Abstract

The gene pair hgcAB is essential for microbial mercury methylation. Our understanding of its abundance and diversity in nature is rapidly evolving. In this study we developed a new broad-range primer set for hgcAB, plus an expanded hgcAB reference library, and used these to characterize Hg-methylating communities from diverse environments. We applied this new Hg-methylator database to assign taxonomy to hgcA sequences from clone, amplicon, and metagenomic datasets. We evaluated potential biases introduced in primer design, sequence length, and classification, and suggest best practices for studying Hg-methylator diversity. Our study confirms the emerging picture of an expanded diversity of HgcAB-encoding microbes in many types of ecosystems, with abundant putative mercury methylators Nitrospirae and Chloroflexi in several new environments including salt marsh and peat soils. Other common microbes encoding HgcAB included Phycisphaerae, Aminicenantes, Spirochaetes, and Elusimicrobia. Combined with high-throughput amplicon specific sequencing, the new primer set also indentified novel hgcAB sequences similar to Lentisphaerae, Bacteroidetes, Atribacteria, and candidate phyla WOR-3 and KSB1 bacteria. Gene abundance data also corroborate the important role of two “classic” groups of methylators (Deltaproteobacteria and Methanomicrobia) in many environments, but generally show a scarcity of hgcAB+ Firmicutes. The new primer set was developed to specifically target hgcAB sequences found in nature, reducing degeneracy and providing increased sensitivity while maintaining broad diversity capture. We evaluated mock communities to confirm primer improvements, including culture spikes to environmental samples with variable DNA extraction and PCR amplification efficiencies. For select sites, this new workflow was combined with direct high-throughput hgcAB sequencing. The hgcAB diversity generated by direct amplicon sequencing confirmed the potential for novel Hg-methylators previously identified using metagenomic screens. A new phylogenetic analysis using sequences from freshwater, saline, and terrestrial environments showed Deltaproteobacteria HgcA sequences generally clustered among themselves, while metagenome-resolved HgcA sequences in other phyla tended to cluster by environment, suggesting horizontal gene transfer into many clades. HgcA from marine metagenomes often formed distinct subtrees from those sequenced from freshwater ecosystems. Overall the majority of HgcA sequences branch from a cluster of HgcAB fused proteins related to Thermococci, Atribacteria (candidate division OP9), Aminicenantes (OP8), and Chloroflexi. The improved primer set and library, combined with direct amplicon sequencing, provide a significantly improved assessment of the abundance and diversity of hgcAB+ microbes in nature.

Highlights

  • Environmental microbial methylation of inorganic mercury (Hg) produces the bio-accumulative neurotoxin methylmercury (MeHg) (Hsu-Kim et al, 2013; Chen et al, 2018)

  • We evaluated high-throughput hgcAB amplicon libraries for the New Horizon site in East Fork Poplar Creek (EFPC), chosen due to the expected high diversity in Hg-methylators at this site (Supplementary Table S5)

  • In amplicon sequence libraries amplified with Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL)-HgcAB-uniF and ORNL-HgcAB-uni-R, 39.2% of oligonucleotide sequences found in amplicon sequences were shared between primer sets

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Summary

Introduction

Environmental microbial methylation of inorganic mercury (Hg) produces the bio-accumulative neurotoxin methylmercury (MeHg) (Hsu-Kim et al, 2013; Chen et al, 2018). Some of the biogeochemical controls on the activity of Hg methylators are well known and may be managed to reduce risk (Hsu-Kim et al, 2018), the organisms that drive MeHg production in several critical environments remain poorly understood. These include the oceans, source of most MeHg risk to humans globally (UNEP, 2019), and many Hg-contaminated environments (Brooks and Southworth, 2011; Eckley et al, 2020). We report on an improved approach to identifying Hg-methylators in nature We hope that this information will advance biogeochemical models of MeHg production and perhaps provide routes for mitigation

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