Abstract

Numerous studies have found that soil microbiomes differ at the aggregate level indicating they provide spatially heterogeneous habitats for microbial communities to develop. However, an understanding of the assembly processes and the functional profile of microbes at the aggregate level remain largely rudimentary, particularly for those active members in soil aggregates. In this study, we investigated the diversity, co-occurrence network, assembly process and predictive functional profile of active bacteria in aggregates of different sizes using H218O-based DNA stable isotope probing (SIP) and 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Most of the bacterial reads were active with 91 % of total reads incorporating labelled water during the incubation. The active microbial community belonged mostly of Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria, with a relative abundance of 55.32 % and 28.12 %, respectively. Assembly processes of the active bacteria were more stochastic than total bacteria, while the assembly processes of total bacteria were more influenced by deterministic processes. Furthermore, many functional profiles such as environmental information processing increased in active bacteria (19.39 %) compared to total bacteria (11.22 %). After incubation, the diversity and relative abundance of active bacteria of certain phyla increased, such as Proteobacteria (50.70 % to 59.95 %), Gemmatimonadetes (2.63 % to 4.11 %), and Bacteroidetes (1.50 % to 2.84 %). In small macroaggregates (SMA: 0.25-2 mm), the active bacterial community and its assembly processes differed from that of other soil aggregates (MA: microaggregates, <0.25 mm; LMA: large macroaggregates, 2-4 mm). For functional profiles, the relative abundance of important functions, such as amino acid metabolism, signal transduction and cell motility, increased with incubation days and/or in SMA compared to other aggregates. This study provides robust evidence that the community of active bacteria and its assembly processes in soil aggregates differed from total bacteria, and suggests the importance of dominant active bacteria (such as Proteobacteria) for the predicted functional profiles in the soil ecosystem.

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