Analogous assembly mechanisms and functional guilds govern prokaryotic communities in mangrove ecosystems of China and South America

Author:

Du Huan12ORCID,Pan Jie123,Zhang Cuijing12,Yang Xilan45,Wang Cheng67,Lin Xiaolan8,Li Jinhui9,Liu Wan10,Zhou Haokui45,Yu Xiaoli67,Mo Shuming9,Zhang Guoqing10,Zhao Guoping1011,Qu Wu12,Jiang Chengjian9,Tian Yun8,He Zhili67,Liu Yang12,Li Meng12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Archaeal Biology Center, Institute for Advanced Study, Shenzhen University , Shenzhen, China

2. Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Marine Microbiome Engineering, Institute for Advanced Study, Shenzhen University , Shenzhen, China

3. Shenzhen Xbiome Biotech Co. Ltd. , Shenzhen, China

4. Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Synthetic Genomics, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Synthetic Genomics, CAS Key Laboratory of Quantitative Engineering Biology, Shenzhen Institute of Synthetic Biology , Shenzhen, China

5. Institute of Synthetic Biology, Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Shenzhen, China

6. Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai) , Zhuhai, China

7. State Key Laboratory for Biocontrol, Environmental Microbiomics Research Center, School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Sun Yat-sen University , Guangzhou, China

8. Key Laboratory of the Ministry of Education for Coastal and Wetland Ecosystems, School of Life Sciences, Xiamen University , Xiamen, China

9. National Engineering Research Center for Non-Food Biorefinery, Guangxi Research Center for Biological Science and Technology, Guangxi Academy of Sciences , Nanning, China

10. National Genomics Data Center& Bio-Med Big Data Center, CAS Key Laboratory of Computational Biology, Shanghai Institute of Nutrition and Health, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chinese Academy of Science , Shanghai, China

11. Hangzhou Institute for Advanced Study, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences , Hangzhou, China

12. Marine Science and Technology College, Zhejiang Ocean University , Zhoushan, China

Abstract

ABSTRACT As an important coastal “blue carbon sink,” mangrove ecosystems contain microbial communities with an as-yet-unknown high species diversity. Exploring the assemblage and structure of sediment microbial communities therein can aid in a better understanding of their ecosystem functioning, such as carbon sequestration and other biogeochemical cycles in mangrove wetlands. However, compared to other biomes, the study of mangrove sediment microbiomes is limited, especially in diverse mangrove ecosystems at a large spatial scale, which may harbor microbial communities with distinct compositions and functioning. Here, we analyzed 380 sediment samples from 13 and 8 representative mangrove ecosystems, respectively, in China and South America and compared their microbial features. Although the microbial community compositions exhibited strong distinctions, the community assemblage in the two locations followed analogous patterns: the assemblages of the entire community, abundant taxa, rare taxa, and generalists were predominantly driven by stochastic processes with significant distance-decay patterns, while the assembly of specialists was more likely related to the behaviors of other organisms in or surrounding the mangrove ecosystems. In addition, co-occurrence and topological network analysis of mangrove sediment microbiomes underlined the dominance of sulfate-reducing prokaryotes in both the regions. Moreover, we found that more than 70% of the keystone and hub taxa were sulfate-reducing prokaryotes, implying their important roles in maintaining the linkage and stability of the mangrove sediment microbial communities. This study fills a gap in the large-scale analysis of microbiome features covering distantly located and diverse mangrove ecosystems. Here, we propose a suggestion to the Mangrove Microbiome Initiative that 16S rRNA sequencing protocols should be standardized with a unified primer to facilitate the global-scale analysis of mangrove microbiomes and further comparisons with the reference data sets from other biomes. Importance Mangrove wetlands are important ecosystems possessing valuable ecological functions for carbon storage, species diversity maintenance, and coastline stabilization. These functions are greatly driven or supported by microorganisms that make essential contributions to biogeochemical cycles in mangrove ecosystems. The mechanisms governing the microbial community assembly, structure, and functions are vital to microbial ecology but remain unclear. Moreover, studying these mechanisms of mangrove microbiomes at a large spatial scale can provide a more comprehensive insight into their universal features and can help untangle microbial interaction patterns and microbiome functions. In this study, we compared the mangrove microbiomes in a large spatial range and found that the assembly patterns and key functional guilds of the Chinese and South American mangrove microbiomes were analogous. The entire communities exhibited significant distance-decay patterns and were strongly governed by stochastic processes, while the assemblage of specialists may be merely associated with the behaviors of the organisms in mangrove ecosystems. Furthermore, our results highlight the dominance of sulfate-reducing prokaryotes in mangrove microbiomes and their key roles in maintaining the stability of community structure and functions.

Funder

MOST | National Natural Science Foundation of China

Shenzhen Municipal Science and Technology Innovation Council | Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Program

Innovation Team Project of Universities in Guangdong Province

Shenzhen University 2035 Program for Excellent Research

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Cell Biology,Microbiology (medical),Genetics,General Immunology and Microbiology,Ecology,Physiology

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