Novel and unusual genes for nitrogen and metal cycling in Planctomycetota- and KSB1-affiliated metagenome-assembled genomes reconstructed from a marine subsea tunnel

Author:

Suarez Carolina1ORCID,Hackl Thomas2ORCID,Wilen Britt-Marie3ORCID,Persson Frank3ORCID,Hagelia Per4,Jetten Mike S M5ORCID,Dalcin Martins Paula2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Water Resources Engineering, Faculty of Engineering LTH, Lund University , Lund 221 00 , Sweden

2. Microbial Ecology Cluster, GELIFES, University of Groningen , Groningen 9747 AG , Netherlands

3. Division of Water Environment Technology, Department of Architecture and Civil Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology , Gothenburg 412 96 , Sweden

4. Construction Division, The Norwegian Public Roads, Administration , Oslo 0667 , Norway

5. Department of Microbiology, RIBES, Radboud University , Nijmegen 6525 AJ , Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract The Oslofjord subsea road tunnel is a unique environment in which the typically anoxic marine deep subsurface is exposed to oxygen. Concrete biodeterioration and steel corrosion in the tunnel have been linked to the growth of iron- and manganese-oxidizing biofilms in areas of saline water seepage. Surprisingly, previous 16S rRNA gene surveys of biofilm samples revealed microbial communities dominated by sequences affiliated with nitrogen-cycling microorganisms. This study aimed to identify microbial genomes with metabolic potential for novel nitrogen- and metal-cycling reactions, representing biofilm microorganisms that could link these cycles and play a role in concrete biodeterioration. We reconstructed 33 abundant, novel metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) affiliated with the phylum Planctomycetota and the candidate phylum KSB1. We identified novel and unusual genes and gene clusters in these MAGs related to anaerobic ammonium oxidation, nitrite oxidation, and other nitrogen-cycling reactions. Additionally, 26 of 33 MAGs also had the potential for iron, manganese, and arsenite cycling, suggesting that bacteria represented by these genomes might couple these reactions. Our results expand the diversity of microorganisms putatively involved in nitrogen and metal cycling, and contribute to our understanding of potential biofilm impacts on built infrastructure.

Funder

NWO

European Research Council

Science for Life Laboratory

Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation

Swedish Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Microbiology

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