Exaggerated trans-membrane charge of ammonium transporters in nutrient-poor marine environments

Author:

Kellom Matthew1ORCID,Pagliara Stefano2ORCID,Richards Thomas A.3ORCID,Santoro Alyson E.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA

2. Living Systems Institute and Biosciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, Devon EX4 4QD, UK

3. Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, 11a Mansfield Road, Oxford OX1 3SZ, UK

Abstract

Transporter proteins are a vital interface between cells and their environment. In nutrient-limited environments, microbes with transporters that are effective at bringing substrates into their cells will gain a competitive advantage over variants with reduced transport function. Microbial ammonium transporters (Amt) bring ammonium into the cytoplasm from the surrounding periplasm space, but diagnosing Amt adaptations to low nutrient environments solely from sequence data has been elusive. Here, we report altered Amt sequence amino acid distribution from deep marine samples compared to variants sampled from shallow water in two important microbial lineages of the marine water column community—Marine Group I Archaea (Thermoproteota) and the uncultivated gammaproteobacterial lineage SAR86. This pattern indicates an evolutionary pressure towards an increasing dipole in Amt for these clades in deep ocean environments and is predicted to generate stronger electric fields facilitating ammonium acquisition. This pattern of increasing dipole charge with depth was not observed in lineages capable of accessing alternative nitrogen sources, including the abundant alphaproteobacterial clade SAR11. We speculate that competition for ammonium in the deep ocean drives transporter sequence evolution. The low concentration of ammonium in the deep ocean is therefore likely due to rapid uptake by Amts concurrent with decreasing nutrient flux.

Funder

Division of Ocean Sciences

Division of Materials Research

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

Division of Computer and Network Systems

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Immunology,General Neuroscience

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