A comparative study reveals the relative importance of prokaryotic and eukaryotic proton pump rhodopsins in a subtropical marginal sea

Author:

Ma Minglei1,Li Hongfei12,Wang Cong1,Li Tangcheng13,Wang Jierui1,Yuan Huatao1,Yu Liying14,Wang Jingtian1ORCID,Li Ling1,Lin Senjie156ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, College of Ocean and Earth Science, Xiamen University , Xiamen 361102, China

2. National Engineering Research Center for Marine Aquaculture, Zhejiang Ocean University , Zhoushan 316022, China

3. Biology Department and Institute of Marine Sciences, College of Science, Shantou University , Shantou 515063, China

4. Central Laboratory, the Second Affiliated Hospital of Fujian Medical University , Quanzhou 362000, China

5. Laboratory of Marine Biology and Biotechnology, Qingdao National Laboratory of Marine Science and Technology , Qingdao 266237, China

6. Department of Marine Sciences, University of Connecticut , Groton, CT 06340, USA

Abstract

Abstract Proton-pump rhodopsin (PPR) in marine microbes can convert solar energy to bioavailable chemical energy. Whereas bacterial PPR has been extensively studied, counterparts in microeukaryotes are less explored, and the relative importance of the two groups is poorly understood. Here, we sequenced whole-assemblage metatranscriptomes and investigated the diversity and expression dynamics of PPR in microbial eukaryotes and prokaryotes at a continental shelf and a slope site in the northern South China Sea. Data showed the whole PPRs transcript pool was dominated by Proteorhodopsins and Xanthorhodopsins, followed by Bacteriorhodopsin-like proteins, dominantly contributed by prokaryotes both in the number and expression levels of PPR unigenes, although at the continental slope station, microeukaryotes and prokaryotes contributed similarly in transcript abundance. Furthermore, eukaryotic PPRs are mainly contributed by dinoflagellates and showed significant correlation with nutrient concentrations. Green light-absorbing PPRs were mainly distributed in >3 μm organisms (including microeukaryotes and their associated bacteria), especially at surface layer at the shelf station, whereas blue light-absorbing PPRs dominated the <3 μm (mainly bacterial) communities at both study sites, especially at deeper layers at the slope station. Our study portrays a comparative PPR genotype and expression landscape for prokaryotes and eukaryotes in a subtropical marginal sea, suggesting PPR’s role in niche differentiation and adaptation among marine microbes.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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