Alternative strategies of nutrient acquisition and energy conservation map to the biogeography of marine ammonia-oxidizing archaea

Author:

Qin WeiORCID,Zheng YueORCID,Zhao FengORCID,Wang YulinORCID,Urakawa HidetoshiORCID,Martens-Habbena Willm,Liu Haodong,Huang Xiaowu,Zhang Xinxu,Nakagawa Tatsunori,Mende Daniel R.,Bollmann Annette,Wang BaozhanORCID,Zhang Yao,Amin Shady A.ORCID,Nielsen Jeppe L.ORCID,Mori Koji,Takahashi Reiji,Virginia Armbrust E.ORCID,Winkler Mari-K.H.,DeLong Edward F.ORCID,Li MengORCID,Lee Po-Heng,Zhou JizhongORCID,Zhang Chuanlun,Zhang Tong,Stahl David A.,Ingalls Anitra E.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractAmmonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) are among the most abundant and ubiquitous microorganisms in the ocean, exerting primary control on nitrification and nitrogen oxides emission. Although united by a common physiology of chemoautotrophic growth on ammonia, a corresponding high genomic and habitat variability suggests tremendous adaptive capacity. Here, we compared 44 diverse AOA genomes, 37 from species cultivated from samples collected across diverse geographic locations and seven assembled from metagenomic sequences from the mesopelagic to hadopelagic zones of the deep ocean. Comparative analysis identified seven major marine AOA genotypic groups having gene content correlated with their distinctive biogeographies. Phosphorus and ammonia availabilities as well as hydrostatic pressure were identified as selective forces driving marine AOA genotypic and gene content variability in different oceanic regions. Notably, AOA methylphosphonate biosynthetic genes span diverse oceanic provinces, reinforcing their importance for methane production in the ocean. Together, our combined comparative physiological, genomic, and metagenomic analyses provide a comprehensive view of the biogeography of globally abundant AOA and their adaptive radiation into a vast range of marine and terrestrial habitats.

Funder

Simons Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

The Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Marine Archaea Geo-Omics, Southern University of Science and Technology

Novo Nordisk Fonden

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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