The active free-living bathypelagic microbiome is largely dominated by rare surface taxa

Author:

Sebastián Marta12,Giner Caterina R12,Balagué Vanessa12,Gómez-Letona Markel34,Massana Ramon12,Logares Ramiro12,Duarte Carlos M56,Gasol Josep M12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Marine Biology and Oceanography , . Pg Marítim de la Barceloneta 37-49, Barcelona, Catalunya E08003 , Spain

2. Institut de Ciències del Mar, CSIC , . Pg Marítim de la Barceloneta 37-49, Barcelona, Catalunya E08003 , Spain

3. Instituto de Oceanografía y Cambio Global , , Telde, Las Palmas 35214 , Spain

4. Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Parque Científico Tecnológico Marino de Taliarte, s/n , , Telde, Las Palmas 35214 , Spain

5. Red Sea Research Centre (RSRC) , , Thuwal 23955 , Saudi Arabia

6. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology , , Thuwal 23955 , Saudi Arabia

Abstract

Abstract A persistent microbial seed bank is postulated to sustain the marine biosphere, and recent findings show that prokaryotic taxa present in the ocean’s surface dominate prokaryotic communities throughout the water column. Yet, environmental conditions exert a tight control on the activity of prokaryotes, and drastic changes in these conditions are known to occur from the surface to deep waters. The simultaneous characterization of the total (DNA) and active (i.e. with potential for protein synthesis, RNA) free-living communities in 13 stations distributed across the tropical and subtropical global ocean allowed us to assess their change in structure and diversity along the water column. We observed that active communities were surprisingly more similar along the vertical gradient than total communities. Looking at the vertical connectivity of the active vs. the total communities, we found that taxa detected in the surface sometimes accounted for more than 75% of the active microbiome of bathypelagic waters (50% on average). These active taxa were generally rare in the surface, representing a small fraction of all the surface taxa. Our findings show that the drastic vertical change in environmental conditions leads to the inactivation and disappearance of a large proportion of surface taxa, but some surface-rare taxa remain active (or with potential for protein synthesis) and dominate the bathypelagic active microbiome.

Funder

Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation

Consolider-Ingenio Programme

Malaspina 2010 Expedition

ECORARE

Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitivity

MALASPINOMICS

MICOLOR

Severo Ochoa Centre of Excellence

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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