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1.
J Environ Manage ; 367: 122011, 2024 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39094415

ABSTRACT

Photosynthetic carbon sequestration and microbial carbon metabolism are major processes of algae-bacteria interactions, affecting pollutant degradation as well as fundamental biogeochemical cycles in aquatic systems. Human-induced land-use changes greatly alter the molecular composition and input of terrestrial dissolved organic matter (DOM) in inland lakes. However, how the origin of DOM leads to varying effects on phycosphere microbial communities or molecular composition of DOM, e.g., via carbon metabolism, has been little studied in freshwater. Here, we incubated the cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa and a bacterial community from natural lakes to establish an alga-bacteria model system. This allowed us to investigate how DOM from different sources affects phycosphere microbial diversity and DOM diversification. We showed that Suwannee River fulvic acid (SRFA), Suwannee River natural organic matter (SRNOM) and cropland lake DOM promote algal growth, whereas DOM from an urban lake inhibits algal growth. Algal metabolites and DOM together shaped the chemotaxis response of phycosphere communities. High-resolution mass spectrometry analysis demonstrated that DOM chemo-diversity tended to become uniform after interactions of diverse DOM sources with the algae-bacteria symbiosis system. Molecular thermodynamic analysis of DOM based on a substrate-explicit model further verified that microbial interactions render DOM less bioavailable and thus increase recalcitrant DOM formation. Metabolome analysis uncovered that DOM addition intensifies metabolic pathways related to labile and recalcitrant DOM utilization (mainly lignin/carboxyl-rich alicyclic molecule (CRAM)-like DOM, unsaturated hydrocarbon), whereby cofactor and vitamin metabolism represented an extremely strong activity in all metabolic pathways. Our results highlight covariation and interactions of DOM with microbial metabolism at the molecular level and expands our understanding of microbially mediated DOM shaping aquatic carbon cycling.


Subject(s)
Carbon , Lakes , Lakes/microbiology , Carbon/metabolism , Humans , Benzopyrans , Bacteria/metabolism
2.
Sci Total Environ ; 923: 171465, 2024 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38453086

ABSTRACT

Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is one of the most important fluxes in the global carbon cycle but its response to light exposure remains unclear at a molecular-level. The chemical response of DOM to light should vary with its molecular composition and environmental conditions while some basic hypotheses are still unclear, such as the balance between photobleaching and photo-humification and the question of oxidative properties. Here we exposed aquatic DOM from diverse freshwaters impacted by different levels of anthropogenic activity and algal exudates to environmentally-realistic light conditions. We found that photobleaching occurred in DOM with relatively high initial humic content producing low H/C molecules, whereas DOM with low initial humic content was humified. DOM pools with relatively high initial saturation and low aromaticity were prone to transform towards more unsaturated molecular formulae and high H/C molecules with a distinct decrease of bioavailability. Photo-transformation was mainly influenced by reactive intermediates, with reactive oxygen species (ROS) playing a dominant role in humification when the initial humus content of DOM was high. In contrast, for algal DOM with high protein content, it was likely that the autoxidation of excited state DOM was more important than indirect oxidation involving ROS. Our results reveal how photo-transformation patterns depend on the initial composition of DOM and provide new insights into the role of photochemical processes in biogeochemical cycling of DOM.

3.
Sci Total Environ ; 857(Pt 2): 159522, 2023 Jan 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36270364

ABSTRACT

Anthropogenic activities have greatly changed the land use and land cover (LULC) and further influenced the chemical properties and amount of DOM transported into aquatic systems, meanwhile, microbial processing is also critical to DOM molecular composition in freshwaters. However, how they jointly shape DOM's chemical composition and chemodiversity in lakes is poorly understood. Here we examined DOM characteristics for seven inland lakes with three different land cover conditions (forest-dominated, cropland-dominated, and urban-dominated). Results indicated that DOM in cropland-dominated and forest-dominated lakes exhibited more characteristics of terrestrial organic matter, while urban-dominated lakes had more allochthonous organic matter driven by relatively high nutrient input. Human activities extended terrestrial DOM input to lakes and intensified the amount of heteroatomic organic molecules containing nitrogen and sulfur in lakes, with cropland contributing more N-containing compounds and urban contributing more S-containing compounds. Differential bacterial community composition appeared in the three types of land cover lakes, while strong co-occurrence/exclusion patterns between specific microbes and molecular formula groups revealed the key DOM metabolism functions of these bacteria. Matrix correlations based on Mantel tests confirmed that watershed landcover status was a dominating factor for DOM sources and molecular composition in mountainous lakes through direct input of terrestrial organic matter, and microbial processing was not the key factor for DOM molecular formula. Our findings help to assess the influence of human activities and microbial processing in the transfer and transformation of DOM in environmental waters.


Subject(s)
Dissolved Organic Matter , Lakes , Humans , Lakes/chemistry , Human Activities , Forests , Nitrogen
4.
Sci Total Environ ; 806(Pt 1): 150538, 2022 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34582854

ABSTRACT

The hazardous effects of plastic and plastic leachates on organisms, even bacteria, have attracted widespread attention, but only a limited effort has been devoted to explore the response of fungi to plastic leachate induced by light irradiation. Here, we performed plastic leaching experiments to obtain leachates from polyethylene (PE), polyethylene terephthalate (PET) and polypropylene (PP), and optical properties of plastic leachates were analysed to determine the influence of light conditions and plastic materials on that. The effects of plastic leachates on the production of fungal enzyme and the biodegradation of heterocyclic dye by fungi were evaluated. Results indicated that the UV light greatly enhanced the release of leachates from the three plastics. Both plastic polymers and light irradiation affected the plastic-derived dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and their aromaticity, but the molecular weight of plastic leachates showed no dependency on light irradiation types, and PE was the easiest to photo age and leached more DOC. Plastic leachates had no dose-effect on the production of extracellular enzymes by fungi. PE leachates showed long-term toxicities to fungi, and no manganese peroxidase activities were detected after a 42-day incubation, while that of controls were up to 73.64 ± 8.81 U/L. However, the PE and PP leachates greatly promoted methylene blue degradation by the fungi, but PET leachates relieved the decolouration of methylene blue, probably because of the benzene ring structure in the PET monomer. Fusarium oxysporum had a stronger degradation ability than Phanerochaete chrysosporium. Our results indicate that plastic leachates can influence the production and secretion of fungi ligninolytic extracellular enzymes, and regulate the fungal degradation of heterocyclic dye.


Subject(s)
Phanerochaete , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Biodegradation, Environmental , Fusarium , Plastics/toxicity , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/toxicity
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