Alpha-glucans from bacterial necromass indicate an intra-population loop within the marine carbon cycle
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2580-2694, Wiltshire, Karen H
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7148-0529, Teeling, Hanno, Becher, Dörte, Bengtsson, Mia Maria, Hehemann, Jan-Hendrik, Bornscheuer, Uwe T, Amann, Rudolf I and Schweder, Thomas
;
Phytoplankton blooms provoke bacterioplankton blooms, from which bacterial biomass (necromass) is released via increased zooplankton grazing and viral lysis. While bacterial consumption of algal biomass during blooms is well-studied, little is known about the concurrent recycling of these substantial amounts of bacterial necromass. We demonstrate that bacterial biomass, such as bacterial alpha-glucan storage polysaccharides, generated from the consumption of algal organic matter, is reused and thus itself a major bacterial carbon source in vitro and during a diatom-dominated bloom. We highlight conserved enzymes and binding proteins of dominant bloom-responder clades that are presumably involved in the recycling of bacterial alpha-glucan by members of the bacterial community. We furthermore demonstrate that the corresponding protein machineries can be specifically induced by extracted alpha-glucan-rich bacterial polysaccharide extracts. This recycling of bacterial necromass likely constitutes a large-scale intra-population energy conservation mechanism that keeps substantial amounts of carbon in a dedicated part of the microbial loop.
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2580-2694, Wiltshire, Karen H
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7148-0529, Teeling, Hanno, Becher, Dörte, Bengtsson, Mia Maria, Hehemann, Jan-Hendrik, Bornscheuer, Uwe T, Amann, Rudolf I and Schweder, Thomas
;
AWI Organizations > Biosciences > Coastal Ecology
Alpha-glucans from bacterial necromass indicate an intra-population loop within the marine carbon cycle.pdf - Other
Download (1MB) | Preview
