Proteogenomic analyses indicate bacterial methylotrophy and archaeal heterotrophy are prevalent below the grass root zone

Author:

Butterfield Cristina N.1,Li Zhou2,Andeer Peter F.3,Spaulding Susan1,Thomas Brian C.1,Singh Andrea1,Hettich Robert L.2,Suttle Kenwyn B.4,Probst Alexander J.1,Tringe Susannah G.5,Northen Trent3,Pan Chongle2,Banfield Jillian F.13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, CA, United States

2. Chemical Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, Unites States

3. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, United States

4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA, United States

5. DOE Joint Genome Institute, Walnut Creek, CA, United States

Abstract

Annually, half of all plant-derived carbon is added to soil where it is microbially respired to CO2. However, understanding of the microbiology of this process is limited because most culture-independent methods cannot link metabolic processes to the organisms present, and this link to causative agents is necessary to predict the results of perturbations on the system. We collected soil samples at two sub-root depths (10–20 cm and 30–40 cm) before and after a rainfall-driven nutrient perturbation event in a Northern California grassland that experiences a Mediterranean climate. From ten samples, we reconstructed 198 metagenome-assembled genomes that represent all major phylotypes. We also quantified 6,835 proteins and 175 metabolites and showed that after the rain event the concentrations of many sugars and amino acids approach zero at the base of the soil profile. Unexpectedly, the genomes of novel members of the Gemmatimonadetes and Candidate Phylum Rokubacteria phyla encode pathways for methylotrophy. We infer that these abundant organisms contribute substantially to carbon turnover in the soil, given that methylotrophy proteins were among the most abundant proteins in the proteome. Previously undescribed Bathyarchaeota and Thermoplasmatales archaea are abundant in deeper soil horizons and are inferred to contribute appreciably to aromatic amino acid degradation. Many of the other bacteria appear to breakdown other components of plant biomass, as evidenced by the prevalence of various sugar and amino acid transporters and corresponding hydrolyzing machinery in the proteome. Overall, our work provides organism-resolved insight into the spatial distribution of bacteria and archaea whose activities combine to degrade plant-derived organics, limiting the transport of methanol, amino acids and sugars into underlying weathered rock. The new insights into the soil carbon cycle during an intense period of carbon turnover, including biogeochemical roles to previously little known soil microbes, were made possible via the combination of metagenomics, proteomics, and metabolomics.

Funder

Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research, of the US Department of Energy

US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute

DOE Office of Science User Facility. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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