Evidence of Interdomain Ammonium Cross-Feeding From Methylamine- and Glycine Betaine-Degrading Rhodobacteraceae to Diatoms as a Widespread Interaction in the Marine Phycosphere

Dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) compounds such as methylamines (MAs) and glycine betaine (GBT) occur at detectable concentrations in marine habitats and are also produced and released by microalgae. For many marine bacteria, these DON compounds can serve as carbon, energy, and nitrogen sources, but...

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Main Authors: Karsten Zecher, Kristiane Rebecca Hayes, Bodo Philipp
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2020.533894/full
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spelling doaj-75463de2dfeb4c68ac5d547e45b583ae2020-11-25T03:58:13ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2020-10-011110.3389/fmicb.2020.533894533894Evidence of Interdomain Ammonium Cross-Feeding From Methylamine- and Glycine Betaine-Degrading Rhodobacteraceae to Diatoms as a Widespread Interaction in the Marine PhycosphereKarsten ZecherKristiane Rebecca HayesBodo PhilippDissolved organic nitrogen (DON) compounds such as methylamines (MAs) and glycine betaine (GBT) occur at detectable concentrations in marine habitats and are also produced and released by microalgae. For many marine bacteria, these DON compounds can serve as carbon, energy, and nitrogen sources, but microalgae usually cannot metabolize them. Interestingly though, it was previously shown that Donghicola sp. strain KarMa—a member of the marine Rhodobacteraceae—can cross-feed ammonium such that the ammonium it produces upon degrading monomethylamine (MMA) then serves as nitrogen source for the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum; thus, these organisms form a mutual metabolic interaction under photoautotrophic conditions. In the present study, we investigated whether this interaction plays a broader role in bacteria–diatom interactions in general. Results showed that cross-feeding between strain KarMa and P. tricornutum was also possible with di- and trimethylamine as well as with GBT. Further, cross-feeding of strain KarMa was also observed in cocultures with the diatoms Amphora coffeaeformis and Thalassiosira pseudonana with MMA as the sole nitrogen source. Regarding cross-feeding involving other Rhodobacteraceae strains, the in silico analysis of MA and GBT degradation pathways indicated that algae-associated Rhodobacteraceae-type strains likely interact with P. tricornutum in a similar manner as the strain KarMa does. For these types of strains (such as Celeribacter halophilus, Roseobacter denitrificans, Roseovarius indicus, Ruegeria pomeroyi, and Sulfitobacter noctilucicola), ammonium cross-feeding after methylamine degradation showed species-specific patterns, whereas bacterial GBT degradation always led to diatom growth. Overall, the degradation of DON compounds by the Rhodobacteraceae family and the subsequent cross-feeding of ammonium may represent a widespread, organism-specific, and regulated metabolic interaction for establishing and stabilizing associations with photoautotrophic diatoms in the oceans.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2020.533894/fullmethylaminesRhodobacteraceaediatomscross-feeding interactionphycosphereglycine betaine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karsten Zecher
Kristiane Rebecca Hayes
Bodo Philipp
spellingShingle Karsten Zecher
Kristiane Rebecca Hayes
Bodo Philipp
Evidence of Interdomain Ammonium Cross-Feeding From Methylamine- and Glycine Betaine-Degrading Rhodobacteraceae to Diatoms as a Widespread Interaction in the Marine Phycosphere
Frontiers in Microbiology
methylamines
Rhodobacteraceae
diatoms
cross-feeding interaction
phycosphere
glycine betaine
author_facet Karsten Zecher
Kristiane Rebecca Hayes
Bodo Philipp
author_sort Karsten Zecher
title Evidence of Interdomain Ammonium Cross-Feeding From Methylamine- and Glycine Betaine-Degrading Rhodobacteraceae to Diatoms as a Widespread Interaction in the Marine Phycosphere
title_short Evidence of Interdomain Ammonium Cross-Feeding From Methylamine- and Glycine Betaine-Degrading Rhodobacteraceae to Diatoms as a Widespread Interaction in the Marine Phycosphere
title_full Evidence of Interdomain Ammonium Cross-Feeding From Methylamine- and Glycine Betaine-Degrading Rhodobacteraceae to Diatoms as a Widespread Interaction in the Marine Phycosphere
title_fullStr Evidence of Interdomain Ammonium Cross-Feeding From Methylamine- and Glycine Betaine-Degrading Rhodobacteraceae to Diatoms as a Widespread Interaction in the Marine Phycosphere
title_full_unstemmed Evidence of Interdomain Ammonium Cross-Feeding From Methylamine- and Glycine Betaine-Degrading Rhodobacteraceae to Diatoms as a Widespread Interaction in the Marine Phycosphere
title_sort evidence of interdomain ammonium cross-feeding from methylamine- and glycine betaine-degrading rhodobacteraceae to diatoms as a widespread interaction in the marine phycosphere
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Microbiology
issn 1664-302X
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) compounds such as methylamines (MAs) and glycine betaine (GBT) occur at detectable concentrations in marine habitats and are also produced and released by microalgae. For many marine bacteria, these DON compounds can serve as carbon, energy, and nitrogen sources, but microalgae usually cannot metabolize them. Interestingly though, it was previously shown that Donghicola sp. strain KarMa—a member of the marine Rhodobacteraceae—can cross-feed ammonium such that the ammonium it produces upon degrading monomethylamine (MMA) then serves as nitrogen source for the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum; thus, these organisms form a mutual metabolic interaction under photoautotrophic conditions. In the present study, we investigated whether this interaction plays a broader role in bacteria–diatom interactions in general. Results showed that cross-feeding between strain KarMa and P. tricornutum was also possible with di- and trimethylamine as well as with GBT. Further, cross-feeding of strain KarMa was also observed in cocultures with the diatoms Amphora coffeaeformis and Thalassiosira pseudonana with MMA as the sole nitrogen source. Regarding cross-feeding involving other Rhodobacteraceae strains, the in silico analysis of MA and GBT degradation pathways indicated that algae-associated Rhodobacteraceae-type strains likely interact with P. tricornutum in a similar manner as the strain KarMa does. For these types of strains (such as Celeribacter halophilus, Roseobacter denitrificans, Roseovarius indicus, Ruegeria pomeroyi, and Sulfitobacter noctilucicola), ammonium cross-feeding after methylamine degradation showed species-specific patterns, whereas bacterial GBT degradation always led to diatom growth. Overall, the degradation of DON compounds by the Rhodobacteraceae family and the subsequent cross-feeding of ammonium may represent a widespread, organism-specific, and regulated metabolic interaction for establishing and stabilizing associations with photoautotrophic diatoms in the oceans.
topic methylamines
Rhodobacteraceae
diatoms
cross-feeding interaction
phycosphere
glycine betaine
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2020.533894/full
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