Back to Search Start Over

Catabolic protein degradation in marine sediments confined to distinct archaea

Authors :
Xiuran Yin
Guowei Zhou
Mingwei Cai
Qing-Zeng Zhu
Tim Richter-Heitmann
David A. Aromokeye
Yang Liu
Rolf Nimzyk
Qingfei Zheng
Xiaoyu Tang
Marcus Elvert
Meng Li
Michael W. Friedrich
Source :
The ISME journal. 16(6)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Metagenomic analysis has facilitated prediction of a variety of carbon utilization potentials by uncultivated archaea including degradation of protein, which is a wide-spread carbon polymer in marine sediments. However, the activity of detrital catabolic protein degradation is mostly unknown for the vast majority of archaea. Here, we show actively executed protein catabolism in three archaeal phyla (uncultivated Thermoplasmata, SG8-5; Bathyarchaeota subgroup 15; Lokiarchaeota subgroup 2c) by RNA- and lipid-stable isotope probing in incubations with different marine sediments. However, highly abundant potential protein degraders Thermoprofundales (MBG-D) and Lokiarchaeota subgroup 3 were not incorporating 13C-label from protein during incubations. Nonetheless, we found that the pathway for protein utilization was present in metagenome associated genomes (MAGs) of active and inactive archaea. This finding was supported by screening extracellular peptidases in 180 archaeal MAGs, which appeared to be widespread but not correlated to organisms actively executing this process in our incubations. Thus, our results have important implications: (i) multiple low-abundant archaeal groups are actually catabolic protein degraders; (ii) the functional role of widespread extracellular peptidases is not an optimal tool to identify protein catabolism, and (iii) catabolic degradation of sedimentary protein is not a common feature of the abundant archaeal community in temperate and permanently cold marine sediments.

Details

ISSN :
17517370
Volume :
16
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The ISME journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aadf494d37f9a07fe3bc2ca1d1816475