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Grazers affect the composition of dissolved storage glycans and thereby bacterioplankton composition during a biphasic North Sea spring algae bloom

Authors :
Chandni Sidhu
Inga V. Kirstein
Cédric L. Meunier
Johannes Rick
Karen H. Wiltshire
Nicola Steinke
Silvia Vidal-Melgosa
Jan-Hendrik Hehemann
Bruno Huettel
Thomas Schweder
Bernhard M. Fuchs
Rudolf I. Amann
Hanno Teeling
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Blooms of marine microalgae play a pivotal role in global carbon cycling. Such blooms entail successive blooms of specialized clades of planktonic bacteria that remineralize algal biomass. We investigated the bacterioplankton response to a bloom in the German Bight in spring 2020. Metagenome sequencing at 30 time-points allowed reconstruction of 251 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), 245 representing as yet uncultured species, while corresponding metatranscriptome sequencing highlighted 50 particularly active MAGs. Together with algae, copepod, protist and bacteria diversity and abundance data in combination with physico-chemical data and antibody-based saccharide measurements, we demonstrate (i) how dissolved primary photoassimilated algal and secondary bacterial storage glycans shape the bacterioplankton community composition, and (ii) how grazing on higher trophic levels determines the release of these abundant glycans. We thus elucidate principles governing how bacterioplankton clades respond to algal blooms and collectively remineralize gigatons of carbon annually on a global scale.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a14a5f04132e74a4d3a41bb93a5473e7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.09.22.509014