Differences in substrate use linked to divergent carbon flow during litter decomposition

Author:

Albright Michaeline B N1ORCID,Thompson Jaron2,Kroeger Marie E1,Johansen Renee1,Ulrich Danielle E M1,Gallegos-Graves La Verne1,Munsky Brian23,Dunbar John1

Affiliation:

1. Biosciences Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Mailstop M888, Los Alamos, NM 87545, USA

2. Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA

3. School of Biomedical Engineering, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Discovering widespread microbial processes that create variation in soil carbon (C) cycling within ecosystems may improve soil C modeling. Toward this end, we screened 206 soil communities decomposing plant litter in a common garden microcosm environment and examined features linked to divergent patterns of C flow. C flow was measured as carbon dioxide (CO2) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from 44-days of litter decomposition. Two large groups of microbial communities representing ‘high’ and ‘low’ DOC phenotypes from original soil and 44-day microcosm samples were down-selected for fungal and bacterial profiling. Metatranscriptomes were also sequenced from a smaller subset of communities in each group. The two groups exhibited differences in average rate of CO2 production, demonstrating that the divergent patterns of C flow arose from innate functional constraints on C metabolism, not a time-dependent artefact. To infer functional constraints, we identified features – traits at the organism, pathway or gene level – linked to the high and low DOC phenotypes using RNA-Seq approaches and machine learning approaches. Substrate use differed across the high and low DOC phenotypes. Additional features suggested that divergent patterns of C flow may be driven in part by differences in organism interactions that affect DOC abundance directly or indirectly by controlling community structure.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

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