Constraining activity and growth substrate of fungal decomposers via assimilation patterns of inorganic carbon and water into lipid biomarkers

Author:

Jabinski Stanislav12ORCID,d. M. Rangel Wesley2ORCID,Kopáček Marek13,Jílková Veronika2,Jansa Jan4ORCID,Meador Travis B.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecosystem Biology, Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia, České Budějovice, Czechia

2. Institute of Soil Biology and Biochemistry, Biology Centre CAS, České Budějovice, Czechia

3. Institute of Hydrobiology, Biology Centre CAS, České Budějovice, Czechia

4. Institute of Microbiology CAS, Praha, Czechia

Abstract

ABSTRACT Fungi are among the few organisms on the planet that can metabolize recalcitrant carbon (C) but are also known to access recently produced plant photosynthate. Therefore, improved quantification of growth and substrate utilization by different fungal ecotypes will help to define the rates and controls of fungal production, the cycling of soil organic matter, and thus the C storage and CO 2 buffering capacity in soil ecosystems. This pure-culture study of fungal isolates combined a dual stable isotope probing (SIP) approach, together with rapid analysis by tandem pyrolysis-gas chromatography-isotope ratio mass spectrometry to determine the patterns of water-derived hydrogen (H) and inorganic C assimilated into lipid biomarkers of heterotrophic fungi as a function of C substrate. The water H assimilation factor ( α W ) and the inorganic C assimilation into C 18:2 fatty acid isolated from five fungal species growing on glucose was lower (0.62% ± 0.01% and 4.7% ± 1.6%, respectively) than for species grown on glutamic acid (0.90% ± 0.02% and 7.4% ± 3.7%, respectively). Furthermore, the assimilation ratio (R IC/ α W ) for growth on glucose and glutamic acid can distinguish between these two metabolic modes. This dual-SIP assay thus delivers estimates of fungal activity and may help to delineate the predominant substrates that are respired among a matrix of compounds found in natural environments. IMPORTANCE Fungal decomposers play important roles in food webs and nutrient cycling because they can feed on both labile and more recalcitrant forms of carbon. This study developed and applied a dual stable isotope assay ( 13 C-dissolved inorganic carbon/ 2 H) to improve the investigation of fungal activity in the environment. By determining the incorporation patterns of hydrogen and carbon into fungal lipids, this assay delivers estimates of fungal activity and the different metabolic pathways that they employ in ecological and environmental systems.

Funder

Grantová Agentura České Republiky

Ministerstvo Školství, Mládeže a Tělovýchovy

EC | European Regional Development Fund

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

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