Selective cell lysis pressure on rare and abundant prokaryotic taxa across a shelf-to-slope continuum in the Northern South China Sea

Author:

Liu Lu12ORCID,Zhong Kevin Xu3,Chen Qi12ORCID,Wang Yu12ORCID,Zhang Ting12,Jiao Nianzhi12,Zheng Qiang12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory for Marine Environmental Science, Institute of Marine Microbes and Ecospheres, College of Ocean and Earth Sciences, Xiamen University, Xiamen, China

2. Fujian Key Laboratory of Marine Carbon Sequestration, Xiamen University, Xiamen, China

3. Department of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

Abstract

ABSTRACT Microbial growth and mortality are fundamental to community assembly and drive the elemental biogeochemical cycles in the ocean. Virus-induced host lysis contributes, on average, half of prokaryotic mortality and has a substantial effect on composition and diversity of marine microbes. Nevertheless, virus-mediated taxon-specific cell lysis is few studied to date. In the present study, we investigated the taxon-specific cell lysis and estimated its contribution to the variations of community composition in rare and abundant microbial taxa. The dominant taxa Prochlorococcus , Synechococcus , SAR11, and Rhodobacteraceae displayed lower cell lysis index (CLI, the rate of extracellular to intracellular rRNA) in surface seawater. Meanwhile, Alteromonas , Pseudomonas, and Halomonas had high CLI values in the bottom seawater. Cell lysis contributed a larger percentage of variation in rare taxa (5.0%–9.4%) than in abundant taxa (0.1%–1.7%). Furthermore, linear regression analysis indicated that rare taxa were more likely to experience higher viral lysis pressure relative to abundant taxa. Our findings provide insight into the impact of virus-mediated cell lysis on prokaryotic community structure and diversity and further improve our understanding of the various abiotic and biotic factors contributing to community assembly in the ocean. IMPORTANCE Virus-induced host lysis contributes up to 40% of total prokaryotic mortality and plays crucial roles in shaping microbial composition and diversity in the ocean. Nonetheless, what taxon-specific cell lysis is caused by viruses remains to be studied. The present study, therefore, examined the taxon-specific cell lysis and estimated its contribution to the variations in the rare and abundant microbial taxa. The results demonstrate that taxon-specific mortality differed in surface and bottom of the coastal environment. In addition, active rare taxa are more susceptible to heightened lytic pressure and suggested the importance of viral lysis in regulating the microbial community composition. These results improve our understanding of bottom-up (abiotic environmental variables) and top-down (viral lysis) controls contributing to microbial community assembly in the ocean.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

MOE | Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

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