Affiliation:
1. University of Münster, Institute for Molecular Microbiology and Biotechnology, Münster, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Methylamines occur ubiquitously in the oceans and can serve as carbon, nitrogen, and energy sources for heterotrophic bacteria from different phylogenetic groups within the marine bacterioplankton. Diatoms, which constitute a large part of the marine phytoplankton, are believed to be incapable of using methylamines as a nitrogen source. As diatoms are typically associated with heterotrophic bacteria, the hypothesis came up that methylotrophic bacteria may provide ammonium to diatoms by degradation of methylamines. This hypothesis was investigated with the diatom
Phaeodactylum tricornutum
and monomethylamine (MMA) as the substrate. Bacteria supporting photoautotrophic growth of
P. tricornutum
with MMA as the sole nitrogen source could readily be isolated from seawater. Two strains,
Donghicola
sp. strain KarMa, which harbored genes for both monomethylamine dehydrogenase and the
N
methylglutamate pathway, and
Methylophaga
sp. strain M1, which catalyzed MMA oxidation by MMA dehydrogenase, were selected for further characterization. While strain M1 grew with MMA as the sole substrate, strain KarMa could utilize MMA as a nitrogen source only when, e.g., glucose was provided as a carbon source. With both strains, release of ammonium was detected during MMA utilization. In coculture with
P. tricornutum
, strain KarMa supported photoautotrophic growth with 2 mM MMA to the same extent as with the equimolar amount of NH
4
Cl. In coculture with strain M1, photoautotrophic growth of
P. tricornutum
was also supported, but to a much lower degree than by strain KarMa. This proof-of-principle study with a synthetic microbial community suggests that interkingdom cross-feeding of ammonium from methylamine-degrading bacteria is a contribution to phytoplankton growth which has been overlooked so far.
IMPORTANCE
Interactions between diatoms and heterotrophic bacteria are important for marine carbon cycling. In this study, a novel interaction is described. Bacteria able to degrade monomethylamine, which is a ubiquitous organic nitrogen compound in marine environments, can provide ammonium to diatoms. This interkingdom metabolite transfer enables growth under photoautotrophic conditions in coculture, which would not be possible in the respective monocultures. This proof-of-principle study calls attention to a so far overlooked contribution to phytoplankton growth.
Funder
Evonik Industries
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
43 articles.
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