Genomic insights into redox-driven microbial processes for carbon decomposition in thawing Arctic soils and permafrost

Author:

Li Yaoming12,Xue Yaxin3,Roy Chowdhury Taniya4,Graham David E.5ORCID,Tringe Susannah G.6ORCID,Jansson Janet K.7ORCID,Taş Neslihan2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Grassland Science, Beijing Forest University, Beijing, China

2. Earth and Environmental Sciences Area, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California, USA

3. Data Sciences and Quantitative Biology, Discovery Sciences, AstraZeneca R&D, Cambridge, United Kingdom

4. Woodwell Climate Research Center, Falmouth, Massachusetts, USA

5. Biosciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA

6. DOE Joint Genome Institute, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California, USA

7. Biological Sciences Division, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Climate change is rapidly transforming Arctic landscapes where increasing soil temperatures speed up permafrost thaw. This exposes large carbon stocks to microbial decomposition, possibly worsening climate change by releasing more greenhouse gases. Understanding how microbes break down soil carbon, especially under the anaerobic conditions of thawing permafrost, is important to determine future changes. Here, we studied the microbial community dynamics and soil carbon decomposition potential in permafrost and active layer soils under anaerobic laboratory conditions that simulated an Arctic summer thaw. The microbial and viral compositions in the samples were analyzed based on metagenomes, metagenome-assembled genomes, and metagenomic viral contigs (mVCs). Following the thawing of permafrost, there was a notable shift in microbial community structure, with fermentative Firmicutes and Bacteroidota taking over from Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria over the 60-day incubation period. The increase in iron and sulfate-reducing microbes had a significant role in limiting methane production from thawed permafrost, underscoring the competition within microbial communities. We explored the growth strategies of microbial communities and found that slow growth was the major strategy in both the active layer and permafrost. Our findings challenge the assumption that fast-growing microbes mainly respond to environmental changes like permafrost thaw. Instead, they indicate a common strategy of slow growth among microbial communities, likely due to the thermodynamic constraints of soil substrates and electron acceptors, and the need for microbes to adjust to post-thaw conditions. The mVCs harbored a wide range of auxiliary metabolic genes that may support cell protection from ice formation in virus-infected cells. IMPORTANCE As the Arctic warms, thawing permafrost unlocks carbon, potentially accelerating climate change by releasing greenhouse gases. Our research delves into the underlying biogeochemical processes likely mediated by the soil microbial community in response to the wet and anaerobic conditions, akin to an Arctic summer thaw. We observed a significant shift in the microbial community post-thaw, with fermentative bacteria like Firmicutes and Bacteroidota taking over and switching to different fermentation pathways. The dominance of iron and sulfate-reducing bacteria likely constrained methane production in the thawing permafrost. Slow-growing microbes outweighed fast-growing ones, even after thaw, upending the expectation that rapid microbial responses to dominate after permafrost thaws. This research highlights the nuanced and complex interactions within Arctic soil microbial communities and underscores the challenges in predicting microbial response to environmental change.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

MOST | National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Scholarship Council

DOE | SC | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Reference110 articles.

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