Temporal dynamics of microbial transcription in wetted hyperarid desert soils

Author:

León-Sobrino CarlosORCID,Ramond Jean-BaptisteORCID,Coclet ClémentORCID,Kapitango Ritha-Meriam,Maggs-Kölling GillianORCID,Cowan Don A.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractRainfall is rare in hyperarid deserts but, when it occurs, it triggers large biological responses which are considered to be essential for the long-term maintenance of biodiversity. In such environments, microbial communities have major roles in nutrient cycling, but their functional responses to short-lived resource opportunities are poorly understood. We used whole community metatranscriptomic data to demonstrate structured and sequential functional responses in desiccated desert soils to a simulated rainfall event over a seven-day time frame. Rapid transcriptional activation of Actinobacteria, Alpha-proteobacteria and phage transcripts was followed by a marked increase in protist and myxobacterial activity, before returning to the original state. In functional terms, motility systems were activated in the early phases, whereas competition-toxicity systems increased in parallel to the activity from predators and the drying of soils. The dispersal-predation dynamic was identified as a central driver of microbial community responses to watering. Carbon fixation mechanisms that were active under dry condition were rapidly down-regulated in wetted soils, and only reactivated on a return to a near-dry state, suggesting a reciprocal balance between carbon fixation and fixed-carbon acquisition processes. Water addition induced a general reduction in the transcription of stress response genes, most prominently HSP20, indicating that this chaperone is particularly important for life in desiccated ecosystems. Based on these data, we propose a rainfall response model for desert soil microbiomes.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Climate and carbon risk of tourism in Europe;Journal of Sustainable Tourism;2023-01-09

2. Water inputs across the Namib Desert: implications for dryland edaphic microbiology;Frontiers of Biogeography;2022-06-04

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