Molybdenum isotope signature of microbial nitrogen utilization in siboglinid tubeworms

Author:

Wang Xudong12ORCID,Xu Ting3,Peckmann Jörn4,Bayon Germain5,Jia Zice1,Gong Shanggui1,Li Jie6,Cordes Erik7,Sun Yanan3,Tao Jun8,Chen Duofu1,Feng Dong12

Affiliation:

1. 1Shanghai Engineering Research Center of Hadal Science and Technology, College of Marine Sciences, Shanghai Ocean University, Shanghai 201306, China

2. 2Laboratory for Marine Mineral Resources, Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology, Qingdao 266061, China

3. 3Department of Ocean Science, Division of Life Science, and Hong Kong Branch of the Southern Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong, China

4. 4Institute for Geology, Center for Earth System Research and Sustainability, Universität Hamburg, 20146 Hamburg, Germany

5. 5Univ Brest, CNRS, Ifremer, Geo-Ocean, F-29280 Plouzané, France

6. 6State Key Laboratory of Isotope Geochemistry, Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510640, China

7. 7Department of Biology, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19122, USA

8. 8MLR Key Laboratory of Marine Mineral Resources, Guangzhou Marine Geological Survey, China Geological Survey, Guangzhou 510070, China

Abstract

Abstract Many chemosynthesis-based communities prospering in deep-sea environments rely on the metabolic activity of sulfide-oxidizing bacteria. This is the case for vestimentiferan siboglinid tubeworms, whose demand for nutrition is satisfied predominantly by their endosymbiotic bacteria harbored in a specialized organ called the trophosome. Such chemosymbiosis leads to a significantly lower nitrogen isotope composition of the trophosome than in other types of soft tissue. However, the specific process of nitrogen utilization by siboglinids remains unclear. As a key element in the relevant enzymes (nitrogenase and nitrate reductase), molybdenum (Mo) is indispensable in the biogeochemical cycling of nitrogen. The Mo isotope composition (δ98Mo) of siboglinids is thus a potential proxy for decoding the processes involved in nitrogen metabolism. In this study, we found δ98Mo values along the chitinous tube of the vestimentiferan siboglinid Paraescarpia echinospica from the Haima seeps of the South China Sea as negative as −4.59‰ (−1.13‰ ± 1.75‰, 1SD, n = 19)—the lowest δ98Mo value ever reported for any kind of natural material. It is suggested that this extremely negative Mo isotope composition is caused by preferential utilization of isotopically light Mo by the tubeworm’s endosymbionts or epibionts during nitrate reduction. Such Mo isotope signature could provide a means for identifying siboglinid tubeworms, a group of annelids that has previously escaped unambiguous identification due to the lack of mineralized skeleton, in the rock record.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

Subject

Geology

Reference35 articles.

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