Abstract

Cobalamin (vitamin B12) is a complex metabolite and essential cofactor required by many branches of life, including most eukaryotic phytoplankton. Algae and other cobalamin auxotrophs rely on environmental cobalamin supplied from a relatively small set of cobalamin-producing prokaryotic taxa. Although several Bacteria have been implicated in cobalamin biosynthesis and associated with algal symbiosis, the involvement of Archaea in cobalamin production is poorly understood, especially with respect to the Thaumarchaeota. Based on the detection of cobalamin synthesis genes in available thaumarchaeotal genomes, we hypothesized that Thaumarchaeota, which are ubiquitous and abundant in aquatic environments, have an important role in cobalamin biosynthesis within global aquatic ecosystems. To test this hypothesis, we examined cobalamin synthesis genes across sequenced thaumarchaeotal genomes and 430 metagenomes from a diverse range of marine, freshwater and hypersaline environments. Our analysis demonstrates that all available thaumarchaeotal genomes possess cobalamin synthesis genes, predominantly from the anaerobic pathway, suggesting widespread genetic capacity for cobalamin synthesis. Furthermore, although bacterial cobalamin genes dominated most surface marine metagenomes, thaumarchaeotal cobalamin genes dominated metagenomes from polar marine environments, increased with depth in marine water columns, and displayed seasonality, with increased winter abundance observed in time-series datasets (e.g., L4 surface water in the English Channel). Our results also suggest niche partitioning between thaumarchaeotal and cyanobacterial ribosomal and cobalamin synthesis genes across all metagenomic datasets analyzed. These results provide strong evidence for specific biogeographical distributions of thaumarchaeotal cobalamin genes, expanding our understanding of the global biogeochemical roles played by Thaumarchaeota in aquatic environments.

Highlights

  • Cobalamin is an enzyme cofactor that many prokaryotic and eukaryotic species use to catalyze rearrangement-reduction or methyl transfer reactions involved primarily in amino acid synthesis, return of carbon to central metabolism via the tricarboxylic acid cycle and synthesis of DNA

  • Based on genome add vitamin B12 production to the roles recognized analysis, known dominant marine bacterial taxa for these abundant and enigmatic marine microbial implicated in cobalamin production include select community members

  • Based on our observation of cobalamin synthesis genes within available thaumarchaeotal genomes Pipeline for detection and taxonomic classification of (Hallam et al, 2006; Spang et al, 2010; Walker et al, cobalamin biosynthesis genes 2010; Blainey et al, 2011; Kim et al, 2011; Lebedeva Metagenome profile Hidden Markov Models et al, 2013; Lloyd et al, 2013; Luo et al, 2014), were used for genes of the combined with the ubiquity and abundance of these cobalamin biosynthesis pathway that were retrieved organisms, we hypothesized that Thaumarchaeota from the TIGRfam (Haft et al, 2003) and Pfam

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Summary

Aquatic metagenomes implicate Thaumarchaeota in global cobalamin production

Andrew C Doxey, Daniel A Kurtz, Michael DJ Lynch, Laura A Sauder and Josh D Neufeld. Cobalamin (vitamin B12) is a complex metabolite and essential cofactor required by many branches of life, including most eukaryotic phytoplankton. Based on the detection of cobalamin synthesis genes in available thaumarchaeotal genomes, we hypothesized that Thaumarchaeota, which are ubiquitous and abundant in aquatic environments, have an important role in cobalamin biosynthesis within global aquatic ecosystems. To test this hypothesis, we examined cobalamin synthesis genes across sequenced thaumarchaeotal genomes and 430 metagenomes from a diverse range of marine, freshwater and hypersaline environments. Our results suggest niche partitioning between thaumarchaeotal and cyanobacterial ribosomal and cobalamin synthesis genes across all metagenomic datasets analyzed These results provide strong evidence for specific biogeographical distributions of thaumarchaeotal cobalamin genes, expanding our understanding of the global biogeochemical roles played by Thaumarchaeota in aquatic environments. The ISME Journal (2015) 9, 461–471; doi:10.1038/ismej.2014.142; published online 15 August 2014

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