4.5 Article

Metabolic characterization of a model heterotrophic bacterium capable of significant chemical alteration of marine dissolved organic matter

期刊

MARINE CHEMISTRY
卷 177, 期 -, 页码 357-365

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.marchem.2015.06.027

关键词

Dissolved organic matter (DOM); FT-ICR mass spectrometry; Alteromonas sp AltSIO; Glucose galactose uptake

资金

  1. JGI Community Science Program [1015920]
  2. UCSD Summer Training Academy for Research in the Sciences (STARS)
  3. Scripps Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF)
  4. NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service Pacific Islands Region Marine National Monument Program
  5. Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center
  6. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program
  7. NSF [OCE-1154320, OCE-0962721]
  8. NSF CAREER [OCE-05-28475]
  9. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Marine Microbiology Initiative grant [2758]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The marine bacterium Alteromonas sp. AltSIO was previously found to consume an equivalent magnitude of surface coastal marine dissolved organic carbon (DOC) as diverse bacterial assemblages (Pedler et al., 2014). In this study, we sought to investigate the potential of AltSIO to alter the chemical composition of marine DOC by characterizing its capacity to metabolize a broad suite of environmentally relevant model substrates. Results showed that AltSIO had a particularly broad capacity to degrade carbohydrates relative to other marine bacteria characterized as generalist heterotrophs. Growth in seawater incubations amended with model neutral sugars and radiolabeled substrates showed that AltSIO preferentially utilized la-galactose and disaccharides, but showed little to no biomass incorporation or respiration of D-glucose. Lastly, analysis of ambient dissolved organic matter (DOM) from time-course mesocosms by ultrahigh resolution mass spectrometry showed that both AltSIO grown in pure culture and a mixed bacterial community significantly altered ambient DOM, yet the alteration appeared uniform across chemical classes. for both treatments. This study provides insight into the physiological mechanisms of a globally distributed generalist bacterial taxon that has the capacity to significantly alter the geochemistry of marine DOM. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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