Abstract

How the diverse bacterial communities inhabiting desert soils maintain energy and carbon needs is much debated. Traditionally, most bacteria are thought to persist by using organic carbon synthesized by photoautotrophs following transient hydration events. Recent studies focused on Antarctic desert soils have revealed, however, that some bacteria use atmospheric trace gases, such as hydrogen (H2), to conserve energy and fix carbon independently of photosynthesis. In this study, we investigated whether atmospheric H2 oxidation occurs in four nonpolar desert soils and compared this process to photosynthesis. To do so, we first profiled the distribution, expression, and activities of hydrogenases and photosystems in surface soils collected from the South Australian desert over a simulated hydration-desiccation cycle. Hydrogenase-encoding sequences were abundant in the metagenomes and metatranscriptomes and were detected in actinobacterial, acidobacterial, and cyanobacterial metagenome-assembled genomes. Native dry soil samples mediated H2 oxidation, but rates increased 950-fold following wetting. Oxygenic and anoxygenic phototrophs were also detected in the community but at lower abundances. Hydration significantly stimulated rates of photosynthetic carbon fixation and, to a lesser extent, dark carbon assimilation. Hydrogenase genes were also widespread in samples from three other climatically distinct deserts, the Namib, Gobi, and Mojave, and atmospheric H2 oxidation was also greatly stimulated by hydration at these sites. Together, these findings highlight that H2 is an important, hitherto-overlooked energy source supporting bacterial communities in desert soils. Contrary to our previous hypotheses, however, H2 oxidation occurs simultaneously rather than alternately with photosynthesis in such ecosystems and may even be mediated by some photoautotrophs.IMPORTANCE Desert ecosystems, spanning a third of the earth's surface, harbor remarkably diverse microbial life despite having a low potential for photosynthesis. In this work, we reveal that atmospheric hydrogen serves as a major previously overlooked energy source for a large proportion of desert bacteria. We show that both chemoheterotrophic and photoautotrophic bacteria have the potential to oxidize hydrogen across deserts sampled across four continents. Whereas hydrogen oxidation was slow in native dry deserts, it increased by three orders of magnitude together with photosynthesis following hydration. This study revealed that continual harvesting of atmospheric energy sources may be a major way that desert communities adapt to long periods of water and energy deprivation, with significant ecological and biogeochemical ramifications.

Highlights

  • How the diverse bacterial communities inhabiting desert soils maintain energy and carbon needs is much debated

  • Chemoheterotrophs are hypothesized to store some of the organic carbon released following hydration events and use it as an energy source to maintain themselves in predominantly dormant states during subsequent long-term desiccation [6, 29,30,31]

  • This study suggests that multiple energy sources, including atmospheric H2, are important for the endurance of microbial communities in desert environments

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Summary

Introduction

How the diverse bacterial communities inhabiting desert soils maintain energy and carbon needs is much debated. Hydrogenase genes were widespread in samples from three other climatically distinct deserts, the Namib, Gobi, and Mojave, and atmospheric H2 oxidation was greatly stimulated by hydration at these sites Together, these findings highlight that H2 is an important, hithertooverlooked energy source supporting bacterial communities in desert soils. Multiple actinobacterial lineages that predominate in deserts are proposed to express high-affinity enzymes to use atmospheric trace gases as alternative electron donors for the aerobic respiratory chain [15, 37,38,39] Through this hidden metabolic flexibility, organisms that require organic carbon for growth can still persist in dormant states in continually carbon-depleted soils [6, 40]. Atmospheric H2 oxidation may provide a minimalistic way for bacteria to sustain energy and carbon needs in otherwise energy-depleted desert environments

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