Virus–Host Interactions Drive Contrasting Bacterial Diel Dynamics in the Ocean

Author:

Chen Xiaowei1,Hu Chen12ORCID,Wei Wei13,Yang Yunlan12,Weinbauer Markus G.4,Li Hongbo5,Ren Shiying1,Ma Ruijie1,Huang Yibin67,Luo Tingwei1,Jiao Nianzhi1,Zhang Rui18

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, College of Ocean and Earth Sciences, Fujian Key Laboratory of Marine Carbon Sequestration, Xiamen University, Xiamen 361102, PR China.

2. College of the Environment and Ecology, Xiamen University, Xiamen 361102, PR China.

3. Research Center for Environmental Ecology and Engineering, School of Environmental Ecology and Biological Engineering, Wuhan Institute of Technology, Wuhan 430205, PR China.

4. Sorbonne Universités, UPMC, Université Paris 06, CNRS, Laboratoire d’Océanographie de Villefranche (LOV), Villefranche-sur-Mer 06230, France.

5. National Marine Environmental Monitoring Center, Ministry of Ecological Environment, Dalian 116023, PR China.

6. Department of Ocean Sciences, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA, USA.

7. NOAA/OAR Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, Seattle, WA, USA.

8. Institute for Advanced Study, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen 518055, PR China.

Abstract

Marine organisms perform a sea of diel rhythmicity. Planktonic diel dynamics have been shown to be driven by light, energy resources, circadian rhythms, and the coordinated coupling of photoautotrophs and heterotrophic bacterioplankton. Here, we explore the diel fluctuation of viral production and decay and their impact on the total and active bacterial community in the coastal and open seawaters of the South China Sea. The results showed that the night-production diel pattern of lytic viral production was concurrent with the lower viral decay at night, contributing to the accumulation of the viral population size during the night for surface waters. The diel variations in bacterial activity, community composition, and diversity were found highly affected by viral dynamics. This was revealed by the finding that bacterial community diversity was positively correlated to lytic viral production in the euphotic zone of the open ocean but was negatively related to lysogenic viral production in the coastal ocean. Such distinct but contrasting correlations suggest that viral life strategies can not only contribute to diversifying bacterial community but also potentially piggyback their host to dominate bacterial community, suggesting the tightly synchronized depth-dependent and habitat-specific diel patterns of virus–host interactions. It further implies that viruses serve as an ecologically important driver of bacterial diel dynamics across the ocean, highlighting the viral roles in bacterial ecological and biogeochemical processes in the ocean.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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