Light Regimes Shape Utilization of Extracellular Organic C and N in a Cyanobacterial Biofilm

Here it is becoming clear that many microbial primary producers can also play a role as organic consumers, we know very little about the metabolic regulation of photoautotroph organic matter consumption. Cyanobacteria in phototrophic biofilms can reuse extracellular organic carbon, but the metabolic...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inmBio Vol. 7; no. 3
Main Authors Stuart, Rhona K., Mayali, Xavier, Boaro, Amy A., Zemla, Adam, Everroad, R. Craig, Nilson, Daniel, Weber, Peter K., Lipton, Mary, Bebout, Brad M., Pett-Ridge, Jennifer, Thelen, Michael P., Pakrasi, ed., Himadri B., Tiedje, ed., James M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Society for Microbiology 06.07.2016
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Summary:Here it is becoming clear that many microbial primary producers can also play a role as organic consumers, we know very little about the metabolic regulation of photoautotroph organic matter consumption. Cyanobacteria in phototrophic biofilms can reuse extracellular organic carbon, but the metabolic drivers of extracellular processes are surprisingly complex. We investigated the metabolic foundations of organic matter reuse by comparing exoproteome composition and incorporation of 13C-labeled and 15N-labeled cyanobacterial extracellular organic matter (EOM) in a unicyanobacterial biofilm incubated using different light regimes. In the light and the dark, cyanobacterial direct organic C assimilation accounted for 32% and 43%, respectively, of all organic C assimilation in the community. Under photosynthesis conditions, we measured increased excretion of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) and proteins involved in micronutrient transport, suggesting that requirements for micronutrients may drive EOM assimilation during daylight hours. This interpretation was supported by photosynthesis inhibition experiments, in which cyanobacteria incorporated N-rich EOM-derived material. In contrast, under dark, C-starved conditions, cyanobacteria incorporated C-rich EOM-derived organic matter, decreased excretion of EPS, and showed an increased abundance of degradative exoproteins, demonstrating the use of the extracellular domain for C storage. Sequence-structure modeling of one of these exoproteins predicted a specific hydrolytic activity that was subsequently detected, confirming increased EOM degradation in the dark. Associated heterotrophic bacteria increased in abundance and upregulated transport proteins under dark relative to light conditions. Taken together, our results indicate that biofilm cyanobacteria are successful competitors for organic C and N and that cyanobacterial nutrient and energy requirements control the use of EOM.
Bibliography:AC52-07NA27344
LLNL-JRNL-682499
USDOE
ISSN:2161-2129
2150-7511