology of animals that naturally and repeatedly experience anoxia is underexplored. One such animal is the marine nematode Laxus oneistus. It thrives, invariably coated by its sulfur-oxidizing symbiont Candidatus Thiosymbion oneisti, in anoxic sulfidic or hypoxic sand. Here, transcriptomics and proteomics showed that, whether in anoxia or not, L. oneistus mostly expressed genes involved in ubiquitination, energy generation, oxidative stress response, immune response, development, and translation. Importantly, ubiquitination genes were also highly expressed when the nematode was subjected to anoxic sulfidic conditions, together with genes involved in autophagy, detoxification and ribosome biogenesis. We hypothesize that these degradation pathways were induced to recycle damaged cellular components (mitochondria) and misfolded proteins into nutrients. Remarkably, when L. oneistus was subjected to anoxic sulfidic conditions, lectin and mucin genes were also upregulated, potentially to promote the attachment of its thiotrophic symbiont. Furthermore, the nematode appeared to survive oxygen deprivation by using an alternative electron carrier (rhodoquinone) and acceptor (fumarate), to rewire the electron transfer chain. On the other hand, under hypoxia, genes involved in costly processes (e.g., amino acid biosynthesis, development, feeding, mating) were upregulated, together with the worm's Toll-like innate immunity pathway and several immune effectors (e.g., bactericidal/permeability-increasing proteins, fungicides). In conclusion, we hypothesize that, in anoxic sulfidic sand, L. oneistus upregulates degradation processes, rewires the oxidative phosphorylation and reinforces its coat of bacterial sulfur-oxidizers. In upper sand layers, instead, it appears to produce broad-range antimicrobials and to exploit oxygen for biosynthesis and development.


Subject(s)
Chromatiaceae , Nematoda , Animals , Chromadorea , Hypoxia , Nematoda/microbiology , Oxygen/metabolism , Sand , Sulfides , Sulfur/metabolism
7.
Nat Ecol Evol ; 6(7): 866-877, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35501482

ABSTRACT

Seagrasses are among the most efficient sinks of carbon dioxide on Earth. While carbon sequestration in terrestrial plants is linked to the microorganisms living in their soils, the interactions of seagrasses with their rhizospheres are poorly understood. Here, we show that the seagrass, Posidonia oceanica excretes sugars, mainly sucrose, into its rhizosphere. These sugars accumulate to µM concentrations-nearly 80 times higher than previously observed in marine environments. This finding is unexpected as sugars are readily consumed by microorganisms. Our experiments indicated that under low oxygen conditions, phenolic compounds from P. oceanica inhibited microbial consumption of sucrose. Analyses of the rhizosphere community revealed that many microbes had the genes for degrading sucrose but these were only expressed by a few taxa that also expressed genes for degrading phenolics. Given that we observed high sucrose concentrations underneath three other species of marine plants, we predict that the presence of plant-produced phenolics under low oxygen conditions allows the accumulation of labile molecules across aquatic rhizospheres.


Subject(s)
Alismatales , Rhizosphere , Oxygen , Sucrose , Sugars
8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(9)2022 03 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35165204

ABSTRACT

Marine coastlines colonized by seagrasses are a net source of methane to the atmosphere. However, methane emissions from these environments are still poorly constrained, and the underlying processes and responsible microorganisms remain largely unknown. Here, we investigated methane turnover in seagrass meadows of Posidonia oceanica in the Mediterranean Sea. The underlying sediments exhibited median net fluxes of methane into the water column of ca. 106 µmol CH4 ⋅ m-2 ⋅ d-1 Our data show that this methane production was sustained by methylated compounds produced by the plant, rather than by fermentation of buried organic carbon. Interestingly, methane production was maintained long after the living plant died off, likely due to the persistence of methylated compounds, such as choline, betaines, and dimethylsulfoniopropionate, in detached plant leaves and rhizomes. We recovered multiple mcrA gene sequences, encoding for methyl-coenzyme M reductase (Mcr), the key methanogenic enzyme, from the seagrass sediments. Most retrieved mcrA gene sequences were affiliated with a clade of divergent Mcr and belonged to the uncultured Candidatus Helarchaeota of the Asgard superphylum, suggesting a possible involvement of these divergent Mcr in methane metabolism. Taken together, our findings identify the mechanisms controlling methane emissions from these important blue carbon ecosystems.


Subject(s)
Alismatales/metabolism , Euryarchaeota/metabolism , Methane/metabolism , Aerobiosis , Anaerobiosis , Euryarchaeota/classification , Geologic Sediments , Mediterranean Sea , Microbiota , Oxidation-Reduction , Phylogeny , Species Specificity
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(27)2021 07 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34183413

ABSTRACT

Our understanding of metabolic interactions between small symbiotic animals and bacteria or parasitic eukaryotes that reside within their bodies is extremely limited. This gap in knowledge originates from a methodological challenge, namely to connect histological changes in host tissues induced by beneficial and parasitic (micro)organisms to the underlying metabolites. We addressed this challenge and developed chemo-histo-tomography (CHEMHIST), a culture-independent approach to connect anatomic structure and metabolic function in millimeter-sized symbiotic animals. CHEMHIST combines chemical imaging of metabolites based on mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) and microanatomy-based micro-computed X-ray tomography (micro-CT) on the same animal. Both high-resolution MSI and micro-CT allowed us to correlate the distribution of metabolites to the same animal's three-dimensional (3D) histology down to submicrometer resolutions. Our protocol is compatible with tissue-specific DNA sequencing and fluorescence in situ hybridization for the taxonomic identification and localization of the associated micro(organisms). Building CHEMHIST upon in situ imaging, we sampled an earthworm from its natural habitat and created an interactive 3D model of its physical and chemical interactions with bacteria and parasitic nematodes in its tissues. Combining MSI and micro-CT, we present a methodological groundwork for connecting metabolic and anatomic phenotypes of small symbiotic animals that often represent keystone species for ecosystem functioning.


Subject(s)
Histological Techniques , Oligochaeta/physiology , Symbiosis/physiology , X-Ray Microtomography , Animals , Bacteria/cytology , Host-Parasite Interactions , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Mass Spectrometry , Oligochaeta/cytology
10.
Anal Chem ; 93(24): 8399-8407, 2021 06 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34097397

ABSTRACT

Spatial metabolomics using mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) is a powerful tool to map hundreds to thousands of metabolites in biological systems. One major challenge in MSI is the annotation of m/z values, which is substantially complicated by background ions introduced throughout the chemicals and equipment used during experimental procedures. Among many factors, the formation of adducts with sodium or potassium ions, or in case of matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI)-MSI, the presence of abundant matrix clusters strongly increases total m/z peak counts. Currently, there is a limitation to identify the chemistry of the many unknown peaks to interpret their biological function. We took advantage of the co-localization of adducts with their parent ions and the accuracy of high mass resolution to estimate adduct abundance in 20 datasets from different vendors of mass spectrometers. Metabolites ranging from lipids to amines and amino acids form matrix adducts with the commonly used 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) matrix like [M + (DHB-H2O) + H]+ and [M + DHB + Na]+. Current data analyses neglect those matrix adducts and overestimate total metabolite numbers, thereby expanding the number of unidentified peaks. Our study demonstrates that MALDI-MSI data are strongly influenced by adduct formation across different sample types and vendor platforms and reveals a major influence of so far unrecognized metabolite-matrix adducts on total peak counts (up to one third). We developed a software package, mass2adduct, for the community for an automated putative assignment and quantification of metabolite-matrix adducts enabling users to ultimately focus on the biologically relevant portion of the MSI data.


Subject(s)
Metabolome , Metabolomics , Diagnostic Imaging , Lipids , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization
11.
Science ; 371(6536)2021 03 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33766860

ABSTRACT

Vacuolar myelinopathy is a fatal neurological disease that was initially discovered during a mysterious mass mortality of bald eagles in Arkansas in the United States. The cause of this wildlife disease has eluded scientists for decades while its occurrence has continued to spread throughout freshwater reservoirs in the southeastern United States. Recent studies have demonstrated that vacuolar myelinopathy is induced by consumption of the epiphytic cyanobacterial species Aetokthonos hydrillicola growing on aquatic vegetation, primarily the invasive Hydrilla verticillata Here, we describe the identification, biosynthetic gene cluster, and biological activity of aetokthonotoxin, a pentabrominated biindole alkaloid that is produced by the cyanobacterium A. hydrillicola We identify this cyanobacterial neurotoxin as the causal agent of vacuolar myelinopathy and discuss environmental factors-especially bromide availability-that promote toxin production.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Toxins/toxicity , Cyanobacteria , Demyelinating Diseases/veterinary , Eagles , Indole Alkaloids/toxicity , Neurotoxins/toxicity , Animals , Bacterial Toxins/biosynthesis , Bacterial Toxins/chemistry , Bacterial Toxins/isolation & purification , Bird Diseases/chemically induced , Bromides/metabolism , Bromine/analysis , Caenorhabditis elegans/drug effects , Chickens , Cyanobacteria/genetics , Cyanobacteria/growth & development , Cyanobacteria/metabolism , Demyelinating Diseases/chemically induced , Genes, Bacterial , Hydrocharitaceae/metabolism , Hydrocharitaceae/microbiology , Indole Alkaloids/chemistry , Indole Alkaloids/isolation & purification , Lethal Dose 50 , Multigene Family , Neurotoxins/biosynthesis , Neurotoxins/chemistry , Neurotoxins/isolation & purification , Southeastern United States , Tryptophan/metabolism , Zebrafish
12.
J Exp Biol ; 223(Pt 16)2020 08 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32616546

ABSTRACT

Associations between animals and microbes affect not only the immediate tissues where they occur, but also the entire host. Metabolomics, the study of small biomolecules generated during metabolic processes, provides a window into how mutualistic interactions shape host biochemistry. The Hawaiian bobtail squid, Euprymna scolopes, is amenable to metabolomic studies of symbiosis because the host can be reared with or without its species-specific symbiont, Vibrio fischeri In addition, unlike many invertebrates, the host squid has a closed circulatory system. This feature allows a direct sampling of the refined collection of metabolites circulating through the body, a focused approach that has been highly successful with mammals. Here, we show that rearing E. scolopes without its natural symbiont significantly affected one-quarter of the more than 100 hemolymph metabolites defined by gas chromatography mass spectrometry analysis. Furthermore, as in mammals, which harbor complex consortia of bacterial symbionts, the metabolite signature oscillated on symbiont-driven daily rhythms and was dependent on the sex of the host. Thus, our results provide evidence that the population of even a single symbiont species can influence host hemolymph biochemistry as a function of symbiotic state, host sex and circadian rhythm.


Subject(s)
Aliivibrio fischeri , Decapodiformes , Animals , Hawaii , Metabolome , Symbiosis
13.
Nat Microbiol ; 5(8): 1026-1039, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32451471

ABSTRACT

Brown algae are important players in the global carbon cycle by fixing carbon dioxide into 1 Gt of biomass annually, yet the fate of fucoidan-their major cell wall polysaccharide-remains poorly understood. Microbial degradation of fucoidans is slower than that of other polysaccharides, suggesting that fucoidans are more recalcitrant and may sequester carbon in the ocean. This may be due to the complex, branched and highly sulfated structure of fucoidans, which also varies among species of brown algae. Here, we show that 'Lentimonas' sp. CC4, belonging to the Verrucomicrobia, acquired a remarkably complex machinery for the degradation of six different fucoidans. The strain accumulated 284 putative fucoidanases, including glycoside hydrolases, sulfatases and carbohydrate esterases, which are primarily located on a 0.89-megabase pair plasmid. Proteomics reveals that these enzymes assemble into substrate-specific pathways requiring about 100 enzymes per fucoidan from different species of brown algae. These enzymes depolymerize fucoidan into fucose, which is metabolized in a proteome-costly bacterial microcompartment that spatially constrains the metabolism of the toxic intermediate lactaldehyde. Marine metagenomes and microbial genomes show that Verrucomicrobia including 'Lentimonas' are abundant and highly specialized degraders of fucoidans and other complex polysaccharides. Overall, the complexity of the pathways underscores why fucoidans are probably recalcitrant and more slowly degraded, since only highly specialized organisms can effectively degrade them in the ocean.


Subject(s)
Phaeophyceae/metabolism , Polysaccharides/metabolism , Verrucomicrobia/enzymology , Verrucomicrobia/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Cell Wall/metabolism , Esterases , Genes, Bacterial/genetics , Glycoside Hydrolases , Metabolic Networks and Pathways , Metagenome , Phylogeny , Proteome , Substrate Specificity , Sulfatases , Sulfates/metabolism , Transcriptome , United States , Verrucomicrobia/genetics , Verrucomicrobia/isolation & purification
14.
mBio ; 11(2)2020 04 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32317322

ABSTRACT

Cold seeps and hydrothermal vents deliver large amounts of methane and other gaseous alkanes into marine surface sediments. Consortia of archaea and partner bacteria thrive on the oxidation of these alkanes and its coupling to sulfate reduction. The inherently slow growth of the involved organisms and the lack of pure cultures have impeded the understanding of the molecular mechanisms of archaeal alkane degradation. Here, using hydrothermal sediments of the Guaymas Basin (Gulf of California) and ethane as the substrate, we cultured microbial consortia of a novel anaerobic ethane oxidizer, "Candidatus Ethanoperedens thermophilum" (GoM-Arc1 clade), and its partner bacterium "Candidatus Desulfofervidus auxilii," previously known from methane-oxidizing consortia. The sulfate reduction activity of the culture doubled within one week, indicating a much faster growth than in any other alkane-oxidizing archaea described before. The dominance of a single archaeal phylotype in this culture allowed retrieval of a closed genome of "Ca. Ethanoperedens," a sister genus of the recently reported ethane oxidizer "Candidatus Argoarchaeum." The metagenome-assembled genome of "Ca. Ethanoperedens" encoded a complete methanogenesis pathway including a methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) that is highly divergent from those of methanogens and methanotrophs. Combined substrate and metabolite analysis showed ethane as the sole growth substrate and production of ethyl-coenzyme M as the activation product. Stable isotope probing demonstrated that the enzymatic mechanism of ethane oxidation in "Ca. Ethanoperedens" is fully reversible; thus, its enzymatic machinery has potential for the biotechnological development of microbial ethane production from carbon dioxide.IMPORTANCE In the seabed, gaseous alkanes are oxidized by syntrophic microbial consortia that thereby reduce fluxes of these compounds into the water column. Because of the immense quantities of seabed alkane fluxes, these consortia are key catalysts of the global carbon cycle. Due to their obligate syntrophic lifestyle, the physiology of alkane-degrading archaea remains poorly understood. We have now cultivated a thermophilic, relatively fast-growing ethane oxidizer in partnership with a sulfate-reducing bacterium known to aid in methane oxidation and have retrieved the first complete genome of a short-chain alkane-degrading archaeon. This will greatly enhance the understanding of nonmethane alkane activation by noncanonical methyl-coenzyme M reductase enzymes and provide insights into additional metabolic steps and the mechanisms underlying syntrophic partnerships. Ultimately, this knowledge could lead to the biotechnological development of alkanogenic microorganisms to support the carbon neutrality of industrial processes.


Subject(s)
Anaerobiosis , Archaea/metabolism , Ethane/metabolism , Archaea/classification , Archaea/genetics , Bacteria/classification , Bacteria/genetics , Bacteria/metabolism , Biomarkers , Energy Metabolism , Genome, Archaeal , Genomics/methods , Geologic Sediments/microbiology , Hydrothermal Vents/microbiology , Metabolic Networks and Pathways , Molecular Typing , Oxidation-Reduction , Phylogeny , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics
15.
J Am Soc Mass Spectrom ; 31(6): 1249-1259, 2020 Jun 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32309938

ABSTRACT

The connection between monosaccharides influences the structure, solubility, and biological function of carbohydrates. Although tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) often enables the compositional identification of carbohydrates, traditional MS/MS fragmentation methods fail to generate abundant cross-ring fragments of intrachain monosaccharides that could reveal carbohydrate connectivity. We examined the potential of helium-charge transfer dissociation (He-CTD) as a method of MS/MS to decipher the connectivity of ß-1,4- and ß-1,3-linked oligosaccharides. In contrast to collision-induced dissociation (CID), He-CTD of isolated oligosaccharide precursors produced both glycosidic and cross-ring cleavages of each monosaccharide. The radical-driven dissociation in He-CTD induced single cleavage events, without consecutive fragmentations, which facilitated structural interpretation. He-CTD of various standards up to a degree of polymerization of 7 showed that ß-1,4- and ß-1,3-linked carbohydrates can be distinguished based on diagnostic 3,5A fragment ions that are characteristic for ß-1,4-linkages. Overall, fragment ion spectra from He-CTD contained sufficient information to infer the connectivity specifically for each glycosidic bond. When testing He-CTD to resolve the order of ß-1,4- and ß-1,3-linkages in mixed-linked oligosaccharide standards, He-CTD spectra sometimes provided less confident assignment of connectivity. Ion mobility spectrometry-mass spectrometry (IMS-MS) of the standards indicated that ambiguity in the He-CTD spectra was caused by isobaric impurities in the mixed-linked oligosaccharides. Radical-driven dissociation induced by He-CTD can thus expand MS/MS to carbohydrate linkage analysis, as demonstrated by the comprehensive fragment ion spectra on native oligosaccharides. The determination of connectivity in true unknowns would benefit from the separation of isobaric precursors, through UPLC or IMS, before linkage determination via He-CTD.


Subject(s)
Oligosaccharides/analysis , Oligosaccharides/chemistry , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Carbohydrate Conformation , Helium/chemistry , Isomerism , Models, Molecular
16.
Nat Microbiol ; 5(3): 498-510, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32015496

ABSTRACT

Spatial metabolomics describes the location and chemistry of small molecules involved in metabolic phenotypes, defence molecules and chemical interactions in natural communities. Most current techniques are unable to spatially link the genotype and metabolic phenotype of microorganisms in situ at a scale relevant to microbial interactions. Here, we present a spatial metabolomics pipeline (metaFISH) that combines fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) microscopy and high-resolution atmospheric-pressure matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry to image host-microbe symbioses and their metabolic interactions. The metaFISH pipeline aligns and integrates metabolite and fluorescent images at the micrometre scale to provide a spatial assignment of host and symbiont metabolites on the same tissue section. To illustrate the advantages of metaFISH, we mapped the spatial metabolome of a deep-sea mussel and its intracellular symbiotic bacteria at the scale of individual epithelial host cells. Our analytical pipeline revealed metabolic adaptations of the epithelial cells to the intracellular symbionts and variation in metabolic phenotypes within a single symbiont 16S rRNA phylotype, and enabled the discovery of specialized metabolites from the host-microbe interface. metaFISH provides a culture-independent approach to link metabolic phenotypes to community members in situ and is a powerful tool for microbiologists across fields.


Subject(s)
Bivalvia/microbiology , Host Microbial Interactions/physiology , Metabolomics/methods , Microbiota/physiology , Animals , Bacteria/genetics , Bacteria/metabolism , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Metabolome , Microbiota/genetics , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization/methods , Symbiosis , Tandem Mass Spectrometry
17.
mSystems ; 4(6)2019 Dec 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31822601

ABSTRACT

Microbial communities exchange molecules with their environment, which plays a major role in regulating global biogeochemical cycles and climate. While extracellular metabolites are commonly measured in terrestrial and limnic ecosystems, the presence of salt in marine habitats limits the nontargeted analyses of the ocean exometabolome using mass spectrometry (MS). Current methods require salt removal prior to sample measurements, which can alter the molecular composition of the metabolome and limit the types of compounds detected by MS. To overcome these limitations, we developed a gas chromatography MS (GC-MS) method that avoids sample altering during salt removal and that detects metabolites down to nanomolar concentrations from less than 1 ml of seawater. We applied our method (SeaMet) to explore marine metabolomes in vitro and in vivo First, we measured the production and consumption of metabolites during the culture of a heterotrophic bacterium, Marinobacter adhaerens Our approach revealed successional uptake of amino acids, while sugars were not consumed. These results show that exocellular metabolomics provides insights into nutrient uptake and energy conservation in marine microorganisms. We also applied SeaMet to explore the in situ metabolome of coral reef and mangrove sediment porewaters. Despite the fact that these ecosystems occur in nutrient-poor waters, we uncovered high concentrations of sugars and fatty acids, compounds predicted to play a key role for the abundant and diverse microbial communities in coral reef and mangrove sediments. Our data demonstrate that SeaMet advances marine metabolomics by enabling a nontargeted and quantitative analysis of marine metabolites, thus providing new insights into nutrient cycles in the oceans.IMPORTANCE Nontargeted approaches using metabolomics to analyze metabolites that occur in the oceans is less developed than those for terrestrial and limnic ecosystems. One of the challenges in marine metabolomics is that salt limits metabolite analysis in seawater to methods requiring salt removal. Building on previous sample preparation methods for metabolomics, we developed SeaMet, which overcomes the limitations of salt on metabolite detection. Considering that the oceans contain the largest dissolved organic matter pool on Earth, describing the marine metabolome using nontargeted approaches is critical for understanding the drivers behind element cycles, biotic interactions, ecosystem function, and atmospheric CO2 storage. Our method complements both targeted marine metabolomic investigations as well as other "omics" (e.g., genomics, transcriptomics, and proteomics) approaches by providing an avenue for studying the chemical interaction between marine microbes and their habitats.

18.
mBio ; 10(3)2019 06 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31239380

ABSTRACT

Since the discovery of symbioses between sulfur-oxidizing (thiotrophic) bacteria and invertebrates at hydrothermal vents over 40 years ago, it has been assumed that autotrophic fixation of CO2 by the symbionts drives these nutritional associations. In this study, we investigated "Candidatus Kentron," the clade of symbionts hosted by Kentrophoros, a diverse genus of ciliates which are found in marine coastal sediments around the world. Despite being the main food source for their hosts, Kentron bacteria lack the key canonical genes for any of the known pathways for autotrophic carbon fixation and have a carbon stable isotope fingerprint that is unlike other thiotrophic symbionts from similar habitats. Our genomic and transcriptomic analyses instead found metabolic features consistent with growth on organic carbon, especially organic and amino acids, for which they have abundant uptake transporters. All known thiotrophic symbionts have converged on using reduced sulfur to gain energy lithotrophically, but they are diverse in their carbon sources. Some clades are obligate autotrophs, while many are mixotrophs that can supplement autotrophic carbon fixation with heterotrophic capabilities similar to those in Kentron. Here we show that Kentron bacteria are the only thiotrophic symbionts that appear to be entirely heterotrophic, unlike all other thiotrophic symbionts studied to date, which possess either the Calvin-Benson-Bassham or the reverse tricarboxylic acid cycle for autotrophy.IMPORTANCE Many animals and protists depend on symbiotic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria as their main food source. These bacteria use energy from oxidizing inorganic sulfur compounds to make biomass autotrophically from CO2, serving as primary producers for their hosts. Here we describe a clade of nonautotrophic sulfur-oxidizing symbionts, "Candidatus Kentron," associated with marine ciliates. They lack genes for known autotrophic pathways and have a carbon stable isotope fingerprint heavier than other symbionts from similar habitats. Instead, they have the potential to oxidize sulfur to fuel the uptake of organic compounds for heterotrophic growth, a metabolic mode called chemolithoheterotrophy that is not found in other symbioses. Although several symbionts have heterotrophic features to supplement primary production, in Kentron they appear to supplant it entirely.


Subject(s)
Autotrophic Processes , Bacteria/genetics , Carbon Cycle/genetics , Ciliophora/microbiology , Sulfur/metabolism , Symbiosis , Aquatic Organisms/microbiology , Bacteria/metabolism , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Gene Expression Profiling , Genomics , Italy , Oxidation-Reduction , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics
19.
Nat Microbiol ; 4(9): 1465-1474, 2019 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31182796

ABSTRACT

Placozoa is an enigmatic phylum of simple, microscopic, marine metazoans1,2. Although intracellular bacteria have been found in all members of this phylum, almost nothing is known about their identity, location and interactions with their host3-6. We used metagenomic and metatranscriptomic sequencing of single host individuals, plus metaproteomic and imaging analyses, to show that the placozoan Trichoplax sp. H2 lives in symbiosis with two intracellular bacteria. One symbiont forms an undescribed genus in the Midichloriaceae (Rickettsiales)7,8 and has a genomic repertoire similar to that of rickettsial parasites9,10, but does not seem to express key genes for energy parasitism. Correlative image analyses and three-dimensional electron tomography revealed that this symbiont resides in the rough endoplasmic reticulum of its host's internal fibre cells. The second symbiont belongs to the Margulisbacteria, a phylum without cultured representatives and not known to form intracellular associations11-13. This symbiont lives in the ventral epithelial cells of Trichoplax, probably metabolizes algal lipids digested by its host and has the capacity to supplement the placozoan's nutrition. Our study shows that one of the simplest animals has evolved highly specific and intimate associations with symbiotic, intracellular bacteria and highlights that symbioses can provide access to otherwise elusive microbial dark matter.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/metabolism , Placozoa/microbiology , Symbiosis , Water Microbiology , Animals , Bacteria/classification , Bacteria/genetics , Biosynthetic Pathways , Endoplasmic Reticulum, Rough/microbiology , Genome, Bacterial/genetics , Microbiota/genetics , Phylogeny , Placozoa/cytology , Species Specificity , Vacuoles/microbiology
20.
Metabolites ; 9(4)2019 Apr 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30959834

ABSTRACT

We report here that a straightforward change of the standard derivatization procedure for GC⁻MS metabolomics is leading to a strong increase in metabolite signal intensity. Drying samples between methoxymation and trimethylsilylation significantly increased signals by two- to tenfold in extracts of yeast cells, plant and animal tissue, and human urine. This easy step reduces the cost of sample material and the need for expensive new hardware.

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