Labile dissolved organic matter compound characteristics select for divergence in marine bacterial activity and transcription
ABSTRACT
Bacteria play a key role in the planetary carbon cycle partly because they rapidly
assimilate labile dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the ocean. However, knowledge
of the molecular mechanisms at work when bacterioplankton metabolize distinct
components of the DOM pool is still limited. We, therefore, conducted seawater
culture enrichment experiments with ecologically relevant DOM, combining both
polymer and monomer model compounds for distinct compound classes. This
included carbohydrates (polysaccharides vs. monosaccharides), proteins (polypeptides
vs. amino acids), and nucleic acids (DNA vs. nucleotides). We noted pronounced
changes in bacterial growth, activity, and transcription related to DOM characteristics.
Transcriptional responses differed between compound classes, with distinct gene sets
(“core genes”) distinguishing carbohydrates, proteins, and nucleic acids. Moreover,
we found a strong divergence in functional transcription at the level of particular
monomers and polymers (i.e., the condensation state), primarily in the carbohydrates
and protein compound classes. These specific responses included a variety of cellular
and metabolic processes that were mediated by distinct bacterial taxa, suggesting
pronounced functional partitioning of organic matter. Collectively, our findings show
that two important facets of DOM, compound class and condensation state, shape
bacterial gene expression, and ultimately select for distinct bacterial (functional) groups.
This emphasizes the interdependency of marine bacteria and labile carbon compounds
for regulating the transformation of DOM in surface waters.