Rhodopsin-mediated nutrient uptake by cultivated photoheterotrophic Verrucomicrobiota

Author:

Bar-Shalom Rinat1,Rozenberg Andrey2ORCID,Lahyani Matan1,Hassanzadeh Babak3ORCID,Sahoo Gobardhan14,Haber Markus15ORCID,Burgsdorf Ilia1ORCID,Tang Xinyu1,Squatrito Valeria1ORCID,Gomez-Consarnau Laura36,Béjà Oded2ORCID,Steindler Laura1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Marine Biology, Leon H. Charney School of Marine Sciences, University of Haifa , Haifa 3498838, Israel

2. Faculty of Biology, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology , Haifa 3200003, Israel

3. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Southern California , Los Angeles, CA 90089, USA

4. Department of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, School of Life Sciences, Pondicherry University , Puducherry 605014, India

5. Institute of Hydrobiology, Biology Centre CAS , Na Sadkach 7, 37005 Ceske Budejovice, Czechia

6. Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada , Ensenada, BC, México

Abstract

Abstract Rhodopsin photosystems convert light energy into electrochemical gradients used by the cell to produce ATP, or for other energy-demanding processes. While these photosystems are widespread in the ocean and have been identified in diverse microbial taxonomic groups, their physiological role in vivo has only been studied in few marine bacterial strains. Recent metagenomic studies revealed the presence of rhodopsin genes in the understudied Verrucomicrobiota phylum, yet their distribution within different Verrucomicrobiota lineages, their diversity, and function remain unknown. In this study, we show that more than 7% of Verrucomicrobiota genomes (n = 2916) harbor rhodopsins of different types. Furthermore, we describe the first two cultivated rhodopsin-containing strains, one harboring a proteorhodopsin gene and the other a xanthorhodopsin gene, allowing us to characterize their physiology under laboratory-controlled conditions. The strains were isolated in a previous study from the Eastern Mediterranean Sea and read mapping of 16S rRNA gene amplicons showed the highest abundances of these strains at the deep chlorophyll maximum (source of their inoculum) in winter and spring, with a substantial decrease in summer. Genomic analysis of the isolates suggests that motility and degradation of organic material, both energy demanding functions, may be supported by rhodopsin phototrophy in Verrucomicrobiota. Under culture conditions, we show that rhodopsin phototrophy occurs under carbon starvation, with light-mediated energy generation supporting sugar transport into the cells. Overall, this study suggests that photoheterotrophic Verrucomicrobiota may occupy an ecological niche where energy harvested from light enables bacterial motility toward organic matter and supports nutrient uptake.

Funder

United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation

National Science Foundation

Milgrom Family Foundation funding collaboration between Technion Institute of Science and University of Haifa.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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